Cassell v. Pfaifer

221 A.2d 668, 243 Md. 447, 1966 Md. LEXIS 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 19, 1966
Docket[No. 279, September Term, 1965.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 221 A.2d 668 (Cassell v. Pfaifer) 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
Cassell v. Pfaifer, 221 A.2d 668, 243 Md. 447, 1966 Md. LEXIS 544 (Md. 1966).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Truth is always strange. 1 It may sometimes be improbable. 2 These ancient cliches are singularly appropriate to this episode in the lives of the appellant, Junia Cassell (Cassell) and Susan Pfaifer, the appellee (Susan). They met during the Christmas holidays in 1955 and began to keep company in the spring of 1956. She was 35 and widowed. He was 33, married, but separated from his wife. 3 He was a clerk in a neighborhood food market. She kept house for her uncle, John Kruk (sometimes spelled Crook), with whom she had lived since childhood. Neither had advanced beyond grade school. Early in the summer of 1956, while in a hospital convalescing from abdominal surgery, he was visited by Susan and her Uncle John. Because Cassell lived alone they urged him to stay at Uncle John’s house, on York Street, until he was fully recovered. Uncle John said, “You no can take care of yourself, you come and stay until you get well.” For a while he was a guest but when his in *450 surance benefits became available he began to pay $20 per week for his room and board. Soon after he moved in Susan became his mistress.

In 1945 Uncle John had conveyed the York Street property to Susan “reserving * * * a life estate unto himself with the full and absolute power to mortgage, sell, convey * * * the entire estate.” Whether Susan was aware of her remainder interest when she met Cassell is not revealed by the record. Nor is there any indication that Cassell, at that time, knew of it.

Cassell found the amenities of the household to his liking and they (including Susan’s daughter, Jean) settled into a pleasant, harmonious routine. They “ate together, * * * went places together, * * * went out and had fun together, * * * went together on picnics [and vacations].” Cassell bought a washing machine, a studio couch, a hot water heater, a steam iron and a typewriter, all of which were put to use in the house. Susan wore a ring which looked like a wedding band and some people thought they were married. He did odd jobs around the house and, on at least one occasion, provided the necessary materials. As he put it, he “usually done what a man usually does around the house as a married man.” He felt they “were all living there as one happy family.”

In late 1959 a builder demolished the structure next door and, in the process, damaged Uncle John’s house. He had counsel file suit against the builder and in April 1960 a settlement was negotiated. Counsel deducted $600 for services and made his check for the balance ($1,700) payable to Uncle John and Susan. This check was endorsed and left (neither cashed nor deposited) with Paradise Building Association, Inc. (Paradise) .

Uncle John, Susan and Cassell debated whether to repair the house or accept the builder’s offer of $4,000 and buy another one. Cassell thought the house was not worth repairing. Susan said she couldn’t “afford' to buy a house.” After much talk Cassell said “Uncle John loves me like a son and I like him as a father. As [we are] all one family and we are going to get married, what’s wrong with us all going in together?” No one demurred so Susan and Cassell went house hunting. She learned from her younger sister that a house on Doris Avenue was for *451 sale. They looked at it, liked it and, later, took Uncle John to see it. Further details were left to Cassell. He talked to the people at Paradise and from them he learned that Paradise would finance the purchase only if he (Cassell) joined in the execution of the mortgage. It seems that Uncle John and Susan were not acceptable because he was retired, she was a widow, and neither had sufficient means or income. Cassell said he relayed all this information to Uncle John and Susan.

Early in May Uncle John disposed of the house and Cassell and Susan signed the contract for the Doris Avenue property. As earlier noted, the check for $1,700 had been left with Paradise. Cassell went to the Paradise office, added his name as an-endorser, deposited $1,200 and received the check of Paradise for $500, which he and Susan took with them when they went to sign the contract for the Doris Avenue property. The owners presented them with a contract on a printed form which was not fully completed. Cassell wrote in his name as buyer and made other additions concerning certain appurtenances. He signed the contract and then passed it to Susan. Oddly enough she signed Uncle John’s name. Their signatures were witnessed by her daughter, Jean and a boy friend. The purchase price was $10,200, $500 of which the sellers’ receipt stated was “Received from Junia H. Cassell.” Cassell had written in also a provision calling for settlement in 30 days, “if possible.”

By arrangement with the owners of the Doris Avenue house, Cassell, before they moved in, made a number of repairs and improvements. Early in July he went to the office of Paradise and signed the application for the loan he had negotiated earlier. The application indicates that “title [is] to be taken in the names of Sue Pfaifer, John Kruk and Junia H. Cassell.” Item 2, under the heading “Personal History,” calls for the full name of the applicant’s wife, “if married.” Cassell inserted “Sue Pfaifer (wife to be).”

During the forenoon of 7 July I960 Uncle John and Susan (Cassell was not present) went to the office of The Title Guarantee Company for the settlement of the York Street house. Uncle John signed the deed and the memorandum of settlement and received the title company’s check, to his order, for $3,-741.94. In the afternoon of the same day Cassell, Susan and *452 Uñele John went to the office of I. William Schimmel, Esq., the attorney for Paradise, for the settlement of the Doris Avenue house. The memorandum of settlement shows that the amount of the loan was $5,200, to which was added the amount Paradise was holding in escrow 4 ($1,400). Uncle John handed over the $3,741.94 check he had received at the York Street settlement which was more than was needed so Mr. Schimmel gave Uncle John his check for the excess ($162.40). The sellers signed and delivered a deed which created a joint tenancy in Susan, Uncle John and Cassell. The mortgage, requiring monthly payments of $43.89 principal and interest, and $31.46 expenses, was then signed by all three.

Uncle John failed rapidly after the move to Doris Avenue. He had been something of an invalid since 1957. Cassell had taken him to and from the hospital a number of times and frequently he assisted Susan in performing the nursing services the old man required. One of the symptoms of his ailment was an incontinence of both bladder and bowel. Cassell, at times, had to assist in attaching the urinal device he had to wear. He got along well with Uncle John, who “was like a father to him.” Cassell felt he “was like a son to ” Uncle John. He was with him the night he died (28 October 1961).

Uncle John’s death brought to an end any financial assistance he may have provided. Otherwise things went on pretty much as before. In the spring of 1963 they bought an awning for the house.

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Bluebook (online)
221 A.2d 668, 243 Md. 447, 1966 Md. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassell-v-pfaifer-md-1966.