Dillfelder v. Winterling

133 A. 825, 150 Md. 626, 1926 Md. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 A. 825 (Dillfelder v. Winterling) 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
Dillfelder v. Winterling, 133 A. 825, 150 Md. 626, 1926 Md. LEXIS 58 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Pattison J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The property involved in this appeal, consisting of a leasehold interest in a' house and lot of land situated on 12th Street, in the City of Baltimore, was on the 8th day of Feb *627 ruary, 1915, conveyed unto Charles A. Winterling and the ■appellee, Lena Winterling, his wife, as tenants by the entirety. They, with their children, occupied the property until the death of the husband in nineteen hundred and seventeen. 'Thereafter his widow, with her youngest daughter, Anna, the appellant, continued to occupy it and are occupying it at this time.

On the 7th day of July, nineteen hundred and twenty, the mother, Lena Winterling, conveyed the property to her said 'daughter. The latter in December, nineteen hundred and twenty, five months after said conveyance to her, married Erank Dillfelder. After her marriage, she, with her husband, lived for seven months at the home of his parents, when they returned to the home of her1 mother, where they have both since lived.

On the 24th day of January, nineteen hundred and twenty-four, Mrs. Winterling filed her bill in this case asking that the deed from her to her1 daughter, executed on the 7th •day of July, nineteen hundred and twenty, he cancelled and set aside.

The bill alleges “that during the summer of 1920, the plaintiff was in ill health and the said defendant represented to her that if she, the plaintiff, was in ill health, it would he better to convey said property to her in order to avoid any trouble or expense in the event anything should happen to said plaintiff, and expressly promised that if the said plaintiff would convey the property to her, she would give it hack to her, the plaintiff, at any time she might want it; that thereupon, pursuaded by the defendant’s representations and "relying on and having faith in her promise to reconvey said property on demand, the salid plaintiff executed an assignment, conveying said property to the defendant, who at that time was known as Anna Winterling, being unmarried * * *■ that said plaintiff received no consideration from the ■defendant or any one else for said conveyance”; that said •deed was recorded and the charge for same paid by the *628 plaintiff, but it was never delivered to the defendant and still remains in the possession of the plaintiff; that the defendant resided with her mother until her marriage on December 23rd, 1920, when she left her mother’s home; “that when the property was originally acquired by the plaintiff and her husband, * * * a mortgage was placed thereon with the Canton Permanent Building Association, of Baltimore City, in the amount of eleven hundred dollars; that after the death of her husband, the plaintiff continued to pay off said mortgage, malting her last payment December 5th, 1922, and has paid all the expenses, including ground rent, water-rent, taxes, etc., due on said property; that the defendant has never paid one cent toward the purchase of said property or toward the expenses due thereon; that the said defendant, has always recognized the plaintiff as the owner of said property and has never assumed any dominion over the same;; that the plaintiff has demanded from the defendant a re-conveyance of said property, but the defendant has refused' and still refuses to convey same to the plaintiff, claiming that the plaintiff has no interest therein.”

The defendant, Mrs. Dillfelder, filed her answer to the bill, averring that the deed was not executed at her request, and that her mother was- not in ill health at the time of its-execution; that upon the direction of her mother, she went to work at the age of twelve years and continued thereat until she was married in nineteen hundred and twenty, at the age-of nineteen years ; that the money earned by her was given, to her mother “except small sums which she was permitted' to retain for her own use,” that her mother promised her-during those years to convoy the property to her, “partly for the consideration of receiving her wages * * * and partly because the defendant was the plaintiff’s youngest child and! the one that remained longest with her, and who, the plaintiff said, had done the most for her, and because all the other children, consisting of one son and one daughter, had! homes which they owned, while the defendant had none”;; that at.. *629 the time of said conveyance the plaintiff said to the defendant, “This is now yonr home, keep it as long as you possibly can,” warning her against any future husband securing control of it, saying that “it would he her home all her life”; that the “conveyance was absolutely voluntary and without any conditions attached to it and was so regarded by both the grantor and the grantee”; that upon her return to her mother, after living with the parents of her husband, as stated in the hill, she paid all operating expenses, “including' the cost of the table, and the plaintiff took her meals with the defendant without paying therefor until she was moved to demand that the defendant convey hack the property to her. Upon the defendant refusing to do so, the plaintiff, while continuing1 to live in the same house, furnished her-own table”; that she made efforts to secure the possession of the deed to said property, but “obstacles were thrown in her way by her mother, the plaintiff.” She averred in her answer “that she offered to pay off the mortgage, taxes and water rent, and tried to do so, but the plaintiff anticipated her.” She denied therein that “she has always recognized the plaintiff as the owner of the property and that she has never assumed any dominion over the same.” That “prior to moving hack into the premises after her marriage, extensive repairs were made to, the house through the labor of ber husband, all materials used on the house being paid for by the defendant.” She also averred that the plaintiff “has made many efforts through cajolery and coercion to induce the defendant to execute a deed to the said property, hut that the defendant has always refused to do so, claiming the property as her own, hut always permitting the plaintiff to live there, it being her intention to permit the plaintiff to live there during all the rest of her natural life.”

The defendant also averred in her answer “that there was no trust attached to the conveyance to her by her mother of the propeitv in question, and that she never at any time entered into any agreement, in writing or verbal, to recoil *630 vey the. said property to the plaintiff.” And concluded her answer by pleading “the Statute of Erauds.”

The court, after hearing the evidence upon the issues joined, passed its decree cancelling and setting aside said deed. It is from that decree that this appeal has been taken.

The undisputed evidence is to-the effect that the deed from Mrs. Winterling to her daughter was voluntary and without consideration and that the property conveyed thereby was acquired largely by the individual labor of the grantor; that at the time of her husband’s death there was still owing upon the mortgage, placed thereon by herself and husband, a considerable sum, which was altogether paid by her, and much of it paid after the execution of the deed to her* daughter.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 825, 150 Md. 626, 1926 Md. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillfelder-v-winterling-md-1926.