Dayton v. Stewart

59 A. 281, 99 Md. 643, 1904 Md. LEXIS 109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 17, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 59 A. 281 (Dayton v. Stewart) 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
Dayton v. Stewart, 59 A. 281, 99 Md. 643, 1904 Md. LEXIS 109 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a decree of the Circuit Court for Dorchester County dismissing a bill in equity filed therein by the appellant, on the 28th day of August, 1901, praying to have set aside and annulled’ a- deed executed by her on the 25th day of September, 1884, and refusing the relief prayed in said bill.

The deed recites that the appellant, “in consideration of five dollars * * * and desiring to secure a home for herself and children” thereinafter named, grants to Edward W. LeCompte the real estate therein described upon the trust, and with the covenants expressed as follows: "In trust however, to and for the sole and separate use, benefit and behoof of the said party of the first part, her children as hereinafter named, *645 and for the further trusts and uses as hereinafter set forth to wit: that the said party of the second part will suffer and permit the said party of the first part without let or molestation, to have, hold, use, occupy, possess and enjoy during the term of her natural life, for her own sole use and benefit, separate and apart from any husband she may hereafter have, should she see proper to marry again, and wholly free from his control and interference, debts and liabilities, curtesy and all other interests whatsoever, the aforesaid premises, with all the rents, issues, profits and proceeds arising therefrom, and then immediately upon her decease to execute a conveyance in fee of the premises to her two children, William S. Stewart and Thomas G. S. B. Stewart, share and share alike, as tenants in common, but if both of said children shall die, without leaving child or children living at the time of their death during the lifetime of the said Susan L. Stewart, then to convey said premises, in fee, to any future husband she may have who survives her and failing said husband to suffer and permit her to make testamentary disposition thereof the trust hereby created having then failed. But if one of the aforenamed children should die in the lifetime of the said Susan L, Stewart without children as aforesaid, then the surviving named child shall stand in his or her stead as to the purposes of this trust, and if either of such children should die as aforesaid, to-wit: during the lifetime of said Susan L. Stewart, but leaving a child or children, then such offspring shall stand in the place of the deceased parent for all the objects and trusts hereby created. Provided that the party of the second part will at any and all times hereafter at the request and direction of the said party of the first part, Susan L. Stewart, expressed in writing and signed by her, sell and convey said premises, or any part thereof, to do which full power is hereby given, for the purpose, nevertheless and solely to purchase other real estate as requested by said Susan L. Stewart or to invesf the same in some other manner at her request, for the purposes of the trust hereby created, in such case she to have only the interest of the fund during her lifetime, the principal to follow *646 the direction of the trust as hereinbefore declared and creáted. Such sale or sales if made to be in fee-simple and free from the therein created trusts which are to follow the fund arising therefrom, and not to cling to the properties so sold and all the provisions of this deed are to apply to any future real estate that may be acquired by sale of the real estate herein conveyed, or any sequence of parcels of real estate that may be acquired therefrom or thereby; it being the intent of this deed to settle said properties and the use and benefit thereof on the said Susan L. Stewart during her lifetime, and at her death the same to go to her aforementioiied children or their child or children or both or either of them, should any of such classes survive her, and if they should not then to go to any future husband she may have who survives her, and if she have no husband living at the time of her death then the trust to be at an end, and she to have full testamentary power over said properties or the future proceeds and issues, thereof. And the said party of the first part hereby covenants that she will warrant generally the propeity hereby conveyed to the said party of the second part, hisheirs and assigns, and the said party of the second part covenants that he will faithfully perform and fulfill the trusts herein created.”

This deed was signed and acknowledged by Edward W. LeCompte, the grantee and .trustee named therein, as well as by the appellant, by her then name of Susan L. Stewart, and was duly recorded. As grounds for the relief sought by the bill it is therein alleged that the deed in question is a voluntary one and “not founded upon any meritorious or valuable consideration ; that it contains no power of revocation ; that she was not advised by the draughtsman of the deed’ nor by any one else of the effect of omitting from the deed a power of revocation; that she did not “properly and thoroughly understand the force and effect” of such omission; that she never intended to exclude a power of revocation from the deed and thus place her property beyond her reach, but believed the deed of trust to be revocable or she would h^tve never signed it; that at the time of signing and executing the deed she was *647 a very young woman, twenty-three years of age and a widow, her husband having died a few years before leaving her with the two children who are named in the deed ; that “she was wholly ignorant of the force and effect of such a deed” and “was not left to the free, unrestrained, and deliberate use of her own judgment in the matter but was persuaded, unduly influenced and prevailed upon to sign the said deed of trust by her mother * * * and other persons whose purposes she now understands to have been that of securing” the properties conveyed by the deed to her two children named therein “in total exclusion of any children” that might be born to her from any subsequent marriage; as well as, for the further purpose of preventing her creditors “from resorting to said property to collect their just claims;” that after the deed was signed it was left by her mother “with the attorney that her mother had gotten to draw it” and without her “consent or knowledge” this attorney, handed it to the clerk of the Court for record and the same was recorded, “but without her” consent or knowledge and against her wishes and desire; that a few days after the recording of the deed the samé was returned to her and has remained uninterruptedly in her possession ever since; that she never delivered the deed to the trustee therein named or to any person for him nor authorized any person to deliver it to him and never intended it should be delivered to him; that she has never ceased at any time “to exercise entire and exclusive ownership and control over” all of the property mentioned in the deed — collecting rents, paying taxes, keeping up repairs as if the deed in question had never been made and the trustee has never interméddled in any manner with the said properties, nor recognized the existence of the trust which the deed purports to create and has never accepted the trust; that she executed the deed when she was contemplating marriage with Benjamin Hart whom she afterwards married and who died on the 27th of February, 1885; that she has, as the offspring of this marriage, one child, a minor living with, and cared for by her; that in September, 1899, she together with her son, William S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A. 281, 99 Md. 643, 1904 Md. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-stewart-md-1904.