Wysocki v. Wysocki

42 A.2d 909, 185 Md. 38, 1945 Md. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 14, 1945
Docket[No. 47, January Term, 1945.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 A.2d 909 (Wysocki v. Wysocki) 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
Wysocki v. Wysocki, 42 A.2d 909, 185 Md. 38, 1945 Md. LEXIS 100 (Md. 1945).

Opinion

Melvin, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City dismissing the bill of complaint of the appellant against the appellee for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii on the ground of abandonment. In addition to the formal allegations usually found in the bill in such cases, it is alleged that although the parties have been living in the same home, “the defendant has refused since the date of the separation” (May 26, 1941) “to live with your oratrix as husband and wife.” In his answer to this bill the husband (appellee), in denying that he has abandoned and deserted his wife (appellant) , alleges that, “on the contrary, the living apart at this time in the same house is no fault of his but is due to the wife who refuses to live with him and do for him as a wife in the home, but constantly had nagged him and accused him of improper conduct without just cause or reason.”

The appellant’s definition of the issue created by the bill and answer, and the one upon which her counsel based his argument on this appeal, is thus stated in his brief: “Did the appellee, without just cause or reason, abandon the appellant by not cohabiting and by stopping sexual relations with her?”

*40 The record shows that these parties were married June 8, , 1924; that they have been residing in Baltimore City ever since; that they have three children, namely, Adele, nineteen, Alfred, seventeen, and Eugene, thirteen; that the family occupies the three-story building No. 2217 East Pratt Street, owned by the parents as tenants by the entireties; that this building has three rooms in the basement and five rooms and bath on the third floor, in addition to the second floor which had been occupied as sleeping quarters by the parties to this suit; that on or about May 26, 1941, the appellee left the marital bedroom for the reason hereinafter mentioned and thereafter slept in the basement; that for the past year he has not spoken to his wife or daughter, and has not partaken of any meals in the house; that most of the house is, and has been for several years, “rented out to roomers”; that this was the wife’s (appellant’s) plan, and that she collects and retains all the rent from it, amounting to $42 per week; that the parties had formerly owned, as tenants by the entireties, another property (on Dillon Street) which the appellant, without the appellee’s knowledge, contracted to sell; that the only time he knew the sale was going through was when he was called on to sign the deed, which he did, and for which he was paid one-half of the purchase price; that he is, and has been for the past fifteen years, organist at St. Stanislaus Catholic Church in Baltimore City, from which position his earnings amount to about $150 a month; that of this amount he gave his wife, first $80 a month, and then after the institution of this suit $60 a month; that in addition to the rent and this payment from her husband the appellant also receives the daughter’s wages of $28 a week, from which total amounts the appellant pays the fixed charges and the operating expenses of the home and property.

While the prayers of the bill of complaint include those for alimony and for maintenance and support of the minor son, Eugene, no order of court was passed thereon *41 and this aspect of the case was not discussed on appeal. The appellant bases her whole case on the issue above referred to, namely, that the appellee abandoned her “by not cohabiting and by -stopping sexual relations with her.”

The law is well settled in Maryland that if the complainant’s own conduct toward her husband was always “kind, affectionate and above reproach,” as she alleges, and that the latter, for the period of time mentioned in the bill, without just cause or reason, refused sexual intercourse with her, then unquestionably his conduct would have to be regarded as an abandonment of his wife and, in view of its duration, she would be entitled to an absolute divorce. Owings v. Owings, 148 Md. 124, 128 A. 748; Ruckle v. Ruckle, 141 Md. 207, 118 A. 472; Roth v. Roth, 143 Md. 142, 122 A. 34; Klein v. Klein, 146 Md. 27, 125 A. 728; Fleegle v. Fleegle, 136 Md. 630, 631, 110 A. 889; Miller v. Miller, 153 Md. 213, 138 A. 20, 22; Crumlick v. Crumlick, 164 Md. 381, 165 A. 189; Fries v. Fries, 166 Md. 604, 608, 171 A. 703; Dotterweich v. Dotterweich, 174 Md. 697, 200 A. 523.

It is equally well settled that the mere fact that the husband or wife ceases to occupy the bed or room in which they have been accustomed to sleep and thereafter occupies alone another room in the house, is not necessarily a withdrawal of the marital right from the other. The determining factor is the continuous refusal, without just cause or reason, to fulfill the marital obligation, and the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove such refusal. Owings v. Owings, supra; Ruckle v. Ruckle, supra.

In undertaking to meet this burden of proof in the instant case the appellant, in her testimony in chief, does not even mention the subject of marital intercourse, but attributes her husband’s action in leaving their bedroom in May, 1941, to his complaint about the disorderly condition of the room. When asked by the chancellor to state the “cause of the separation,” her reply was: “I *42 was putting a partition in upstairs and he said he isn’t going to sleep in a damned dirty room. I was willing to fix it up nicely for that night, and he moved downstairs and kept staying downstairs, and I wasn’t going to beg him to come upstairs.” She supplemented this by stating, in reply to the Court’s further question, “Is that the only reason you two separated?”: “He is very stubborn and before that, many times, sometimes he would sleep downstairs and I would go downstairs and say ‘Come on upstairs, the children are big and I feel cheap, come on up’.” Continuing the testimony along this line:

The Court: “Just a moment. Tell us about this time . you are complaining of.”
The Witness: “I would make him come upstairs. Well, this time I thought to myself, I won’t beg him all the time, I feel like a lowbrow, I won’t go after him and make him come upstairs if he don’t want to of his own free will.”
By Mr. Dorn: “Q. Have you had any arguments between the two of you? A. At that time I don’t think we had any argument.
“Q. You mean at the very time that he went downstairs? A. No, he just went downstairs of his own free will. He wanted to sleep downstairs.”

On cross-examination the appellant testified that: “In the afternoon he (appellee) sleeps upstairs in my bedroom on the second floor and at night, two or three o’clock in the morning, he sleeps in the basement. I never told him to sleep in the basement.” Still further, on cross-examination, her only reference to the general subject of marital intercourse was made.

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Bluebook (online)
42 A.2d 909, 185 Md. 38, 1945 Md. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wysocki-v-wysocki-md-1945.