Sugarman v. Sugarman

78 A.2d 456, 197 Md. 182
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 25, 1981
Docket[No. 81, October term, 1950.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 78 A.2d 456 (Sugarman v. Sugarman) 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
Sugarman v. Sugarman, 78 A.2d 456, 197 Md. 182 (Md. 1981).

Opinion

Grason, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, dated January 30, 1950, Leon Sugarman was required to pay the sum of $25 per week to his wife, Ruth B. Sugarman, as alimony. On February 24, 1950, the husband filed a petition in the case wherein he prayed the “Court to pass an Order, granting unto your Petitioner the privilege of adducing further testimony in said cause for the presentation of such evidence as may be pertinent to said cause”; the wife filed a combination demurrer and answer; the demurrer was overruled; the parties, *184 through, their counsel, stipulated: (1) that the husband abandon any claim to rehearing on the facts adduced at the hearing on January 30, 1950, leaving open the question of the amount of permanent alimony as may now be proper, if any; (2) the husband admitted that he was at that time employed by the firm of Middleman and Wise, as shipping clerk, at a gross pay of $40 per week, or take-home pay of $37.20 per week; (3) that written memoranda be filed with the Court in support of and in opposition to the pending petition and that no testimony need be taken in open court at that time in connection therewith.

On June 8, 1950, the chancellor passed an order reducing the alimony from $25 per week to $10 per week. From this order the wife appealed.

The appellant filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, a bill against her husband, wherein she prayed to be divorced a mensa et thoro, alimony pendente lite and permanent, and suit money. She thereafter dropped the prayer for a partial divorce and amended her bill and prayed for alimony pendente lite and permanent, and suit money; which amended bill was answered and the case went to trial, resulting in the decree of January 30, 1950. There was no testimony offered at the hearing on the petition for a rehearing, the court and the parties to this case relying entirely on the testimony on which the first decree was based. That testimony discloses the following facts: These parties were married February 22, 1948, at Yuma, Arizona, and were married a second time by a religious ceremony on March 20, 1948, in Los Angeles, California. Neither was married before. She was thirty-six years of age at the time she testified and said her husband was forty-one years of age at that time. When they were married the husband was in the used car business with his brother, doing business under the name of Suggie Motor Company, located in Hollywood, California. Just before the marriage she worked at the Santa Anita Race Track, as a cashier, and before that she worked for Earl Carroll, in Los Angeles, as a *185 cashier in a restaurant, and she started work “when I got out of school” and worked continuously until the time she was married. There were no children born to these parties. About a month after she was married she filed for unemployment insurance. “I received $22.00 a week for twenty weeks, which went into the joint account that we had, checking account from which I paid all bills”.

The used car business in California collapsed. The accountant who made up the amended income tax return for the company for the year 1948, was indicted and went to jail. The wife said that on June 2, 1948 (this is a mistake, it was June 2, 1949) these parties left California and drove to Brooklyn, New York, to see the wife’s sick mother, who was then dying with cancer. Her mother and father lived at that place. The mother died on July 26, 1949. The appellant and her husband stayed at the home of her sister, in Brooklyn, until the separation. The appellee was born and raised in Baltimore, where his people live. His mother was ill, and before the death of the wife’s mother he came to Baltimore to see his mother, returning to Brooklyn to attend the funeral of his mother-in-law. After the funeral he returned to Baltimore, and thereafter never lived with his wife.

It appears that before leaving California the appellant sent from Los Angeles $1,500 to the East Brooklyn Savings Bank, with instructions to deposit same to the joint account of herself and her husband. She says she had this money “in joint account in Los Angeles, and when we were — my husband got in serious trouble along with his accountant, and there was two months of court litigation over the business and the books and a lot of other things”. The husband notified the bank in Brooklyn not to honor the appellant’s check. She had an automobile titled in her name, which was given to her by her husband, and in which they drove from California to Brooklyn, New York. Her husband drove it to Baltimore when he deserted her and she came to Baltimore *186 and got the car and now has it in Brooklyn. She sold the car for $1,200, but cannot consummate the sale because the car is titled in California, and under the California law the husband must join with her in assigning the title to the purchaser, which he will not do.

• The wife says the husband has about $11,000 which came from the business in California. He says he got nothing from the business, but had $10,000 which was accumulated over a period of about fifteen or twenty years. He sent that sum to Baltimore and it is now deposited in a safe deposit box in a bank in Baltimore, in the name of one of his sisters. The wife says she is destitute and is now living with her father, in Brooklyn; that she was so shocked at the way her husband behaved prior to and after the death of her mother that she is a nervous wreck, has to take sleeping pills, and is entirely unable to work. At the time of their marriage, she says, she was allowed $75. a week. “We opened a charge account' after we were married — he opened it.” She bought her husband what she terms “a trousseau” and charged the same. She said his clothes were very bad.

The husband testified: “Q. You are letting the $10,-000.00 which you swore to you have stay idle? A. That is right. Q. Why? A. Because I don’t think I am capable of going into business with it and I have had that money ever since I was a kid.” He said he has high blood pressure and that he went to a doctor in California and “to the Veterans’ Administration also here”. He testified he never gave the car to his wife.

“The Court: Was it in her name?

“The Witness: Yes, at the instigation of her friend, the accountant, who said — Put it in her name.

“Mr. Bregel: Is that the one that went to jail?

“The Witness: Yes.

“The Court: This $1,500.00 in a New York savings bank, where did that money come from?

“The Witness: From my brother and I in the business. *187 We put that in my name and my wife’s name to pacify her because she was always antagonistic towards my brother.

“The Court: You mean that was a gift then from you and your brother?

“The Witness: A gift not to her, but to me. We were to buy furniture with it — taken from the business out there.”

The appellee lives with his mother at 2450 Callow Avenue, Baltimore. He works as an installation helper for W. E. Sellers Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Langston v. Langston
784 A.2d 1086 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2001)
Brown v. Brown
103 A.2d 856 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1991)
Young v. Young
484 A.2d 1054 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1984)
Kingsley v. Kingsley
412 A.2d 1263 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1980)
Burton v. Burton
252 A.2d 472 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 A.2d 456, 197 Md. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sugarman-v-sugarman-md-1981.