Blunt v. Blunt

110 A. 473, 136 Md. 194, 1920 Md. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 110 A. 473 (Blunt v. Blunt) 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
Blunt v. Blunt, 110 A. 473, 136 Md. 194, 1920 Md. LEXIS 48 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Stockbridge, L,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

When Amanda F. W. Blunt died she left a will and codicil, duly executed to pass real estate in Maryland. By the terms of the instrument she made a division of farm lands situate in this State, among her several children, with the exception of William R. Blunt.

Her son William thereupon filed a caveat to the will. This caveat was concluded by a - compromise agreement entered into between William R. Blunt and his brothers and sisters, under which a certain piece of land was to be conveyed to William. Thereupon the verdict of a jury was taken sustaining the will, and that phase of the litigation closed.

Following this came two suits, one in which William R.' Blunt was the plaintiff and his brothers and sisters the defendants, the object of which was to require a specific performance of the terms of the compromise, and the conveyance to William R. Blunt of the lot of land which by that compromise he was to receive.

There was also a bill filed by Bradley T. J. Blunt against William R. Blunt and others for the specific performance of an alleged contract, by the terms of which William R. Blunt was to convey to his brother Bradley a portion of the lot which it had been agreed he should receive in the division of the estate of his mother.

The theory of this bill was that the consideration for this transfer was the right to cut the; timber on a certain other lot of ground, which had been devised to Bradley for life, with remainder to his children.

In the bill filed by William R. Blunt the theory was that of a sale of the property which he should receive under the compromise agreement for a cash consideration of $2,500, *196 to be secured by a mortgage upon tbe land, and that so far* as the timber was concerned on the other lot, he was acting merely as the agent of his brother Bradley.

In the bill which William B. filed he prayed for the specific enforcement of the terms of the compromise.

The two cases were then consolidated, and the consolidated cases heard before the judge in Baltimore County, sitting as a court of equity, by whom it was decreed that William B. Blunt was entitled to have conveyed to him the property specified in the compromise agreement, and that the contract of sale between Bradley and William B. had been in part performed, William B. having received the lumber, and Bradley having exercised ownership over the part agreed to be conveyed to him by renting the same out, by which part performance the case was removed from the operation of the statute of frauds* and the Court, to some extent at least of its own motion, inasmuch as the timber had been cut on the land of Bradley, which under the terms of his mother’s will he had but a life interest in, decreed that the life interest with the remainder to his children should be made to apply also to the land to be acquired from William. As one at least of the remaindermen was an infant the Court could do no less, as the timber had been cut from the land in which there were these remainder interests, and it was the duty of the Court to protect the interest of the infants.

At the time when the contract, whatever it was, was made, it was impossible for William B. Blunt to have made a deed of the property to his brother Bradley, inasmuch as no title to it had ever been conveyed to him by his brothers and sisters, in accordance with the provisions of the compromise agi'eement.

The law of specific performance is well settled by many adjudications, both in this State and elsewhere, to only one of which does it seem necessary to refer in this opinion. It is well summarized in 25 R. C. L., pp. 203-258, and in Miller on Equity, Sec. 656, 660. Nor does there seem to> be any *197 serious contention between counsel as to what the law is, unless it is as to the amount of proof required.

It was said in the oral argument and repeated in the printed brief, that the contract sought to be enforced must be “so clearly established as to satisfy the Court beyond all reasonable doubt.” This is the familiar form of expressing the rule of the criminal law as to the character of proof requisite to sustain a conviction, and for this reliance is placed upon the language in Semmes v. Worthington, 38 Md. 298, 318.

The expression of J ubge Alyey in this ease must be taken in connection with the facts as they were shown in that case, which in many respects was quite different from the ease at bar. It must not be understood as importing the rule of the criminal law into an equity case, while it is perfectly true that the quantum of proof required in a case for specific performance is greater than that demanded in most classes of civil cases.

The case as presented in this Court is entirely a question of fact and not a question of law. It is not an easy matter to determine exactly what the real facts were, or the precise nature of the contract between William B. Blunt and his brother Bradley.

The testimony adduced in support of their respective theories is not merely divergent, but absolutely irreconcilable. The several witnesses contradict one another and frequently in different portions of their testimony contradict themselves, while all of them show clearly, either an interest in the ultimate result of the suit, or a plain bias in favor- of one or the other of the «liicf parties litigant. There is hardly one of them who can bo properly regarded as an impartial witness, whose testimony can be relied upon to establish the contention of one or the other of the brothers beyond any peradventure.

Something also is to be attributed to the lapse of five or six " years which occurred between the time of entering into the *198 contract, and the time when the witnesses were called to give their testimony, and the frailties of human memory are well known. Unfortunately not all of the witnesses are as frank as Mr. Smallwood, who in testifying to the contract between the brothers, unconsciously perhaps, disclosed what not unnaturally may have colored his testimony, when he said, “I had an apple in that bag myself.”

It is evident that this did not apply solely to him, for Mr. Roddy, who superintended the sawing of the lumber, and who testified that his arrangement was -with William R. Blunt, nevertheless rendered -an account against both William R. and Bradley Blunt, which he explained or attempted to explain by saying in substance that his idea was to make somebody responsible to him for the amount claimed to be due, and that as looking to that end he made out the account against both of the brothers, and would in all probability have made it out just as readily against other or additional parties, had he supposed that thereby he could secure what he claimed to be due him.

If it were possible to restore the two Blunt brothers to their status in quo it would undoubtedly be a proper case for the Court to- do- so, and leave the parties in the situation which they had created for themselves. This is no longer posrsible. The timber upon the land which was devised to Bradley T. R.

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Bluebook (online)
110 A. 473, 136 Md. 194, 1920 Md. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blunt-v-blunt-md-1920.