Colburn v. Ellers

153 A. 14, 160 Md. 104, 1931 Md. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 13, 1931
Docket[No. 56, October Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 A. 14 (Colburn v. Ellers) 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
Colburn v. Ellers, 153 A. 14, 160 Md. 104, 1931 Md. LEXIS 56 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Milton F. Colburn, a widower, died at his home, 114 Cathedral Street, Annapolis, Md., on June 27th, 1926, in his seventy-ninth year. He had been twice married, and three children of the first marriage, Gilbert J., Milton F. Colburn, and Elizabeth E. Krouse, and seven of the second, Mary, the wife of Angelo Geraci, Margaret, the wife of William Ellers, Della, the wife of Charles Staff, and James B., Harry V., David 0., and William J. Colburn, survived him.

Throughout the earning period of his life he was employed in some form of railroad work, for a time as an engineer, later as a motorman, and finally as a flagman or crossing watchman.

He led an active, hard, and at time hazardous life, and in the course of it suffered on several occasions accidental injuries. But while those injuries left certain manual disabilities, his general health appears to have been good until the latter part of 1924, when he suffered a stroke of paralysis. He never fully recovered from that attack, and although after it for a time he was able to get about and to converse, his progress Was slow and uncertain, and his speech difficult, and at times unintelligible except to those with whom he was in immediate and daily contact.

After the death of his second wife, he continued to live in the Cathedral Street house, although as his children grew up and made homes of their own his family became smaller, until there were left only Margaret Ellers and her husband, and Mrs. Staff, and they remained with him to the end.

*106 While he accumulated a small personal estate, the only property of substantial value which he owned was the Cathedral Street home.

Some five or six months after he had been first stricken with paralysis, Mr. Colburn sent for Mr. Nicholas H. Green, a well-known and highly respected member of the bar, and directed him to prepare a deed conveying the Cathedral Street property to his daughter Julia Margaret Ellers, subject to a life estate in the grantor. The deed was prepared, and on May 29th, 1925, duly executed and recorded, and something over a year later, on June 27th, 1926, the grantor died.

On December 30th, 1926, a bill of complaint was filed in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel- County, in which Gilbert J., Harry V., James B., David O., William J., and Milton E. Colburn, and Elizabeth E. Krouse were named as complainants, and Julia Margaret Ellers and William, her husband, and Della Staff, defendants. Later James B., David 0., and William A. Colburn filed a petition stating that they had been joined as parties plaintiff without their knowledge or consent, and praying the court to order their names stricken from the cause as parties plaintiff, which was done.

The plaintiffs in their bill alleged that, at the time he executed the deed to Mrs. Ellers, Mr. Colburn was so infirm and helpless in body, and that his mind was so “enfeebled and impaired,” that he was wholly incapable of making a valid deed or contract, and that, while he was in that state, he was induced to execute it through the fraud and misrepresentation of the defendants. Later the bill was amended so as to charge that the deed was procured through the “fraud, misrepresentation and undue influence of the defendants or some of them, conspiring together.” The defendants answered the original and amended bills, and in their answers denied that, when he executed the deed to Mrs. Ellers, Milton F. Colburn was incapable of executing a valid deed or contract, and they denied that its execution had been induced through fraud, misrepresentation, or undue influence, exercised or practiced upon him by any one. The case was tried *107 upon those issues, and at the conclusion of the trial the chancellor dismissed the bill. The appeal is from that decree.

The picture which the record presents is that of an old man, who had led an active laborious life, and who at the end of it found himself enfeebled by disease, irritable, short tempered, difficult to bear with, but nevertheless needing constant and loving care and attention. He was possessed of a small estate, with no resources sufficient to permit him to buy that attention from strangers, but he did receive it from two of his daughters, Della, who was married to Charles Staff, and Margaret Julia, the wife of William Ellers, who lived in his home with him. His small estate, if divided among his ten children, would have given to each of these daughters a sum wholly inadequate to reward them for their loyal and faithful service. He was conscious of that, and he repeatedly expressed the intention of giving to them the house in which he lived, and that purpose appears to have been accepted, by at least one of the appellants, James B. Colburn, who testified in the case, as just, fair, and appropriate. The deed which is the subject of this proceeding was the consummation of that purpose.

The appellants attack it upon two inconsistent grounds, one that the grantor lacked the mental capacity to validly execute it, the other that it was induced by undue influence and fraud.

The contention that the grantor was mentally incompetent at the time he executed the deed appears to rest upon the theory that his age and his physical debility were sufficient in themselves to justify such an inference. But the law is otherwise. While extreme physical weakness due to age, casualty, or disease is a relevant circumstance, to be weighed and considered in determining the existence of that degree of mental capacity required for the execution of a valid deed or contract, it is not necessarily conclusive nor even controlling. In Higgins v. Carlton, 28 Md. 115, it was, stated in the caveatees’ seventh prayer, which this court approved, that “neither age nor sickness, nor extreme distress, nor debility of body, will affect the capacity to make a will if sufficient intelligence *108 remain.” And in Underhill on Wills the same principle is expressed in the following language: “But physical weakness, whether arising from injuries caused hy accident, or from illness or old age, while material to be considered upon the question of capacity and of undue influence, is not conclusive as to either. It is well settled that a person may enjoy full testamentary capacity while he is suffering from extreme physical weakness or from the violence of disease. He may have been in an extreme state of weakness, bedridden and speechless, utterly unable to move his limbs or to raise his hands to grasp the pen with which the signature to the will is made, and yet execute a valid will.”

In the absence of proof of prior mental incompetence permanent in its nature, in the trial of any issue involving a want of mental capacity to execute a valid deed or contract at a given time, the burden of proving the absence of such capacity is upon the person alleging it. Eor the law presumes every man to be sane and capable of making a valid deed, contract or will. Scheller v. Schindel, 153 Md. 582, 138 A. 415; Bell v. Wolfkill, 152 Md. 416, 137 A. 35; Smith v. Schuppner, 125 Md. 417, 93 A. 514.

The appellants offered only three witnesses whose testimony had any possible connection with the issue of mental capacity. Of these James B.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 14, 160 Md. 104, 1931 Md. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colburn-v-ellers-md-1931.