Styka v. Styka

263 A.2d 555, 257 Md. 464, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1326
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 2, 1970
Docket[No. 316, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 263 A.2d 555 (Styka v. Styka) 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
Styka v. Styka, 263 A.2d 555, 257 Md. 464, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1326 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

*465 McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Andrew Styka and Ligia Ramirez were married in New York City in June 1959. He is a Pole; she was born in Colombia. He is fluent in Spanish and English; she speaks no Polish and only kitchen English. From the beginning, according to him, their marriage was plagued by her “terrible and uncontrollable moods.” There were times, he said, when coming home was “just like walking into a hell.” She, on the other hand, said they were “very happy together.” There are no children.

In April 1968 they left New York and came to Baltimore County so that Andrew could be near his work. He had been hired as an engineer by the Head Ski Company. With them came Norita Cortez, a maid sent from Colombia by Ligia’s family and Maria Gornyzka, a visitor from Poland, related distantly to Andrew. Ligia got the notion that Maria was not only carrying on with a number of men, including Andrew, but that she also had Lesbian designs on Norita. Andrew testified that she chased him around the house with “knives and crystal vases” and threw at him whatever was at hand. On two occasions he was obliged to call the police. Maria witnessed Ligia’s armed pursuit of Andrew one night in August. She said she had “never in * * * [her] life seen a wife have knives toward her husband.” She left the next morning.

On the night of 10 October, according to Andrew, Ligia slipped a note under his bedroom door. The note, in Spanish, 1 is dated “9-7/68.” She calls it her last note (carta) to him and she went on to say that on the day following she (and Norita) would leave the house for *466 ever (“mañana nos vamos para siempre de esta casa”). She had gone when Andrew returned home from work the next day. He assumed, correctly it seems, that she “went to the house of one of her Colombian friends” in New York. He moved to a nearby small hotel a day or so later. On 15 October he filed a bill for a divorce a mensa et thoro. She testified she returned home on 16 October but the sheriff’s return shows that service of process was made upon her, on 17 October, at the New York address. At about this time she wrote to Andrew’s mother saying she didn’t want him any more. Counsel for the parties seem to have tried, without success, to resolve their differences.

On 6 January 1969, Ligia answered the bill of complaint and filed a “Counter Complaint” alleging desertion by Andrew but asking only for alimony, counsel fees and general relief. The case came on for trial before Maguire, J., on 31 January 1969. After two days of testimony Judge Maguire said, from the bench:

“(The Court) Gentlemen, in this case we have two apparently essentially different stories. It is obvious to the Court that the relationship between Mr. and Mrs. Styka was a very unpleasant one for some period of time. These matters are normally not very difficult, particularly when there are no children involved, and there are none in this case, so it becomes a matter for the Court to determine whom does it believe. If I believe Mr. Styka, then whatever Mrs. Styka has had to say to me, has testified to, and her maid, are complete perjury. If I choose to believe her as to what her testimony and her witnesses, and not Mr. Styka, then his testimony is completely of a perjured nature. That is exactly where we stand, whom the Court may or may not believe.”
* * *
“This letter [9-7/68] has to be given a great *467 deal of weight because of the contents of the letter and there is no question about what it says. Properly interpreted, it says we are not getting along and I am going to leave.”
* * *
“It is most unfortunate to get into these situations where in a court of law, where two adult people are testifying, and somebody lies from the very beginning. It shocks the conscience of the Court to do a thing like that because it is obvious fco me one or the other has no respect for the truth.
“There are no children involved, so if the Court sees fit not to grant the a mensa divorce, the status of the husband and wife doesn’t change any. If the Court sees fit to grant, of course, it changes. It seems to me under the circumstances that exist, the husband said he could never live with her and the wife says well, he can come back — but it is hard to believe that she is sincere about that. * *
“There is no problem with respect to the Court because there are no children involved. I think that that, and the letter written by the wife, she fully intended to separate, no longer live with Mr. Styka. And I think that she left for New York with the intention to go to New York and to come back when she was good and ready. I think she deserted the husband at that time.
“If you will prepare a decree for a divorce a mensa et thoro * * *, I will sign it.”

Placing great reliance on Boyd v. Boyd, 177 Md. 687 (unreported), 11 A. 2d 461 (1940), Ligia insists that “a five day absence is not desertion.” The record suggests her stay may have been a little longer. We did say in Boyd, where the wife filed her bill for a divorce a mensa *468 within 48 hours after her husband’s departure, that the length of time during which the separation has existed ought to be considered in determining whether an alleged abandonment is real, or exists merely in the imagination or desire of the complaining party. But we also said that “a divorce for abandonment and desertion under the provisions of * * * [Code, Art. 16, § 25 (1966 Repl. Vol.)] may be granted without regard to the duration of the abandonment.” 11 A. 2d at 464. The chancellor was reversed, not because of the hasty filing of Mrs. Boyd’s bill of complaint but because there was a complete lack of corroboration of her testimony. In different circumstances it very well might be that a “five day absence” would not amount to desertion but, even if we assume it has the significance Ligia assigns to it, there is attenuating evidence here which cannot be overlooked.

To support her argument that Andrew consented to her leaving, Ligia refers us to her testimony that he asked her for a divorce early in the morning of the day she left the house. But she also testified that earlier that same morning he came to her bedroom, admitted Maria was not “his cousin,” that “he wanted her here * * * and [he] apologized.” Then, she went on, Andrew said, “Oh Ligia, you love me and I love you.” She made no reply; as she put it, “I do not say nothing, I show her.” That Judge Maguire chose not to believe her is understandable. She argues further that Andrew’s refusal of her several offers of reconciliation amounts to a consent to her desertion. Judge Maguire found it “hard to believe that she * * * [was] sincere about that.” See Code, Art. 16, § 26A (1969 Cum. Supp.), and Jester v. Jester, 246 Md. 162, 169-70 (1967).

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Bluebook (online)
263 A.2d 555, 257 Md. 464, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/styka-v-styka-md-1970.