Boyle v. Maryland State Fair, Inc.

134 A. 124, 150 Md. 333, 1926 Md. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 134 A. 124 (Boyle v. Maryland State Fair, Inc.) 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
Boyle v. Maryland State Fair, Inc., 134 A. 124, 150 Md. 333, 1926 Md. LEXIS 34 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint in this case, which was filed by the appellant, ashed the court to require the defendant to surrender to the plaintiff an undivided one-fourth interest in certain land, to account and pay over to- the plaintiff the income and profits received by the defendant from said interest since IDII, and for other relief. The hill alleges, that on July 14th, 1888, Adolph and Louisa Schmidt, being seised' as tenants by the entireties of a tract of land of about one hundred anti eighteen acres, in Anne Arundel County, conveyed the same to Louisa Schmidt in trust for herself for life, and after her death and upon condition of the payment of certain debts upon the land, the remainder was conveyed to their seven children, one of whom was the plaintiff, and there was also a further trust that the said Louisa, could, at any time during her lifetime, upon the payment by any one of the children of their respective part of the debt, convey to such child its share. The hill also alleges that in 1895 a survey of the land was made, and after the one hundred and eighteen acres was divided among the children “in accordance with the said deed of trust and an agreement be *336 tween said children” a parcel of about four and one-half acres of land at the western extremity of the whole tract remained undisposed of. That as a result of said agreement and partition three of the children were divested of any interest in this four and one-half acres, so that the title to it remained in Louisa Schmidt for life, with remainder over to the other three children and the plaintiff. That on October 20, 1902, Louisa executed a deed conveying said four and one-half acres (hereinafter called the track) to the plaintiff in trust for the plaintiff until her daughter Irene (who later intermarried with one Studds), became eighteen years of age, then in trust for Irene until she became twenty-one, and thereupon the tract was to be conveyed to the said Irene in fee-simple, provided that if Irene died before reaching twenty-one the property was to vest in the plaintiff in fee-simple. That after Irene became twenty-one, the plaintiff, through inadvertence, did not convey the property to her, though she was ready and willing to do soq that some time prior to May 29, 1911, one Hopkins, president of the Laurel Four County Fair, Inc., “the corporate predecessor in interest and title ito the defendant, herein acting for and on, behalf of his corporation,” negotiated with Irene for the purchase of said fract, that the plaintiff knew nothing of the details of these .negotiations “until after they were concluded,” and that these negotiations resulted in Irene selling her interest in the tract to Hopkins. That the officers of the Laurel Four 'County Fair, Inc., thereupon advised the plaintiff that in order to vest in Irene the title and estate given to her under the trust deed of 1902, it was necessary for the plaintiff to sign the deed conveying the tract from Irene to Hopkins not only as trustee, but also individually, because, under the deed of trust, the plaintiff would acquire a beneficial interest in the property if Trene died before becoming twenty-one, and hence the plaintiff’s joinder in the deed individually was needed to prevent any future claim that said Irene had died before attaining the age of twenty-one. It was further alleged that the plaintiff was unskilled in conveyancing, that *337 •she executed the deed relying upon the foregoing representations of the officers of the Laurel Four County Fair, Inc., and that at the time she executed the deed she believed that Louisa Schmidt, the life tenant, had full power over the property during her lifetime, and that she did not know that she, as remainderman, liad any rights during her mother’s lifetime, nor that she could execute a conveyance affecting her interest and remainder under the deed of trust of 1888. That the negotiations of Hopkins were with Irene and not with plaintiff up to the time she was requested to join in the deed; that no one paid or offered to pay the plaintiff any consideration; that her motive in signing the deed was to clear the title and that the officers of the defendant advised her that her signature was necessary to accomplish that; and that the plaintiff does not know whether the agents with whom she dealt knew of her interest and remainder under the deed of 1888, but if they did, then they were •guilty of fraud, and if they did not intend to acquire said interest, then it would he unjust to permit them to retain •said interest under the deed of 1911. The bill then asked the court to decree that the defendant’s right under the deed ■of 1911 ceased upon the death of Louisa Schmidt in 1917, and that the defendant be required to surrender possession of the said land to plaintiff and to account for the mesne profits. Later oil the bill of complaint was amended by filing as exhibits copies of the deed showing the chain of 'title to the land in question from its transfer to Adolph and Louisa Schmidt by Henry and Elizabeth Hartman in 1881, •down to its acquisition by the defendant from, the Laurel Four C’ounty Fair, Inc., in August, 1911. This chain of title shows the original transfer above mentioned, then the trust deed from Adolph and Louisa Schmidt to the latter in 1888, then the trust deed of 1902 from Louisa Schmidt to the plaintiff in which Louisa undertook to convey the fee-■simple title to the four and one-half acres involved in this •case, then the deed of 1911 from, the plaintiff, hoth as trustee and individually, her husband, her daughter Irene and the *338 latter’s husband, to Hopkins, in which the grantors undertook to transfer to the grantee a fee-simple title to the four and a half acres, and which also contained a special warranty and a warranty of further assurance, then the deed of June 6, 1911, from Hopkins to the laurel Four Oounty Fair, Inc., and finally the deed from the last named grantee to the defendant, dated August 25, 1911. The defendant demurred to the amended bill, and the demurrer having been sustained by the learned court below, the plaintiff has appealed.

The plaintiff’s interest in the land in dispute is alleged to be an undivided one-fourth interest. The ownership of the remaining three-fourths interest was before this Court in the case of Maryland State Fair, Inc., v. Basilicus H. Schmidt et al., 147 Md. 613, and we decided in that case that the three-fourths interest there involved did not pass under the deeds from Louisa Schmidt to the plaintiff, and from the plaintiff, her daughter and others, to Hopkins, and so to the Maryland State Fair, Inc., the defendant in that case as well as in this one, but was, on the contrary, vested in three of the children of Adolph and Louisa Schmidt, namely, Henry, Basilicus and Mary, as remaindermen under the original trust deed of 18S8. It was also stated in the course of the opinion in that case that the Maryland State Fair, Inc., “has also acquired and holds the interest of Emma J. 0. Boyle (the plaintiff here) in the whole property,” and it further appears in that opinion that the four and a half acres involved is now part of the Laurel race track and because of this fact has been considerably enhanced in value.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 124, 150 Md. 333, 1926 Md. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-maryland-state-fair-inc-md-1926.