Conser v. Snowden

54 Md. 175, 1880 Md. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 54 Md. 175 (Conser v. Snowden) 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
Conser v. Snowden, 54 Md. 175, 1880 Md. LEXIS 81 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of assumpsit instituted by the appellant against the appellee as administrator c. t. a. of Agnes Scholl. The narr. is in the ordinary form, with money counts, and a hill of particulars limits the claim of the appellant to the count for money had and’received to the appellant’s use, and defines the claim to he for one thousand dollars with interest accrued, which has been received by the appellee for the use of the appellant, the same having been given the appellant by the appellee’s testator as a gift, mortis causa.

The facts essential to a proper understanding of the questions presented for our decision are as follows: Agnes Scholl, who for many years was a servant in the appellant’s family, was ill at Bay view Asylum, and the appellant and his daughter, (Mrs. Schaefer) in March, 1811, visited her there. While there, Mrs. Schaefer testifies, “She made remarks and exclamations as though she was suffering pain; she then' said she had a considerable amount of money in a Bank on Gay street, which she wished to leave the appellant; he asked her to leave it to his children instead, and she requested him to prepare a will leaving it equally to witness and her two brothers; she then seemed much worried lest some accident should befall this will, and appellant suggested that she should give him an order for the money on the hank; to this she assented, and asked him to prepare such an order, and [181]*181also told him to obtain her bank book from a Mrs. Margaret A. G-ambrill, in .whose custody she said it then was; she said she did not remember the exact amount of the balance shown by this book, but knew it exceeded one thousand dollars. On April 3rd, 1877, the witness and appellant went again to see her, when she signed the following will, “ In the name of God, Amen! I, Agnes Scholl, of the City of Baltimore, and State of Maryland, being of lawful age and in my right mind, after due reflection, and uninfluenced by any one concerned, and of my own will and accord, do make this my last will and testament. And, first, it is my will that so much of the $65 last deposited in the Savings Bank of Baltimore as may be necessary, be expended to secure my remains a decent Christian burial. Secondly. It is my will that all my other goods and moneys and all my estate and effects whatsoever, be distributed equally between Virginia M. Conser, Carlton Conser and C. Ellsworth Conser, children of S. L. M. Conser, excepting my clothes and household effects, which are stored at Mrs. Louisa Caskie’s, which shall be Virginia M. Conser’s exclusively. And thirdly, it is my will and pleasure that the said S. L. M. Conser, of the city aforesaid, shall see that this, my will, is fully and truly executed.” This will was attested by V. Marion Conser, (Mrs. Schaefer), and the appellant. The testatrix died on the tenth of July, 1877, and the will filed in the proper office and proved by S. L. M. Conser on the 6th of August, 1877, and at the time S. L. 'M. Conser proved the will, he swore he received it from the testatrix, and had retained it, and knew of no other’. The order given appellant on April, 3rd, 1877, read as .follows:

<- Baltimore, April 3rd, 1877. The Savings Bank of Baltimore, pay to the order of S. L. M. Conser, or bearer, the sum of one thousand dollars and-cents, and charge book No.—. Signed, Agnes X Scholl.” It was witnessed [182]*182by Y. Marion. Conser. A memorandum was added, “The book must be sent with this order.” The order for the bank book was in these words, “ Mrs. Gambrill will please give Mr. Conser my bank book.” It was signed by Agnes Scholl making her mark, and was without witness. This last paper was first in appellant’s possession, and was • afterwards given to the Avitness, Mrs. Schaefer, who never gave it back as she remembers, and after search it cannot be found, and witness thought it was lost. The order for the money, after it was given the appellant, witness and the appellant took to the Bank and exhibited, and were told the money was there, and the order in proper form, but could not be paid till the book was produced. No proof was offered that the book was ever in appellant’s bands, or that he. ever made any effort to get it. It was not shown what became of the bank book. But the appellant, to raise the presumption that it was never returned to the testatrix, proved. by a daughter of Mrs. Gambrill, the custodian of it, that for many years prior .to the 3rd of April, 1811, her mother kept a bank book for Mrs. Scholl; that it was kept in her wardrobe; that witness lived with her mother, and had never known of this book being given up prior to April 3rd, 1811, and believed it was then in her custody. About that time her mother was frequently absent from Baltimore, visiting in Anne Arundel County. The appellant having closed his case without offering any other proof than what has been herein incorporated, the appellee was required by the Court to ask an instruction “ that under the pleadings in this cause there is not sufficient evidence on which the plaintiff can recover, and their verdict must be for defendant.” This was done, and the instruction was granted. The granting of this prayer and the refusal to permit the appellant to testify as a witness are the only subjects of exception. We will consider them in reverse order, and first pass upon the second exception, which relates to the instruction given the jury.

[183]*183The appellant contends that all the requisites necessary to the perfection of a gift mortis causa coexist in this case, and especially complains that in deciding that a sufficient delivery was not effected, so as to entitle the appellant to recover, the Court improperly held there was no difference in the legal essentials of delivery in a gift mortis causa and one inter vivos. To sustain this view, very many cases have heen cited and relied on, which it will not he necessary for us to review or refer to, for the doctrine is well settled in Maryland, that there is no difference in the legal requirements to make a good delivery in gifts inter vivos and mortis causa. According to the decisions in this State, if the delivery in this case was not such as would have made an effective gift inter vivos, it will he insufficient to perfect an attempted gift mortis causa. Pennington, Adm’r, &c. vs. Gittings’ Ex’r, &c., 2 Gill & Johnson, 215; Bradley and Wife vs. Hunt, Adm’r of Jack, 5 Gill & Johns., 58; Hebb vs. Hebb, 5 Gill, 509; Taylor vs. Henry, 48 Md., 559. Justice Woodward, in Mitchener vs. Dale, 23 Pa. St. R., 59, concisely defines a gift mortis causa to he that of a “ chattel made hy a person in his last illness, or in periculo mortis, subject to the implied condition that if the donor recover, or if the donee die first, the gift shall he void.”

In Taylor vs. Henry, 48 Md., this Court says, “ In order to render perfect a donatio mortis causa three things must concur: 1. That the gift he made with a view to the death. 2. That it he with a condition, either express or implied, that it shall take effect only on the death of the donor, hy a disorder from which he is then suffering ; and 3. That there he a delivery of the subject of the donation.” In that case, as here, the claim was made to a fund on deposit in hank, which was claimed as a gift of that character. In that case 'the deceased was suffering from the disease of which he died.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Md. 175, 1880 Md. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conser-v-snowden-md-1880.