Trout v. Trout, 64

Citation135 A.2d 893,214 Md. 531
Decision Date18 November 1957
Docket NumberNo. 64,64
PartiesMyrtle F. TROUT v. Foster D. TROUT.
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland

Harold Buchman, Baltimore (Louis Salzman, Baltimore, on the brief), for appellant.

No brief--no appearance for appellee.

Before BRUNE, C. J., and COLLINS, * HENDERSON, HAMMOND and PRESCOTT, JJ.

HENDERSON, Judge.

A wife appeals from a decree of divorce granted to her husband on his bill for divorce. There was no cross-bill. The testimony is meagre. Each of the parties had been married before, and each had a grown son. They were married in 1948. At the time of the trial in 1957, he was sixty-five years of age, she was forty-five. He was a longshoreman. Both were addicted to drink. There were charges of infidelity on both sides, but no evidence to support the charge of adultery made in the bill, and the Chancellor so found. The husband testified she assaulted him on several occasions in 1951, once she tore off his shirt, once she chased him with a butcher knife, once she threw a screwdriver at him while drunk. Finally, she hit him with a beer bottle and cut his head. He went to the hospital for treatment and never returned home. His testimony as to the assaults was wholly uncorroborated. However, Mrs. Trout admitted hitting him with the bottle in 1951, but swore he had her by the throat at the time. She also testified he did not leave her until 1954, long after the bottle incident. Her sister and son corroborated her testimony as to the date he left, June, 1954.

The Chancellor stated that he thought the plaintiff had made out a case of constructive desertion and remarked; 'I feel, for their best interests and the interest of society and the state generally, they ought to be separated.' But divorces cannot be granted because of incompatability or social desirability, unless the testimony measures up to the legislative grounds. Lloyd v. Lloyd, 204 Md. 352, 104 A.2d 595. Even accepting the husband's story at face value, it is wholly uncorroborated, and contradicted in important points. Corroboration is required by the Statute and cannot be dispensed with. Hodges v. Hodges, 213 Md. 322, 326, 131 A.2d 703. Giving full weight to the Chancellor's finding of fact, the decree cannot be supported.

Decree reversed, with costs, and bill dismissed.

* Judge Collins participated in the hearing of this case and in a conference with regard to its decision, but had retired from the Court prior to the adoption of this opinion.

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  • Sewell v. Sewell, 16
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • October 27, 1958
    ...v. Lent, 202 Md. 240, 96 A.2d 14. There must, however, be some corroboration. Hodges v. Hodges, 213 Md. 322, 131 A.2d 703; Trout v. Trout, 214 Md. 531, 135 A.2d 893; Zink v. Zink, 215 Md. 197, 137 A.2d 139. Before the wife's failure to follow the husband to a new domicile selected by him ca......

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