McKane v. McKane

137 A. 288, 152 Md. 515, 1927 Md. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 4, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 137 A. 288 (McKane v. McKane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKane v. McKane, 137 A. 288, 152 Md. 515, 1927 Md. LEXIS 142 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for limited divorce by Sarah Catherine McKane, appellee, against her husband Charles R. McKane, tire appellant,' in which a cross bill was filed by him asking for the same relief. In the bill the ground alleged is exces *516 sively vicious conduct and abandonment and desertion, and in the cross bill the charges are the same and, in addition, cruelty.

In the answers filed each party denies the allegations of the other.

The learned chancellor dismissed the cross bill and granted the original plaintiff the relief prayed in her bill, and fixed the alimony at seventy dollars a month. This appeal is from that decree.

The parties have been married about twenty-five years. At the time of the marriage Mrs. MuKane had an infant son, of whom defendant was not the father, but who lived with them after the marriage. At the time of the separation a niece of plaintiff, Marjory Brown, about thirteen years old, was also staying with them.

The defendant for about thirty-three years has been a freight conductor of the Western Maryland Railroad Company. At the time of the trial he was earning from two hundred to two hundred and eighty dollars a month. His pay checks, or the proceeds thereof, were regularly turned over to his wife for family expenses, he keeping for himself only six dollars a week to pay his board while on the road. His work required him to be away from home from Monday morning till Saturday evening. The house in which the family lived was paid for, half by defendant and half by plaintiff’s son, and title was taken in the name of the son, it being understood that it would be a home for them all.

There is no evidence of abandonment by defendant, and the chancellor so found.

The wife’s charge is that the husband had “spells” about once a month, while at home from Saturday evening till Monday morning, caused by drinking, and that on these occasions he called her vile names, implying lack of chastity on her part; cursed her, pouted, and refused to eat the food she prepared for him; that the trouble began almost immediately after their marriage and continued, especially during the last fifteen years, with seldom more than a month’s *517 intermission; that after these quarrels he would frequently move his clothes and stay away for several weeks; she said: “It simply gave me a nervous breakdown, with the continual cursing me, not eating and leaving home. I had the doctor; every month or so I had to have the doctor on account of my nerves; it simply worked on until my nerves gave way.”

There is some corroboration of plaintiff’s testimony as to cursing and the use of vile and defamatory epithets, once shortly after the marriage, another time about fifteen years ago, and again at the time of the separation in May, 1926; also as to his leaving home several times; also as to defendant’s drinking at least on two occasions. He admits that he took a drink occasionally when he came home tired, but denies that he ever drank to excess. There is none as to his refusal to eat. And there was no testimony, except that of plaintiff, to indicate that these outbreaks were of monthly occurrence. But even if they were, that does not constitute excessively vicious conduct within the meaning of the statute, nor cruelty of treatment in the legal sense.

In Harding v. Harding, 22 Md. 337, the husband during the period of confinement of his wife charged her with adultery and, while she was unable to leave her bed, told her he would not permit her to remain in his home, that she must leave as soon as her confinement was over. “This conduct,” the Court said, “was accompanied with allegations of the gravest and most serious character, impeaching the virtue and chastity of the appellant, and charging that her child was not his, but the offspring of another man.” This Court found that there was no evidence to justify this suspicion. But it concurred in the opinion of the trial court that the charge of cruelty made by the bill was not supported by the evidence, citing Daiger v. Daiger, 2 Md. Ch. 335, and Coles v. Coles, 2 Md. Ch. 341, in which Chancellor Johnson, adopting the principles established in the English ecclesiastical courts, and quoting the language of Chancellor Kent in Barrere v. Barrere, 4 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 187, laid down the rule that “mere petulance and rudeness, and sallies of *518 passion, may not be sufficient.” “There must be a series of acts of violence, or danger of life, limb or health to justify the Court in separating the parties.”

And in Shutt v. Shutt, 71 Md. 193, where gross and revolting language caused by intoxication was relied on as constituting a case of excessively vicious conduct, Judge Alvey said: “But all this conduct was that of an unfortunate woman who had become addicted to the habit of occasional intoxication, and the proof shows that it was only when she was under the influence of strong drink that she was guilty of the gross improprieties referred to in the evidence. And however deplorable this state of things may be, it is quite certain that the courts cannot interfere to furnish relief against all the troubles and distresses that may exist in the matrimonial relation.” And the bill was dismissed.

The latest expression of this Court was in Short v. Short, 151 Md. 444. There we said, through Judge Parke: “Legal cruelty must be such conduct on the part of the husband as will endanger the life, person or health of the wife, or will cause reasonable apprehension of bodily suffering. It should be of such a nature as to render cohabitation physically unsafe tb a degree justifying a refusal to continue it. Marital neglect, indifference, * * * sallies of passion, harshness, rudeness, and the use of profane and abusive language towards her are not sufficient, if not in manner and degree endangering her personal security or health. Childs v. Childs, 49 Md. 514; Hawkins v. Hawkins, 65 Md. 108; Bounds v. Bounds, 135 Md. 220.” See also Wheeler v. Wheeler, 101 Md. 427; Ortel v. Ortel, 145 Md. 177.

In most of the cases above cited the charge was cruelty of conduct. But in Shutt v. Shutt, supra, the Court dealt with the charge of excessively vicious conduct based on drunkenness and its attendant consequences, and it was in discussing this charge that this Court said, through Chief Judge Alvey: “In this state it has been repeatedly declared that the mar riage relation is not to be disturbed for any but the gravest reasons, and only upon such state of facts as show to the en *519 tire satisfaction of the court that it is impossible that the duties of the married life can be discharged.”

The effect of the gross and abusive language must necessarily depend upon the degree of sensitiveness and refinement of nature of the person to whom it is addressed. 19 C. J., p. 44, notes 89 and 90.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 288, 152 Md. 515, 1927 Md. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckane-v-mckane-md-1927.