Wiegand v. Wiegand

142 A. 188, 155 Md. 643, 1928 Md. LEXIS 155
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 25, 1928
Docket[No. 27, April Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 142 A. 188 (Wiegand v. Wiegand) 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
Wiegand v. Wiegand, 142 A. 188, 155 Md. 643, 1928 Md. LEXIS 155 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Oeeutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mildred M. Wiegand, the appellant, on November 16th, 1926, filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City a bill for separate maintenance against William T. Wiegand, her’ husband, on the grounds of cruelty and desertion. He answered that bill, and in his answer denied the charges of cruelty and desertion, and he also filed a cross bill praying that he be divorced a vinculo• matrimonii from his wife on the ground that she had been guilty of illicit carnal intercourse with another man prior to his marriage to her, “the same being unknown to him” at the time of his marriage. The appellant filed an answer in which she denied “the material allegations” of the cross bill as to her unchastity, but alleged condonation. The case came to trial on those pleadings, testimony was taken, and the case submitted without argument, and subsequently a decree was entered dismissing the original bill and granting the relief prayed in the cross bill. This appeal is from that decree.

The undisputed facts of the case are these: Mrs. Wiegand, n&e Bider, at the time of her marriage was an unmarried mother, and was living with her child, then about nine months old, with her mother, in the City of Baltimore. She was a Boman Catholic and Wiegand a Protestant. They were married by a Boman Catholic priest at Ellicott City on *645 December 6th, 1926, and after tbeir marriage they lived together at different places in the City of Baltimore for a period of some ten months, when they went to live with his mother, Mrs. Theodora Wiegand, where they remained for about a year. They then separated. He remained with his mother, while she left the home. At the time they were married Wiegand knew that she had a child, and that at that time she was unmarried, and in his application for a marriage license he stated under oath that she was “single,” although he believed that that was not an accurate definition of her status.

The evidence of the parties as to all other material facts involved in the issues tendered by the pleadings is in hopeless and irreconcilable conflict, and, as we view it, wholly insufficient to entitle either to affirmative relief. Even if there had been no conflict, the uncorroborated testimony of the appellee would not have been sufficient to entitle him to relief under his cross bill (Code, art. 35, sec. 4), and certainly the rule is not less exacting when such testimony is contradicted.

Turning first to the cross bill, to entitle the appellee to the relief prayed by him, he was bound to prove that his wife had been gui ¡ty of illicit carnal intercourse with another man prior to her marriage to him, and that he had ha d at the time of their marriage no knowledge of that fact. Code, art. 16, sec. 38. But there is no such proof to be found in the record. He admitted that he knew when she married him that she had a child, and that at that time she was unmarried, but, he said, she had told him that she had been married and divorced, that the child had been born in lawful wedlock, and that he did not learn the truth until after this proceeding was begun. But that statement was not corroborated in any way, is flatly contradicted by the appellant, and is inconsistent with other conceded facts and circumstances in evidence in the case. Some of these circumstances 'have slight force, but others are more substantial. Although he said that his wife told him that she had been divorced in Baltimore, and be questioned her about the divorce, he appears to have made no other inquiry about it, although he knew that she was quite young, and that she *646 had a child then about nine months old. Appellant testified that she asked her husband to tell his mother about the child, and had said to him that she would not live at his mother’s home unless “she knew the truth about the child,” and that he did promise to tell his mother, and that after that, while she was living with her, his mother asked her why the father of the child had not married her. And while Mrs. Wiegand at first denied having asked her that question, she later said that she was unable to say whether she had or not. Again, although at the time of her marriage her child was a mere infant, she did not take it with her but left it with her mother, and, while at first Wiegand expressed a willingness to have the child with them, whenever appellant suggested sending for it, he always had an excuse for not doing so.

These circumstances are slight and inconclusive, but, whilst they have little probative force, they are about the only facts in the case, with one exception to which we will refer, that bear at all upon the issue of Wiegand’s knowledge of his wife’s unchastity at the time of his marriage, and, whatever else they may do, they certainly do not tend to corroborate his testimony that he had no such knowledge. But a fact of more importance is that, when Wiegand applied for a marriage license, he stated under oath that Mrs. Wiegand was then a “single” woman, and while there might be some quibble as to whether a divorced woman was not a “single” woman within the meaning of article 62, section 5, Code, if that section stood alone, section 4, Ibid, clearly indicates that there is a distinction between the two terms, and in any event Wiegand effectively closed the door on that possible explanation in the following testimony: “Q. Do you know the difference between a married woman and a divorced woman? A. I think so. Q. Do you know the difference between a divorced woman and a single woman? A. I think so. Q. What is the difference between a divorced woman and a single woman ? I presume one has been married and the other one has not, isn’t that right? A. Yes. Q. Did you apply for the marriage license? A. Yes. Q. Did you make the affidavit that is here ? A. Yes, I did. Q. *647 And you swore that she was a single woman at that time? A. Well, she asked me to say she was single. Q. Did you swear she was a single woman at that time ? A. She asked me to say she was single because she had never been married by a priest, and according to her church she had never been married, and according to her church she was single. Q. Are you a Catholic? A. Yo. Q. And according to yonr church she had been ? A. Yes. Q. You swore she was single, although you knew that was not true, becanse she asked yon to? A. She asked me to say she was single. Q. Yon swore to that because it suited your purpose at that time, is that correct? A. I did it to please her.”

Erom that evidence the inference is inevitable that he was willing to make what he believed to be a false statement under oath to “please” the appellant. And if he regarded an oath so lightly when he wanted to marry her, he cannot complain if it is not taken more seriously now when he wants to get rid of her. But, notwithstanding his testimony, it is more reasonable to assume that when he made the application and stated that the woman was single he believed that, and that he did not believe that she had been divorced. And even if the issue depended upon whether Wiegand or his wife told the truth on the stand, there is no* apparent reason why the testimony of a witness who admitted that he made what he believed to be a false affidavit should be preferred to that of his wife who had made no admission quite so damaging.

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Bluebook (online)
142 A. 188, 155 Md. 643, 1928 Md. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiegand-v-wiegand-md-1928.