Schneider v. Schneider

624 A.2d 1319, 96 Md. App. 296, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 28, 1993
Docket1385, September Term, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 624 A.2d 1319 (Schneider v. Schneider) 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
Schneider v. Schneider, 624 A.2d 1319, 96 Md. App. 296, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 91 (Md. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

ALPERT, Judge.

This is yet another case which has its genesis in the disintegration of the respective parties’ marital relationship. Janet Marie Schneider (“Janet”), appellant, appeals from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Frederick County (G. Edward Dwyer, Jr., J., presiding) in favor of her ex-husband, Mark Reynolds Schneider (“Mark”), appellee. Specifically, the circuit court dismissed Janet’s Complaint for Specific Performance; Janet now appeals asking us to address a single question:

Did the court below err in dismissing [without a trial on the merits] appellant’s complaint under the doctrine of unclean hands?

We answer this question in the negative, and therefore affirm.

I.

In 1966, Janet and Mark married. Two children were born of the marriage, a daughter in 1967 and a son in 1972. Then, on July 15, 1990, Mark moved out of the marital home and the couple’s marriage, for all intents and purposes, was over; divorce was soon to follow.

*299 Four days after he moved out, ie., on July 19, 1990, Mark returned briefly to the marital home and left for Janet a four-page, handwritten letter. In the letter, Mark discussed the couple’s financial situation. As part of that discussion, Mark requested Janet to “[d]o what you have to to sell the [marital] house,” and that if the house would sell for more than a certain specified amount, “I [Mark] could send you [Janet] $400.00 or $500.00 every two week[s or] 24 times a year or $10,000.00+ per year.” Moreover, during this approximate time period (ie., late July, 1990), Mark also allegedly promised that he would continue to keep Janet as the primary beneficiary on his life insurance policies. Janet alleged that she relied on Mark’s two financial representations (being, (1) the twice-monthly payments, and (2) remaining his life insurance beneficiary) and, in so relying, she abstained from seeking alimony or other monetary relief from Mark.

On August 7, 1990, Janet filed in the Circuit Court for Frederick County a “Complaint for Absolute Divorce” on the grounds of Mark’s alleged adultery. Janet described the facts supporting Mark’s adultery thusly:

On July 15, 1990, [Janet] went by herself to church as she ordinarily does every Sunday. She left at the normal time, 8:00 AM, but returned home somewhat early because there was a visiting priest. At approximately 9:45 AM, she entered the bedroom she shared with [Mark]. She had in mind changing into her McDonald’s uniform as she was scheduled to begin work at McDonald’s that morning at 11:00 AM. She found [Mark] in bed with a blonde-haired woman. [Janet] was flabbergasted, managed to say something like, “Get out of the house”, and went downstairs. [Mark] came down stairs and stated that he would be moving out. [Mark] left that day and never slept under the roof of the marital home again.

(Emphasis added.) In his Answer to Janet’s Complaint, Mark confirmed the validity of the facts surrounding his adultery and, accordingly, on August 31, 1990, a Judgment of Absolute Divorce was entered in favor of Janet. Consistent with her allegations, Janet sought neither alimony nor other monetary *300 relief; instead, (she contends) she simply relied on Mark’s two aforementioned financial “promises.”

Apparently consistent with his alleged promises, Mark did, in fact, make several $400 payments to Janet. But (according to Janet) the payments soon stopped, Mark “prompt[ly] removed” Janet as his life insurance beneficiary, and, eventually, Janet looked to the legal system to enforce Mark’s alleged contractual promises.

On or about August 27, 1991, in attempting to enforce Mark’s promises, Janet filed legal papers in two separate but concurrent cases. On the one hand, as part of her divorce case, she filed a “Motion to Revise Judgment,” wherein she requested the circuit court to reopen the Judgment of Absolute Divorce “to receive additional evidence and then enter a new judgment that awards Plaintiff [Janet] alimony.” On the other hand, Janet also initiated (in the same court) a completely separate civil action which she captioned as a “Complaint for Specific Performance,” wherein she sought specific performance of Mark’s two financial promises.

Janet stated the relationship between her two concurrent cases as follows:

As stated in [the] Motion [to Revise Judgment], [Janet’s] first choice of remedy is specific performance. However, if for any reason this Court declines to order specific performance, [Janet’s] only recourse would then be a reopening of the divorce case.

Moreover, pursuant to delineated paragraph six of her Complaint for Specific Performance, Janet noted:

For a description of the surrounding circumstances and the conduct of the parties, Plaintiff [Janet] hereby adopts by reference and requests to have incorporated herein the contents of her “Motion to Revise Judgment”, which Motion is being filed in [the divorce case] at the same time as this Complaint is being filed.

The Motion to Revise Judgment, of course, had in turn made express reference to the previous divorce proceedings includ *301 ing, not surprisingly, Mark’s adultery upon which the divorce had been granted.

On or about February 25, 1992, Mark filed a Motion to Dismiss (which Motion was interpreted as applying to both of Janet’s concurrent cases). The heart of the Motion — indeed, the heart of this case — lies in its delineated paragraph 9:

That the Complaint [for Specific Performance] seeks equitable relief, for which the Plaintiff [Janet] has unclean hands as paragraph six [of the Complaint] incorporates the contents of her original Motion to Revise Judgment, which said Motion was based upon perjured testimony.

(Emphasis added.)

Perjured testimony? As Janet subsequently explained in her “Amended Motion to Revise Judgment by Interlineation,” the events which precipitated the parties’ divorce had occurred in a slightly different fashion than (1) she had originally alleged in her Complaint for Absolute Divorce, and (2) she had reiterated in her aforementioned Motion to Revise (and incorporated by reference into her Complaint for Specific Performance):

On July 15, 1990, [Janet] went by herself to church as she ordinarily does every Sunday. She left at the normal time, 8:00 AM, but returned home somewhat early because there was a visiting priest. At approximately 9:45 AM, she entered the bedroom she shared with [Mark], She did not at that time, as stated in Paragraph #2 of the original Motion to Revise Judgment, find [Mark] in bed with another woman. [Instead, Mark] at that time told [Janet] to use the truck for transportation to work at McDonald’s in Thurmont. When [Janet] asked why, [Mark] replied that he was using the car to go find another place to live in Frederick. At approximately noon of the same day, [Mark] appeared at the McDonald’s where [Janet] was working and told her that he had found a place to move into.

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Bluebook (online)
624 A.2d 1319, 96 Md. App. 296, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-schneider-mdctspecapp-1993.