Dalrymple v. Gamble

13 A. 156, 68 Md. 523, 1888 Md. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 13 A. 156 (Dalrymple v. Gamble) 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
Dalrymple v. Gamble, 13 A. 156, 68 Md. 523, 1888 Md. LEXIS 33 (Md. 1888).

Opinions

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The- object of the bill in this case is to obtain from the Court a construction of the will of William H. Dalrjunple, who died in California on the 22d of November, 1881. The testator went to Galifornia from Baltimore in 1849, and ■was, thereafter, a citizen and resident of that State. At the time of his death, and for a number of years before, he lived upon his ranch in Marin County, about twenty miles from San Francisco, where the will in question was executed, on the 21st of August, 1881, and is as follows :

“Dalrymple Ranch, 21si August, 1881.
“This is to certify that in case my present sickness should terminate in my death, it is my will that my ranch [525]*525and all my personal property shall he inherited by Marie Elizabeth Hatch. Witness my hand.
“Witnesses: W. H. Dalrymple.”
Geo. S. Riggs,
Jno. Hanna,
Geo. R. Tamer.”
“I further will that my four lots, located on Gift Map, number one, and one lot on Dolores, corner of Grove Street, San Francisco, now incumbered by mortgage to Peter Alferitz, when unincumbered, shall likewise go to above named Marie Elizabeth Hatch. Witness my hand at Dalrymple Ranch, this twenty-first day of August, eighteen hundred and eighty-one.
“Witnesses : W. H. Dalrymple.”
Geo. S. Riggs,
Jno. Hanna,
Geo. R. Turner.”

At the time this will was executed and at his death, the testator’s ranch and his interest in these lots, were worth about $1000, and his personal property in California about $100. But he had living in Baltimore two brothers and two sisters, and, on the 30th of October, 1881, after the will was made, and twenty-three days before the testator’s death, one of these brothers, the Rev. Edwin A. Dalrymple, died intestate, leaving quite a large personal estate, the testator’s distributive share of which amounted to about $30,000. Shortly before his death the testator had read in the newspapers a notice of the death of his brother in Baltimore, but there is nothing to show that he knew that his brother had died intestate. His surviving brother and sisters in Baltimore were informed of the death of the testator shortly after it occurred, and were at the same time advised that his will would probably pass to the legatee his distributive share of his deceased brother’s [526]*526estate, and that there was good reason for contesting the validity of that will upon the ground of mental incapacity and undue influence. They, thereupon, filed a caveat thereto on these grounds in the California Probate Court. The contest was warm and protracted, and the record of it, which is in evidence before us, shows that there was not only reasonable but very strong- grounds for instituting it. The result, however, of that contest was an order of the Probate Court admitting the will to probate, which upon appeal was affirmed by the Supreme Court of that State. Estate of Dalrymple, 67 Cal., 444. The two main propositions for which the'appellants in the present case, contend, are.:

1st. That this will is a conditional one, and that the sickness therein referred to, did not, in fact, terminate in the testator’s death, and therefore the will is wholly inoperative.

2nd. That under the circumstances of the case the will operates only upon .the personal property which the testator owned at the date of its execution.

1st. As to the question involved in the first proposition, our opinion is, that it has been conclusively settled by- the decision in the California case, and is no longer open for discussion or decision here. According to the statute law of that State, it is expressly provided, that “a will the validity of which is made by its own terms conditional, may be denied probate according to the event with reference to the condition.” 1 Cal. Code, sec. 6281. And with equal explicitness the power and jurisdiction to try and determine any question “substantially affecting the validity” of a will, are vested in the Probate Court. Issues involving such questions must, on request of either party in writing, filed three days prior to the day set for hearing, be tried by a jury summoned in that Court, and if no jurv is demanded, the Court must try and determine the same. 2 Gal. Code, secs. 11,312, 11,313. The issues sub[527]*527mittedUo the jury in this California case involved simply the formal execution of the will, testamentary capacity, and undue influence; but in the course of the trial, evidence was fully gone into as to the nature and character of the disease of which the testator died, and the state and condition of his health from the date of the will to the time of his death. The jury found all the issues submitted to them in favor of the will. Upon this verdict, “and upon the evidence oral and written submitted by the parties,” the Court determined that the decedent at the time he executed the will, “was sick and never thereafter fully recovered, but that said illness terminated in his death.” This adjudication formed part of the order admitting the will to probate from which the appeal was taken. One of the grounds of error relied upon by the contestants before the Appellate Court, was that this issue was a material one directly raised by the pleadings, and not having been submitted to the jury it remained to be decided by the Court upon evidence directly addressed to the Court upon it; that the Court could not assume to decide it upon evidence taken before the jury upon other and different issues, without the consent of all parties to the proceedings ; that the contestants never gave such assent, nor have they waived their right to offer new and additional evidence on such issue, or their right thereafter to present such an issue directly to the Court to be independently decided upon any and all competent evidence at their command. In disposing of this objection the Supreme Court said, the action of the trial Court “in finally making and entering its order or decree without allowing the contestants, at the time proposed by them, to have the issue tried whether or not the death of the testator had been the result of' the illness under which he suffered at the time of the execution of the will, was proper. The testimony was ample to support the finding of the Court upon that point, and the contestants by not including it among the issues they first sub[528]*528mitted to the jury, and upon which the jury found, waived such right, and it then became the duty of the Court to consider the evidence and make a finding thereon.” 67 Cal., 446.' See also Estate of Collins, Myrich’s Prob. Pep., 73, as to the construction and effect of the same California statute law. We have then a definite and final decision of this question by a Court of competent jurisdiction in the State of the domicil of the testator, and in a case to which these appellants tv ere parties contesting the validity of the will. In our judgment that decision is conclusive and the appellants are estopped from raising the same question again in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
13 A. 156, 68 Md. 523, 1888 Md. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalrymple-v-gamble-md-1888.