Adams v. Turnbull

147 A.2d 707, 218 Md. 606, 1959 Md. LEXIS 311
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 21, 1959
Docket[No. 143, September Term, 1958.]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 A.2d 707 (Adams v. Turnbull) 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
Adams v. Turnbull, 147 A.2d 707, 218 Md. 606, 1959 Md. LEXIS 311 (Md. 1959).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

At his mother’s death when he was seventeen, J. Fred Adams, Jr. (commonly called Tubby), inherited in trust a small fortune from his maternal grandfather which became his outright in 1925, when he attained his majority. His father died in 1955, leaving Tubby a life estate in the rest and residue of his estate, which consisted of his home place in Baltimore County, Glen Wild, and the proceeds of recently sold acreage, all worth some $600,000. After he had instituted and abandoned a caveat against the will, Tubby sued in equity to enforce specifically a claimed contractual undertaking by his father, said to have been entered into in 1925, to will him outright everything the father owned at his death. The consideration for the promise was alleged to have been the transfer of the son’s inheritance to the father to be used, income and principal, to support and maintain both of them in the style to which they had been accustomed. The chancellor found the evidence as to the contract relied on “uncertain and unconvincing” and dismissed the bill. Tubby appealed.

In 1902 Dr. J. Fred Adams married Miss Nellie Appold, who enjoyed for life a sizeable income from a trust created by her father. In 1904 their son Tubby was born. The family lived luxuriously, in winter in a town house and in summer at Glen Wild, a four hundred acre country place near Catonsville. In 1917 the doctor gave up his practice and devoted his time to farming and the raising and racing of horses. Mrs. *608 Adams had, bought Glen Wild from the trustees of her father’s trust estate and willed it to her husband subject to an unpaid balance of the purchase price. Six months after his wife’s death in 1921, Dr. Adams petitioned the equity court in which the Appold trust estate was administered to allow him $600.00 a month of Tubby’s income to maintain the boy in his accustomed manner—which was a life of ease and comfort. He testified then that this was his wife’s dying request, that he had no income of his own, that he could break even and maintain himself from the operation of the farm, but that he could not practice medicine and support Tubby, and at the same time keep Glen Wild, and said: “And what I must do is to hold together what we have there on the farm * * * for the future benefit of us * * *. If I have to sacrifice that, it would destroy it for my boy and for myself, too.”

Tubby offered evidence that some $240,000 in bearer bonds, registered bonds, stocks, mortgages and cash were delivered to him by the trustees of his grandfather’s trust and that much of it was turned over to his father, including a $9,000 mortgage on Glen Wild from the doctor to the trustees, which Tubby soon cancelled. In 1927, while he was in college, Tubby married Helen Monmonier of Catonsville. The doctor heartily disapproved, was firmly convinced the girl had married Tubby for his money and was determined that neither she nor her family, including his grandson Jimmy Adams, the child of the marriage, should ever get any Adams’ money or property.

The marriage broke up in three years and Jimmy’s custody was given to the mother. The doctor saw very little of him until the last years of his life when they became close to one another. Tubby studied and travelled in Europe for several years and then returned and lived with his father at Glen Wild until 1940, when he remarried. He had inherited some $60,000 from his aunt that same year, which he went through in fairly quick order. Tubby did not earn more than nominal amounts from 1925 to 1940. Besides supporting Tubby and his family from 1925 to 1940 from the family pool, the doctor supplied $11,000 from the same source for the cost of the divorce and a trust fund for Jimmy. In addition, Tubby got *609 about $13,000 in cash from the trustees, which he did not turn over to his father.

During all this time Dr. Adams continued to farm Glen Wild and breed and race thoroughbred horses. He had several successful years and a number of bad ones. From time to time he sold off parts of Glen Wild and lived off the proceeds.

About 1940 Dr. Adams was threatened with suit on a promissory note to his sister. He deeded all his property to Tubby and confessed judgment in his favor for $50,000. The same day the deed from the doctor to Tubby was executed, a deed back from Tubby and his wife to the doctor was executed but not recorded. Several years later, after the suit had been settled, the deed back to the doctor was recorded and Tubby executed a general release in the doctor’s favor.

In 1931 Dr. Adams executed a will in which he left $15,000 to one sister, $10,000 to another sister, $5,000 to a third sister, and $5,000 to Miss Grace Brenner, who had been secretary and housekeeper for his wife and himself for many years, ail free of tax, and left the rest and residue in trust for Tubby until he became forty, with remainder, if Tubby died before forty, to the doctor’s heirs then living (other than Jimmy Adams). In 1954 he made a new will, in which he gave Grace Brenner $50,000 and his grandson, Jimmy Adams, $50,000, and left Tubby “my residence” and thirty-five acres of land surrounding it and “all stocks, bonds and cash * * * except, however, any such * * * as is derived from the sale of real property.” The executors and trustees were directed to sell all real estate and hold the proceeds in trust for Tubby for life with remainder to Jimmy. In March 1955 Dr. Adams executed his last will, the one which, with a codicil dated June 1, 1955, was probated in July 1955. They left the same $50,000 bequests to Grace Brenner and Jimmy, gave Tubby $20,000 tax free, and “my residence” and six acres of land surrounding it, and left all the rest and residue to trustees for the benefit of Tubby for life, and then for the benefit of Jimmy for life with remainder to Jimmy’s children, per stirpes. Over a year after his father’s death, Tubby filed a caveat to the will on the grounds of undue influence, mental *610 incapacity and fraud in the execution of the will. The caveat was later dismissed, and thirty-two months after his father died Tubby filed the proceedings before us.

We assume without deciding .that a demurrer to the bill properly was overruled, that it was shown that Tubby turned over the bulk of his inheritance to his father and that it was all consumed for the support and benefit of Tubby and his father, most of it for the father, and that the testimony as to the alleged contract that came in properly was received as bearing on the contract relied on, because a thorough review and consideration of the record persuades us that the chancellor was not clearly wrong in his finding that the contract had not been proven.

Tubby was precluded from testifying as to the agreement by the evidence act, Code, 1957, Art. 35, Sec. 3. The other witnesses fell into two general categories. There were a number who had heard Dr. Adams over the years make the statements that everything—or Glen Wild—was Tubby’s, or that everything—or Glen Wild—would be Tubby’s when he, the doctor, died. Generally, it would seem, when Dr. Adams said everything was Tubby’s, he did it in refusing to sell land which he did not want to sell (when he did want to sell, he did so as he pleased) ; or, in connection with a statement that he had willed Tubby everything or there was a will drawn “on it” (this, of course, was substantially true from 1931 to 1954).

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Bluebook (online)
147 A.2d 707, 218 Md. 606, 1959 Md. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-turnbull-md-1959.