Schwartz v. Schwartz

148 A. 259, 158 Md. 80, 1930 Md. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 7, 1930
Docket[No. 34, October Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 148 A. 259 (Schwartz v. Schwartz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwartz v. Schwartz, 148 A. 259, 158 Md. 80, 1930 Md. LEXIS 18 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

Oeeutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The parties to this appeal vrere married on June 29th, 1921. The appellant, Henry C. Schwartz, a widower with grown children, lived in Baltimore, where he carried on a wholesale and retail kraut and pickle business, had acquired some property, and received from his business and his property a comfortable income. Viola O. Schwartz, the appellee, was a widow', also with grown children, with whom she lived in her own home on Henrietta Street, in Baltimore. They met during the lifetime of the appellant’s first wife, who was for some years prior to her death an invalid, apparently confined to her home, and, while there is nothing in the evidence to justify the conclusion that at that time they were anything *82 more than friends, they were at least very close friends, often together, and, not long after the death of the first Mrs. Schwartz, they were married.

Although they both lived in Baltimore at the time, they were married in Philadelphia, and their marriage was apparently not announced until the following September, when he and his children and she and her children went to live in the appellee’s home, and on September 30th, 1922, Vivian O. Schwartz, the only child of the marriage, was born.

As might have been expected, the compulsory association of the members of these ill assorted families was neither happy nor harmonious. Schwartz’s children apparently believed that the relations between Schwartz and the appellee, which culminated in their marriage, had begun and continued while his first wife, their mother, was confined to her bed by the illness which finally resulted in her death, and not unnaturally they resented that, and they disliked her. She on her part appears to have done little to conciliate them, so that from the beginning there was much bickering and ill feeling between appellee and Schwartz’s children. They reproached her for her relations with their father during their mother’s, life, and she upbraided them for their disrespect; they quarreled frequently, and finally, acting, she said, on the-advice of her physician, she asked Schwartz to take them away. Accordingly, in January, 1922, Schwartz established, them in another home, although he continued to live with his wife in her home until December, 1923, when he, too, finally left her home. For a time after he left he allowed her ten dollars a week for her support and that of their child, but in. the latter part of the year 1924, alleging that he had threatened to reduce that allowance, she had him arrested for nonsupport. In obedience to an order passed in that proceeding he paid her from that time on $15 a week for the support of herself and her infant child, but she continued to live apart' from her husband, and on January 20th, 1926, she filed the bill of complaint in this proceeding against him. In that bill she alleges that he abandoned her and her infant child,, *83 and prays that she may be divorced a mensa ei thoro from him, that he may be required to pay permanent alimony for her support and also for the support of the child, and that the custody of the child be awarded to her. In due course Schwartz answered the bill, denied that he had abandoned his wife, and later filed a cross bill against her, in which he prayed that he might be divorced from her on the ground that she had abandoned him. She in turn denied so much of the cross bill as charged her with abandonment, and the case was tried in open court on those pleadings. At the conclusion of the case the court dismissed appellant’s cross bill, and decreed that the appellee be divorced a mensa et thoro from the appellant, that he pay her $15 a week alimony, and that she have the custody of their infant child, subject to the appellant’s right to visit and be with him at seasonable times and places. This appeal is from that decree.

Assuming that the appellee was entitled to any relief at all, neither the propriety of the amount allowed for alimony, nor the award of the custody of the infant child of the parties to the appellee, were questioned in this court, but the sole question presented is whether the trial court erred in finding that appellant had abandoned his wife.

Under Oode, art. 16, sec. 39, a divorce a mensa et thoro may be granted where the erring spouse has been guilty of (1) cruelty of treatment, (2) excessively vicious conduct, or (3) “abandonment or desertion.” Abandonment has been ■defined to mean the voluntary, unjustified, and final separation of one of the married parties from the other, accompanied by an intention to terminate the marital relation (Buckner v. Buckner, 118 Md. 113; Keezer on Marriage and Divorce, sec. 326; Muller v. Muller, 125 Md. 76; Hubbard v. Hubbard, 127 Md. 620; Polley v. Polley, 128 Md. 66; Young v. Young, 136 Md. 85; Klein v. Klein, 146 Md. 29; Miller v. Miller, 153 Md. 218; Daiger v. Daiger, 154 Md. 503), or an unjustified refusal to resume suspended cohabitation. Buckner v. Buckner, supra.

The fact that Schwartz actually left the home in which he was living with his wife, and which she owned, and event *84 ually went to live with his children in the home which he owned, is undisputed, so that the inquiry is whether, under the circumstances, of the case, (1) in so separating from his wife he intended to terminate the marital relation, (2) whether his act was justified, and (3) whether she was justified in refusing to accept his offer (assuming that it was made) to resume marital relations with her if she would come to live with him in his home with his children.

There can be little doubt that the disposition which the trial court made of the case would best promote the happiness and welfare of the parties to this appeal, but, since its right to grant that relief is challenged, the propriety of its decree is not to be measured by such considerations, but by the limits of the power which the legislature has granted to-it in dealing with such cases, as that grant has been construed by this court. So that the question presented to the trial court was, not what would .best serve the interests of the parties to the cause, but whether the evidence proved a ground for divorce under the statute. The evidence relating to that issue is dot only conflicting but is vague, indefinite, and confused, both as to dates and incidents, and the only facts which emerge from it with reasonable certainty and clearness-are that Schwartz did leave his wife’s home, that since December, 1923, they have been living apart, and that it is. impossible for Mrs. Schwartz and Mr. Schwartz’s children by his first wife to dwell together amicably.

Mrs. Schwartz, testifying in her own behalf, said that prior to September, 1921, Mr. Schwartz suggested that he bring his three children to live with him in the house which she then owned, that she consented, and that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
148 A. 259, 158 Md. 80, 1930 Md. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-v-schwartz-md-1930.