Peterman v. Peterman

286 A.2d 812, 14 Md. App. 310, 1972 Md. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 4, 1972
Docket395, September Term, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 286 A.2d 812 (Peterman v. Peterman) 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
Peterman v. Peterman, 286 A.2d 812, 14 Md. App. 310, 1972 Md. App. LEXIS 282 (Md. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Orth, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question in this case is whether the chancellor below was correct in ordering ROBERT L. PETERMAN (appellant) to pay VALERIE S. PETERMAN (appellee) for the professional services of her solicitor in connection with the proceedings before the court. The amount of the counsel fee is not an issue. 1

The power of a court of chancery to require the husband to pay the wife alimony and counsel fees rests fundamentally upon the existence of the marital relation. 2 So, when the marriage is dissolved by divorce, the former wife is not entitled to an allowance of counsel fees inci *312 dent to further litigation against her husband, such as her seeking to secure an increase in the amount of alimony. It logically followed, reasoned the Court in Carter v. Carter, 156 Md. 500, that subsequent to an absolute divorce, no counsel fee should be allowed to the mother because of her inability to pay her solicitor for his legal services in proceedings relative to the father’s request for a modification of the decree with respect to the custody of their infant child. “But”, the Court continued, “while the relation of husband and wife is ended by an absolute divorce, that of parent and child continues, and the father remains primarily, and the mother secondarily, bound to support and maintain the infant.” 3 Id., at 508. Therefore, even though “there can be no liability of the father to the mother for her counsel fees by reason of their former marital relation, yet, by reason of his parental obligation, the father may be liable, even to the mother, in the absence of any reason for imposing upon her his primary obligation, if upon his default, she has supplied the minor with necessaries. This obligation is at law and not in equity.” Ibid. “Necessaries”, when used in connection with the responsibility of a parent to a child, “is not confined to such obvious things as board, lodging, and education, but may upon proper circumstances, extend to the services of an attorney, if reasonable and necessary for the protection or enforcement of the property, rights of the minor or his personal protection, liberty, or relief. * * * The right of recovery, however, is subject to the condition that the expenditure of money made or the services rendered were reasonable and neces *313 sary for the welfare of the infant, and especially, in the event of an action at law or in equity, is it required, before the father may be charged with the payment of attorney fees, that it must affirmatively appear that the proceeding begun or the defense interposed was reasonable and necessary for the temporal or personal welfare of the minor.” Id., at 509.

In Price v. Price, 232 Md. 379, where there was a question of the correctness of an award to be paid by the father of a counsel fee to a lawyer who had performed services for a minor child some time after an absolute divorce had been granted, the Court reiterated, citing Carter, McKay v. Paulson, 211 Md. 90, Frank v. Frank, 203 Md. 361, and Kriedo v. Kriedo, supra, that if the divorced mother or another has furnished necessaries to an infant, the father may be liable to her or the supplier, and again pointed out that this liability of the father must be enforced at law. It suggested, at 385, that the Legislature might well want to change the rule. Then in Andrews v. Andrews, 242 Md. 143, decided 1 April 1966, the Court, relying on the Carter rule that the divorced wife is not entitled to an allowance of counsel fees with respect to the children unless the proceedings are reasonable and necessary for the children’s benefit, held that the award there of a counsel fee to the divorced wife was improper. 4 It called attention to Price. Apparently the Legislature responded. In 1967 it enacted ch. 488, codified as Art. 16, § 5A, providing:

“In all cases where a person makes an application for a decree or modification of a decree with respect to the custody, the amount of support or visitation rights concerning a child or children of the parties, or files any form of proceeding to recover arrearages of child support or otherwise to enforce such decree, the court, after considering the financial status of both *314 parties, their respective needs and whether there was substantial justification for instituting or defending the proceeding, may make such award of costs and counsel fees to either party as shall be just and proper under all the circumstances.”

This statute was construed in McCally v. McCally, 251 Md. 735. Observing that the Act gave the equity court power to award a counsel fee at any time in child custody and support cases, the Court found that by including as a consideration for the exercise of the power “whether there was substantial justification for instituting or defending the proceeding,” the effect was to make the statutory test on that point the test of the cases such as Carter and Andrews. At 736-737. 5

The statute was applied in Fuld v. Fuld, 252 Md. 254, where the Court found that the allowance of a counsel fee by the lower court was insufficient and increased it. In so doing it assumed that the lower court had correctly concluded that there was “substantial justification” for instituting the proceeding for an increase in the amount of support and maintenance for the minor child involved in the case. 5 6

In Rhoderick v. Rhoderick, 257 Md. 354, the Court was of the opinion that the assumption in Fuld that the lower court had correctly concluded that there was “sub *315 stantial justification” for instituting the proceeding for an increase in the amount of support and maintenance for a minor child was “a desirable practice as it would enable us — as we did in the Fuld case — to consider the correctness of the allowance of counsel fees (and court costs) at the same time that we consider the merits of the case.” At 361. But it was careful to point out that “[t]here is, of course, quite a difference between the issue of whether or not there was ‘substantial justification’ in bringing the proceeding, on the one hand, and the issue of whether or not the lower court was clearly in error in making the allowance, on the other.” Ibid. 7

In the light of Art. 16, § 5A and the construction and application of it by the Court of Appeals, we conclude that in equity, subsequent to a divorce a vinculo matrimonii,

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Bluebook (online)
286 A.2d 812, 14 Md. App. 310, 1972 Md. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterman-v-peterman-mdctspecapp-1972.