Oertel v. Oertel

4 Balt. C. Rep. 516
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 516 (Oertel v. Oertel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oertel v. Oertel, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 516 (Md. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

FRANK, J.

On July 18th, 1922, the defendant herein filed against the plaintiff her bill of complaint, charging cruelty of treatment and asking for a divorce a mensa et thoro, alimony and the custody of their infant child, then a little over two years of age. Testimony was duly taken in open Court and a decree was passed granting the relief prayed in the bill. Prom this an appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals of Maryland by the plaintiff herein and by that Court the decree of the lower Court was reversed and the opinion filed is reported in 145 Md., beginning at page 177. In the course of the opinion, Judge Offutt used the following language. “If the testimony on behalf of the complainant were the only testimony in the case, we should not hesitate to grant the relief prayed, but in a contested case such as this, the complainant necessarily assumes the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence the facts relied upon to justify the relief prayed. Allen vs. Allen, 142 Md. 701; Goodhues vs. Goodhues, 90 Md. 292. And while the evidence to which we have referred, if uncontradicted, would be sufficient to gratify the requirements of the statute, requiring that the testimony of a party to a proceeding for divorce shall be corroborated, it is not sufficient to meet the burden imposed by the law upon the complainant of establishing the allegations of her bill of complaint by a preponderance of the evidence, when it is considered in connection with the testimony offered 'by the appellant, which contradicts it, and which, measured either by the number of the witnesses familiar with the facts who gave it, or by the character of their testimony, decidedly outweighs that offered by the complainant.”

The defenses relied on by Mrs. Oertel herein are two-fold. First, that her admitted leaving of the marital home, at Eager street and Rutland avenue, was caused by the cruel treatment of her husband; and, second, that such leaving did not constitute a legal abandonment because she intended to return to that home.

First. The evidence in this case to support the charge of cruelty on the part of the husband is substantially the same as that offered in the preceding case, which was characterized by Judge Offutt in the language above set out. No other instances of cruelty are now relied upon. The question now presented is whether or not the mandate of the Court of Appeals, reversing the decree of this Court and dismissing Mrs. Oertel’s bill is res adjudicata so as to preclude the defense of cruelty offered in this case. I find no decision of our own Court of Appeals directly upon this point. This question, however, has been considered in several other jurisdictions. 19 C. J. 178, par. 2-3. In the case of Civile vs. Civile, 22 California Appeals, 707, decided in 1913, a wife had sued her husband for a divorce because of his alleged intimacy with another woman. This charge was found by the Court to be untrue and her action was dismissed. The husband subsequently filed his complaint alleging that his wife without cause deserted and abandoned him. The wife admitted the desertion, but alleged, by way of defense, the same facts as to his alleged intimacy with another woman as she had relied on as the basis for her previous action against him. The Appellate Court held that it was error to admit any evidence in support of such facts, for the reason that there had been a former final adjudication between the parties of the issues in the previous action where the wife had alleged the same facts as constituting extreme cruelty; “the issue tendered was, therefore, res adjudieata, and plaintiff’s objection to the evidence offered in support thereof [517]*517should have been sustained. The sole and only acts of plaintiff assigned by the defendant as’ a cause for her desertion of plaintiff were those alleged in her action for divorce wherein the Court found him without fault. No evidence whatever was offered tending to show any misconduct on his part subsequent to the date of March 21, 1910, at which time she filed her complaint for divorce, and, as stated, one of the grounds therefor being the alleged conduct pleaded herein as a ground for desertion and the action of the Court had therein was conclusive upon such question.”

In Tillison vs. Tillison, 63 Vermont, 411, the plaintiff had alleged cruelty as a ground for divorce. After a full hearing the libel was dismissed. Thereafter her husband filed a libel for divorce against her on the ground of adultery. One of her defenses was a refusal of the husband to support and cruelty on his part. The trial court permitted her to introduce the same evidence used by her to sustain her claim for a divorce in her former libel. The Supreme Court of Vermont held that this was error. “Under her former libel she could have shown the refusal to support or any act of intolerable severity on the part of the libellant occurring at any time subsequent to her marriage to him to the date of the filing of the libel. The issues in that case were that he was not guilty of the alleged charges during the time named. The dismissal of that libel was a final judgment on the merits of the case.” It was, therefore, held that the prior judgment barred the libellee from setting up the libellant’s refusal to support or any act of intolerable severity on his part committed prior to the commencement of the suit.

The principles underlying these decisions are -well established and have been frequently approved and applied by the Court of Appeals of this State. See e. g.

Royster vs. Horner, 86 Md. 249, 253. Hill vs. McConnell, 106 Md. 574, 576.

The authorities from other States above quoted apply them to divorce cases analogous on their facts to the pending case.

The opinion of the Court of Appeals in the first case between these parties on page 185, held that the evidence offered by Mrs. Oertel in support of her bill, if uncontradicted and uncontested, would have been sufficient to entitle her to a divorce, but that it did not meet the burden which the law casts upon her to establish the allegations of her bill by a preponderance of the evidence. On the contrary, the Court said that the volume and character of the evidence offered by Mr. Oertel decidedly outweighed that offered by her. As the evidence in this case is certainly no stronger, and possibly not so strong, as that offered by her in support of her bill in the former case, and as the acts of cruelty now relied on are the same as those passed on by the Court of Appeals, I feel that I cannot but hold that its decision in the prior case is binding upon me.

I, therefore, hold that Mrs. Oertel’s act in leaving the marital home was not justified and, if it was accompanied by the intention not to return, a case of legal abandonment has been made out.

Second. This intention on her part abundantly appears from the evidence in the case. She never offered to return, because, as she stated in her testimony, she expected her husband to invite her back. She stayed away for a long period of time without making any effort to see her child. She filed a bill for partial divorce against him, as above set out, fought this case to a successful conclusion in the lower Court and attempted to uphold the decree of the lower Court in the Court of Appeals. She brought an action of trover in the Baltimore City Court against her husband, alleging the conversion of certain silver, comprising a portion of their wedding presents. These actions show unequivocably on her part her intention finally to terminate the marital relations.

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Related

Klein v. Klein
125 A. 728 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1924)
Goodhues v. Goodhues
44 A. 990 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1899)
Allen v. Allen
121 A. 926 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1922)
Bounds v. Bounds
108 A. 870 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1919)
Hill v. McConnell
68 A. 199 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1907)
Royston v. Horner
37 A. 718 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oertel-v-oertel-mdcirctctbalt-1926.