Bentley v. Bentley

119 A. 293, 141 Md. 428, 1922 Md. LEXIS 139
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 119 A. 293 (Bentley v. Bentley) 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
Bentley v. Bentley, 119 A. 293, 141 Md. 428, 1922 Md. LEXIS 139 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Boyd, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Miss Harriet S. Bentley lived on a farm in Howard County, Md., a few miles from Laurel. The value of the farm, which contained about 141 acres, is not definitely shown in the record, but Miss Bentley acquired a half in *429 terest in it on August 12th, 1910, and on November 19th, 1918, after some proceedings in court, she acquired title to the whole of it, and gave a mortgage of that elate on it to Janies W. Travers for $3,000 — taking up a prior mortgage which he held ou it. As far as the exhibits-, etc., in the record indicate, the farm was apparently valued at about six thousand dollars in 1918.

On the 25th of June, 1919, Miss Bentley made a deed of trust to James W. Travers, trustee, by which she conveyed and assigned all the property she had, including the farm and personal property, in trust for him to- manage! the same and co-llect the income therefrom and, -after paying all taxes, fixed charges and expenses, to pay the net, income to her for her natural life, and after her death the trust to “close,” and all the property “to he paid over, deeded, or transferred in whatever manner may he necessary and proper, by said James W. Travers-, trustee, to Frank H. Bentley, absolutely.” Miss Bentley died on July 22nd, 1920, leaving surviving her two- brothers, Benjamin A. and' Frank TL Bentley, and two nieces and a nephew, children of her brother Charles, who had predeceased her.

On June 17th, 1921, Benjamin A. Bentley filed a bill of complaint against Frank IT. Bentley and James W. Travers as trustee and in his individual capacity, alleging that the-deed of trust had been obtained through and by “duress, fraud and undue influence exercised and practiced upon” Miss Bentley, and praying that it be “annulled, set aside and held for naught,” and that James W. Travers be required to* render an account of all things received, had or done in connection with his supposed -trusteeship. The lower court on March 28th, 1922, p-assed a decree setting aside the deed and declaring it to he utterly null and void, requiring the trustee forthwith to return to that court an account, and ordering the defendants to pay the costs. From that decree this appeal was taken by Frank H. Bentley.

Miss Bentley was about seventy-eight years of age when she made the deed of trust. The evidence is conflicting as *430 to her mental condition, although physically she was infirm for some time prior to the execution of the deed of trust. Forty exceptions were filed by the plaintiff to questions and answers asked witnesses by the defendants relating to her mental condition, and if we were required to pass on them we would be compelled to hold that the most of them were well taken, as laymen in most of the instances, expressed opinions as to her mental capacity without there being such foundations laid- as are required by our decisions. The lower court did not pass on the exceptions, but decided the case on other grounds regardless of them, and hence we will not do more than say that there was little or no probative force in the testimony of the lay witnesses on either side as to the mental condition of Miss Bentley, if we consider all of it, although there were no exceptions filed by the defendants. The testimony of Dr. Linthicum, the only physician examined, shows that he had not seen her professionally for about two years before the deed of trust was made, and if he saw her at all during that time, neither the time nor the circumstances are given. His evidence is not of much aid to the court in reaching a conclusion, as it does not show "whether or not she was in such a condition as she might have been easily influenced.

There are a few prominent facts which are determinative of the case. When the record is stripped of immaterial matters and some evidence on both sides as to- her mental condition, we find an old lady- seventy-seven or seventy-eight years of age possessed of a farm, subject to a mortgage of probably something like half its value, and some personal property, the amount or value of which is not shown. She had two brothers., two nieces and a nephew, children of a deceased brother, who survived her. One brother, the plaintiff, had formerly lived in Maryland, but was staying with his daughter in Washington, D. C., in 1918, when he was called by some one over the telephone to go to his sister, Miss Bentley, who was sick. He went there the first of *431 May, 1918, and remained until the fifteenth of September, 1919. He was evidently a man of small means, and made and sold brooms for a living. He testified as to a number of peculiar things she did, but we will not state them, as they do not throw much, if any, light on the case.

Frank H. Bentley lived about a mile from bis sister’s place. Before the plaintiff went there, he would take butter and eggs to market for her, and the plaintiff testified that bis brother attended to business for lier. He said that he and his brother talked about the condition of their sister’s mind, and he told his brother “there ought to be a guardian put over her.” He replied, “I know that, it ought to have been done five years ago.” He was asked if he said anything else, and answered: “Well, 1 asked him if be wanted to go with me and have a. guardian appointed. He never said whether he would or would not. He said it would make the family mad. I told him there was no other family hut me and him and brother Charlie’s children.” That was in 1918., Miss Hattie E. Bentley, a daughter of the plaintiff, testified that her I hide Frank said in their store, the latter part of the summer or early fall of 1917, that her aunt ought to have a guardian. Mrs. Sarah Jackson, an aunt by marriage of Benjamin and Frank Bentley, testified tliat Frank told her in 1917 that his sister was unable to do business., and when she was at Miss Bentley’s in August, 1919, she told her that she did not know what she was signing when sho signed the deed of trust. Frank IT. Bentley said his brother, Benjamin, talked with him on one occasion about having; a guardian appointed for her, “and I said, you want to make her good and mad, you just mention it to- her.” He said he did not remember telling his niece about having a guardian appointed.

There is no doubt that for some reason Alias Bentley did not feel very kindly towards her brother, Benjamin, although he spent more time with her than any other relative the latter part of her life, up to September, .1919. That she was *432 feeble and needed assistance in 1918, 1919 and until her death, cannot be successfully denied, but in October, 1919, Mr. and Mrs. Carr moved into her place. The evidence of the two defendants is sufficient to show that they did, consciously or unconsciously, influence Miss Bentley to do whát she did do in reference to the deed of trust. Frank H. Bentley testified that as he went to market to- do her shopping, she called him in the house, “and wanted to know what she could do to.keep brother Ben from disposing of everything on the place. I said, well, I will do anything I can for you. Mr. Travers was suggested because he had a mortgage on the place. I suggested Mr. Travers be appointed trustee, and she said that was all right, and- she said for me to- tell him to come up.

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Bluebook (online)
119 A. 293, 141 Md. 428, 1922 Md. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bentley-v-bentley-md-1922.