DiTommasi v. DiTommasi

340 A.2d 341, 27 Md. App. 241, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 409
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1975
Docket703, September Term, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 340 A.2d 341 (DiTommasi v. DiTommasi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiTommasi v. DiTommasi, 340 A.2d 341, 27 Md. App. 241, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 409 (Md. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

O’Donnell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On November 3, 1964 the appellee, Adrian DiTommasi, and the appellant, Carmela DiTommasi, then husband and wife, acquired, as tenants by the entireties, for their domicile, the real property located at 1902 Callaway Street in Hillcrest Heights, Prince George’s County, Maryland.

Following irreconcilable matrimonial differences the appellee vacated the home on or about November 23, 1966. When, on June 5, 1973, the parties were divorced a vinculo matrimonii by a decree of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, the estate that they held by the entireties was converted into a tenancy in common. See Meyers v. East End Loan & Savings Ass’n, 139 Md. 607, 612, 116 A. 453, 455 (1922); Reed v. Reed, 109 Md. 690, 696, 72 A. 414, 416 (1909).

Unable to reach an agreement as to the disposition of the property, where the appellant continued to reside and since concededly it could not be partitioned, the appellee filed a *244 bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County praying that that court decree the sale of the premises and divide the proceeds among the parties according to their respective rights. See Maryland Code (1974), Real Property Article § 14-107 (a). American Federal Savings and Loan Association, to which the parties were indebted under a deed of trust, was joined as a party in accordance with the provisions of § 14-107 (d).

Opposing such a sale, the appellant defended the action by asserting that her former spouse had made an oral gift of the property to her, was estopped from asserting his interest as a tenant in common therein and that she was nonetheless entitled to reimbursement from him not only for the contribution she made toward the purchase, but for those payments subsequently made by her on account of the interest and principal due American Federal, for taxes, insurance and for improvements made.

Following an evidentiary hearing, the chancellor (Ralph W. Powers, C. J.) filed an opinion in which he found that the appellant had not met her burden, by a preponderance of the evidence, of establishing a donative intent on the part of the appellee; that the complainant was not estopped to assert his interest in the property; and that although he was responsible for contribution for certain specified improvements made to the property by the appellant, she was not entitled to reimbursement of the moneys she had contributed toward the purchase of the property, nor for the payments she made by way of taxes, insurance and principal and interest under the deed of trust. From a decree ordering the sale of the property and appointing cotrustees to make such sale, and from rulings limiting the amounts to be credited to the appellant by the auditor in his statement of account to be filed with the court, the appellant appealed, contending as she had in the trial court, that: (a) the appellee had made an oral gift of the house to her; (b) that he was estopped from asserting his interest in the title to the property; and (c) that the trial court erroneously limited the items for which she was entitled to contribution from him.

*245 (a) and (b)

Since the issues of whether the appellee made a parol gift of his interest in the property and was estopped from asserting his title thereto are so inexorably here intertwined we shall discuss them together.

Carmela DiTommasi testified that when her former spouse departed the premises on November 22, 1966 — as well as on several later occasions when he returned thereto to recoup some of his personal effects — he had told her that “He didn’t want the house, that she could keep it,” and that “you can have the house.” She dramatically recalled one occasion, when the appellee had had her arrested (apparently for assault) and while she was being escorted by the police, he told her: “ ‘You stole the house and I don’t want it.’ ” She also testified that she had earlier given him a boat, that he told her “ ‘You can have the boat too’ ” and that “ ‘He says he give it to me, but he take it [away].’ ” This evidence was buttressed by the testimony of two of the appellant’s daughters (Adrian’s stepchildren), both of whom resided at the premises at the time of separation, that the appellee, following an argument “around Thanksgiving [1966],” stated that “He didn’t want anything to do with the house it belonged to [their] mother.” One of the stepdaughters testified that this disavowal of any interest in the property was repeated on an occasion when her stepfather returned to claim some personal belongings.

A neighbor and confidante of the appellant — who spoke no English — testified through an interpreter that there had been repeated arguments and statements between the parties concerning the house and that on one such occasion, several days after Thanksgiving, 1966, she heard Adrian tell Carmela that “He didn’t want anything to do with the house.” 1

A mutual friend of the principals, since 1960, was the fifth witness to give cumulative testimony on this point. She testified that she had overheard an argument, in September *246 1966, when Adrian stated, “ T don’t give a damn . . . you can have this house ... it don’t belong to me.’ ” The witness conceded, however, when asked if she knew that Mr. and Mrs. DiTommasi had separated, that “I don’t know too much about their business.”

Adrian DiTommasi contradicted the appellant’s witnesses at virtually “every turn”; he emphatically denied ever having made such statements concerning the disposition of the property, contended that he had returned to the premises only twice — on which occasions he admitted himself with his own key — and not on five or six occasions as described by one of the stepdaughters and that on one of his visits, approximately ten days after November 23, 1966, the appellant had had him arrested for nonsupport.

From this plethora of parol evidence versus the appellee’s uncorroborated denial and, specifying purported discrepancies in the appellee’s testimony, the appellant argues that the chancellor erroneously found that there had been no gift of Adrian DiTommasi’s interest in the property.

Judge Powers, in finding that the appellant had not sustained her burden, by a preponderance of the evidence, of establishing a donative intent on the jpart of Adrian DiTommasi, pointed out that in order to make a valid gift inter vivos, there must be a clear intention on the part of the donor to transfer gratuitously t.itle to the property, and also a delivery by the donor and an acceptance by the donee, and that it is essential that the transfer of both possession and title shall be absolute and shall go into immediate effect. See Rogers v. Rogers, 271 Md. 603, 319 A. 2d 119 (1974); Geisler v. Eminizer, 240 Md. 72, 212 A. 2d 734 (1965); Berman v. Leckner, 193 Md. 177, 66 A. 2d 392 (1949); First Nat’l Bk. v. Thomas, 151 Md. 241, 134 A. 210 (1926). See also Urquhart v. Alexander & Alexander, Inc., 218 Md. 405, 414-15, 147 A.

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Bluebook (online)
340 A.2d 341, 27 Md. App. 241, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ditommasi-v-ditommasi-mdctspecapp-1975.