Morgan v. Morgan

510 A.2d 264, 68 Md. App. 85, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 353
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 10, 1986
DocketNo. 1429
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 510 A.2d 264 (Morgan v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Morgan, 510 A.2d 264, 68 Md. App. 85, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 353 (Md. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

WILNER, Judge.

In a nightmarish avalanche of motions, appellant Ann Morgan sought to reopen, upset, and avoid the res judicata bar of an enrolled decree of divorce nearly two years after it was entered. The Circuit Court for Prince George’s County refused to permit her to do that. We shall affirm.

[87]*87This saga began June 3, 1982, when appellee Michael Morgan filed a complaint for divorce based on a voluntary separation allegedly occurring in November, 1980. That action was docketed as Case No. 82-2380. Although duly served, Ann never responded to the complaint, to an amended complaint filed in November, 1982, or to a subsequent motion for or notice of a decree pro confesso. On April 21, 1983, following a hearing before an equity master, the court entered a decree of absolute divorce. No provision was made for spousal support, division of property, or monetary award based on marital property and, as there were no children born of the marriage, the decree was silent in that regard. No appeal was taken from that decree. In reliance on it, Michael remarried and eventually had a child by that marriage.

With the divorce, the erstwhile marital home in Hyattsville, that had been owned by the parties as tenants by the entireties, became owned by them as tenants in common. Ann continued to occupy it as her residence.

On February 26, 1985, Michael filed another action (Case No. 85-2383), seeking a sale of the property in lieu of partition. He alleged the basic facts, including -the divorce and the inability of the parties to agree upon a reasonable disposition of the property. Ann responded on April 11 with two motions, one for the appointment of a guardian ad litem, alleging that she was incompetent to handle her own legal affairs, and one to reopen the divorce case and to consolidate the partition proceeding with it. As grounds for this second motion, Ann alleged that, at all times material to the divorce case, she was incompetent to handle her affairs, that Michael knew or should have known of that incompetence, that her failure to answer the divorce action was due to her incompetence, and that the divorce decree failed to provide for alimony or a division of marital property-

Michael moved to strike both motions. The motion for appointment of a guardian, he said, was not an appropriate [88]*88response to his petition, but should have been filed as a separate action. Moreover, it was not signed or verified, it was not properly captioned, it failed to describe her disability, it was not accompanied by verified certificates of two examining physicians, and it failed to allege facts showing that Ann lacked capacity either at the time the divorce was obtained or currently. He raised some of those same defenses to the second motion as well, arguing also that the motion to reopen should have been filed in the divorce action, that Ann alleged no facts warranting a revision of the divorce decree or showing fraud, mistake, or irregularity, and that she was estopped by laches from attempting to upset the decree.

On May 13, 1985, Michael filed a motion for summary judgment in the partition case. The motion was accompanied by two affidavits, one setting forth the factual basis for his right to have the property sold and the other setting forth facts tending to establish Ann’s competence and a basis for applying the doctrine of laches. Ann did not respond to the motion for summary judgment.

All pending motions were heard on June 7. At the conclusion of the hearing, which, “due to an error in reading the docket,” counsel for Ann did not attend, the court orally denied Ann’s motions to appoint a guardian and to reopen the divorce case and granted Michael’s motion for summary judgment. It signed an order appointing a trustee to sell the Hyattsville property in lieu of partition. On June 21, the court confirmed its rulings on the three motions by formal orders denying Ann’s motions and granting Michael’s.

Seventeen days later, on July 8, Ann moved the court to reconsider its rulings, claiming that, due to counsel’s absence at the June 7 hearing, he was “not able to proffer” an affidavit from Ann’s mother, purporting to attest to Ann’s mental illness. Attached to the motion for reconsideration were two affidavits, one of Ann’s mother and one of a Dr. Velma Powell. The mother acknowledged her daughter’s [89]*89separation from Michael but stated that (1) prior to the separation, Ann had received a disability pension “nine to her mental problems”; (2) Ann had been hospitalized “at various times from 1980 to the present due to her mental illness, which [Michael] knew about”; (3) the mother lived two blocks from Ann and had provided continual assistance to her since Michael left the home; and (4) Ann “was not aware of any divorce proceedings having been brought against her, due to her continuing mental illness.”

Dr. Powell stated that Ann had been under her care for schizophrenia since June 7, 1984, that Ann had “a long history of psychiatric problems,” that at the onset of her treatment (i.e., June, 1984), Ann was psychotic and hallucinating, that, at that time, she stated that she lived with her husband and was not divorced, that Ann was not aware that she had been sued for divorce, and that, in her (Dr. Pow ell’s) opinion, Ann was “not sufficiently in touch with reality to be aware of or respond to divorce proceedings.”

The court denied Ann’s motion on August 2, 1985. No appeal was taken from the June 7 order appointing thf trustee, from the June 21 orders disposing of the three motions, or from the August 2 order denying the motion for reconsideration.

What Ann did then was to turn her attention to the divorce case. Most of the motions filed in the partition case had been cross-filed in the divorce case, apparently because of the motion to consolidate the two proceedings. The last paper filed in the divorce case prior to the court’s resolution of the two principal motions was the notice of the June 7 hearing, filed on May 8. On August 29, 1985, Ann sent to Michael what purported to be a copy of a motion to reopen the divorce case. When Michael discovered that she had neglected to file the original of that motion with the court, he filed the motion along with his own motion to dismiss it. That was done September 13, 1985.

On September 18, Ann moved to strike the motion to reopen, claiming that it was merely a “draft inadvertently [90]*90sent” to Michael’s attorney, and that it was not intended to be filed. Simultaneously, she filed a new, combined motion to appoint a guardian ad litem and to reopen the divorce case. The grounds were precisely those raised in her motions of April 11 in the partition case—that she had been and still was incompetent and incapable of responding to the divorce action and that Michael knew or should have known of her condition. Michael opposed both of those motions.

All of this came to an end in the Circuit Court on October 15. The court that day (1) struck the motion filed by Michael on September 13 on the ground that it was filed in error, and (2) denied Ann’s motion of September 18 on the ground that the issues raised therein were “clearly before the court previously and ruled upon at the hearing on June 7, 1985____” Ann then appealed.

Ann’s sole claim in this appeal is that the order denying her motions in the partition case was interlocutory in nature and therefore cannot serve as a basis for applying res judicata.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
510 A.2d 264, 68 Md. App. 85, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-morgan-mdctspecapp-1986.