Brager v. Friedenwald

97 A. 515, 128 Md. 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 97 A. 515 (Brager v. Friedenwald) 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
Brager v. Friedenwald, 97 A. 515, 128 Md. 8 (Md. 1916).

Opinions

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

At the conclusion of the argument of this case the duty of preparing the opinion devolved upon Judge Stockbbidge. He prepared and submitted an opinion, but a difference arose among the judges as to the conclusion which should be reached upon the question presented by the record, and the opinion was not adopted. But this diversity of opinion does not *10 arise over the principles of law applicable to actions of this character, bnt it arises out of a difference of understanding as to the legal purport and effect of the facts contained in the record. This opinion expresses the views of the majority of the Court.

Upon the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the Court instructed the jury to find their verdict for the defendants upon the ground that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient- to entitle the plaintiff to recover. In obedience to this instruction, the jury found their verdict for the defendants. A judgment was entered on the verdict in favor of the defendants and the plaintiff has brought this appeal.

The record contains seven bills of exceptions. Six of them were-reserved by the plaintiff to rulings of the Court on questions of evidence, and the other to the granting of the prayer referred to by which the case was withdrawn from the consideration of the jury. As the only important question in the case arises over the granting of that prayer, that question will be first considered.

It is important to bear in mind that in deciding the question of the propriety of granting that prayer we do not decide whether or not the evidence is sufficient to' support the plaintiff’s case against any, or all of the defendants. We do not decide, or express any opinion as to whether it is or not, and we are not to be understood as expressing or intimating any opinion upon the credibility of witnesses, or upon the truth of the evidence. In our system of jurisprudence the province of the jury is separate and distinct from that of the Court. When a prayer, such as we have in this case, is submitted to withdraw a case from the jury, the only question the judge can decide upon such an application is whether the plaintiff has offered any evidence legally sufficient to sustain the cause of action. If there is any evidence legally sufficient for that purpose, it is the exclusive duty and province of the jury to say, when all the facts have been submitted to them, whether they are of sufficient probative force to support the *11 plaintiff’s case. In passing upon the propriety of granting this prayer the evidence adduced by the plaintiff in support of her case must he assumed to be true, and she must be given the benefit of all legitimate and fair inferences deducible therefrom in her favor. So the real question before us on this prayer is, not whether the testimony offered proved the plaintiff’s case, or whether the jury ought to have so decided had the case been submitted to them, hut whether there was any legally sufficient evidence offered by the plaintiff from which the jury could properly find, if they believed it true, that the defendants were guilty of the wrongs alleged in the declaration. This principle, it is true, is elementary, hut it is well at- times for our guidance to recur to and restate fundamental principles.

There is one circumstance to which it is proper to refer before proceeding to a discussion of the main facts. The plaintiff called Leo, Jacob and Moses Friedenwald and proved by them that they, and at least two of the defendants, had personal knowledge that the will of 1903, hereafter more particularly referred to, was obtained by the grossest sort of undue influence exerted upon Mr. Friedenwald. Upon cross-examination these witnesses testified that Albert A. Brager, the husband of the plaintiff, and who was acting as her agent and representative throughout the entire negotiations and litigation connected with this estate, was told by them of the exercise of this undue influence before the attack on the 1903 will; that he was informed of all they knew upon the subject. This was denied by Mr. Brager, who testified that he did not know of the specific acts of undue influence until long after both settlements hereafter mentioned were made, and not until these witnesses had testified to this undue influence at the trial of the caveat to the will of 1903. One of these witnesses, Jacob H. Friedenwald, was a party to this suit, and the plaintiff was not bound by his testimony, and it was competent for her to show what the real facts were, notwithstanding the testimony of the other witnesses. *12 There was a conflict of evidence upon a vital question of fact which it was for the jury, and not for the Court, tq decide.

The record is large, and, without prolonging this opinion by a minute and tedious discussion of the evidence, we will give a brief outline of such facts appearing in the record, which in our opinion, should have carried the case to the jury-

Joseph Eriedenwald, who was about eighty-four years of age, died in Baltimore City on December 24, 1910. His wife had predeceased him. He left surviving him twelve children and three grandchildren, the children of a deceased daughter, Rebecca Bloch. These surviving children and grandchildren were his heirs at law and distributees. These children in this opinion will be treated as constituting one of the surviving children of Mr. Eriedenwald. Mr. Eriedenwald was a wealthy man—the exact value of his estate does not appear from this record, but it was probably as much as four millions of dollars. Had he died intestate, each of the surviving twelve children would have taken a one-thirteenth part of his estate, and the above named children of his deceased daughter would have taken the other one-thirteenth part of this vast estate. According to the evidence of Jacob H. Eriedenwald, one of the defendants, and of Moses S. Eriedenwald, another son, it was the fixed intention of Mr. Eriedenwald that his estate should be equally divided among his children. In testifying as to the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary (February 14, 1902) of the marriage of his father and mother, Jacob H. Eriedenwald, said: “We presented my father with a loving cup, with each and every one of the children’s pictures around and father’s and mother’s picture in the center. My father made a few remarks, telling us what good children he had, what fine children he had; that he wanted us to stick together, be one big family, congenial, and that he dearly loved all his children, and at that time he said he was going to divide his worldly possessions equally *13 among all his children.” Speaking of the fifty-first wedding anniversary, Moses S.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A. 515, 128 Md. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brager-v-friedenwald-md-1916.