Odunukwe v. Odunukwe

633 A.2d 418, 98 Md. App. 273, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 172
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 1, 1993
Docket50, September Term, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 633 A.2d 418 (Odunukwe v. Odunukwe) 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
Odunukwe v. Odunukwe, 633 A.2d 418, 98 Md. App. 273, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 172 (Md. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

FISCHER, Judge.

Aggrieved by the outcome of his divorce proceeding, Ebube E. Odunukwe appeals the decision of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. Dr. Odunukwe presents the following questions for our review:

*276 1. Did the circuit court err in awarding Mrs. Odunukwe a monetary award of $60,000 and entering a judgment against Dr. Odunukwe in that amount when the parties stipulated that the marital equity in the family home was $18,400, which the lower court divided equally among the parties, and the evidence revealed that the remaining marital property was valued at a minimum of $6,302.76 but no more than $42,302.76?
2. Did the circuit court err in ordering Dr. Odunukwe to spend approximately eighty-one percent of his net monthly income for alimony, child support, health insurance and mortgage payment and other costs of the family home during the three year possession and use period?
3. Did the circuit court err in ordering Dr. Odunukwe to pay rehabilitative alimony for a period of twelve years where the evidence established that Mrs. Odunukwe would need only three to five years to obtain her doctoral degree in her career field?
4. Did the circuit court err in ordering Dr. Odunukwe to contribute to Mrs. Odunukwe’s attorney’s fees, deposition expenses and court costs where there was insufficient evidence to establish that Mrs. Odunukwe had substantial justification for withholding visitation, retaining seven attorneys or that Mrs. Odunukwe lacked financial resources to pay her fees?
5. Did the circuit court err in ordering a visitation schedule that is contrary to the visitation schedule agreed upon by the parties and placed on the record before the lower court?

Ebube E. Odunukwe and Stella O. Odunukwe had been married for twelve years when their divorce proceeding commenced on July 31, 1992. For more than two years prior to the trial, the parties lived in separate residences. Mrs. Odunukwe remained in the family’s Glen Burnie home, while Dr. Odunukwe rented an apartment in Ellicott City. The parties’ three children, Chiwuze, born August 29, 1982, Ubachukwu, *277 born November 23, 1985, and Azubuike, born March 1, 1989, occupied the family home along with Mrs. Odunukwe.

Dr. and Mrs. Odunukwe were born in the same area of Nigeria but did not meet until 1978 while they were both studying at the University of Illinois in Chicago. The couple was married in a civil ceremony on March 10, 1979. Subsequently, they participated in a cultural ceremony in accordance with their traditions.

In the fall of 1979, Dr. Odunukwe began medical school at Rush Medical College in Chicago, and the couple resided in the married students’ dormitory. Mrs. Odunukwe was then a graduate student at the University of Illinois School of Public Health. Mrs. Odunukwe received her master’s degree in 1982, and Dr. Odunukwe graduated from medical school the following year. During these years, the couple’s income was minimal as they financed their education.

In June, 1983, after Dr. Odunukwe graduated from medical school, he began an internship at Illinois Masonic Hospital. His annual salary was $18,000. That same year, Mrs. Odunukwe worked full-time, and the couple’s joint income for 1983 totalled $20,792.

Unfortunately, 1983 also signalled the start of marital problems for the parties. Mrs. Odunukwe accused her husband of infidelity and physical abuse — charges that Dr. Odunukwe denies. Dr. Odunukwe attributes the parties’ estrangement partially to a pattern of what he labels “false accusations of infidelity.” In addition, Dr. Odunukwe points to self-esteem problems that he claims Mrs. Odunukwe began experiencing.

The parties moved to New York City in June, 1984 when Dr. Odunukwe began a three-year residency at Harlem Hospital. During this time, the parties’ second child was born. Dr. Odunukwe supplemented his residency salary by working at another hospital on evenings and weekends. Mrs. Odunukwe, meanwhile, obtained a position as a dietician at Jacobi Hospital. Despite these demanding schedules, Dr. Odunukwe felt that he and his wife made time to enjoy their children. To the *278 contrary, Mrs. Odunukwe felt that her husband had no time for the family.

By the time that Dr. Odunukwe completed his residency in 1988, the parties, who were then expecting their third child, had decided not to raise their children in New York City. The family then relocated to Glen Burnie, because Dr. Odunukwe knew a doctor there who was selling his medical practice. Both parties liked the location and thought that it would be a better place for their children.

The parties purchased a two bedroom condominium in Glen Burnie, 1 but Dr. Odunukwe later learned that the medical practice he had intended to join was not “a good deal.” Thereafter, Dr. Odunukwe became associated with a three-office optical company in Baltimore. Following the March, 1989 birth of the parties’ third son, Mrs. Odunukwe worked in temporary and part-time positions. She then obtained employment as a dietician at Deaton Hospital in South Baltimore, a position she currently holds.

In March, 1990, Dr. Odunukwe opened his sole ophthalmology practice in Glen Burnie. He presently maintains this practice. With the opening of the new practice, the couple’s marital problems were exacerbated. An argument erupted on April 12,1990 when Dr. Odunukwe sought to take the children to McDonald’s for lunch. Mrs. Odunukwe alleged that Dr. Odunukwe struck her. Dr. Odunukwe responded that the incident was only a verbal argument precipitated by Mrs. Odunukwe’s refusal to allow the children to leave the house without her. Ultimately, Dr. Odunukwe agreed to vacate the family home and to establish his residence elsewhere.

During the separation, Mrs. Odunukwe would not allow Dr. Odunukwe to have the children visit with him, because Mrs. Odunukwe feared that Dr. Odunukwe would take the children to Nigeria and would not return. After a pendente lite hearing, the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County issued, on *279 September 80, 1992, a schedule of unsupervised visitation for Dr. Odunukwe. In November, 1991, Mrs. Odunukwe again denied Dr. Odunukwe visitation with the children. Despite Dr. Odunukwe’s December, 1991 motion to enforce visitation rights and his request for emergency relief, a hearing was not scheduled on the matter until March, 1992. Just prior to the hearing, a consent order “reinstating” visitation was filed, and Dr. Odunukwe’s visitation with the children resumed.

Immediately after the parties separated, Dr. Odunukwe continued to pay the mortgage on the parties’ home, the condominium fees and other costs associated with the condominium, real estate taxes, and the children’s day care costs. Dr. Odunukwe stopped making the day care payment, however, when he learned that Mrs. Odunukwe was no longer taking the children to the babysitter and that Mrs. Odunukwe’s mother was, instead, watching the children. At one point, Dr. Odunukwe learned that, although he had been sending money to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
633 A.2d 418, 98 Md. App. 273, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odunukwe-v-odunukwe-mdctspecapp-1993.