Doyle v. Rody

25 A.2d 457, 180 Md. 471, 1942 Md. LEXIS 167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1942
Docket[No. 13, January Term, 1942.]
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 25 A.2d 457 (Doyle v. Rody) 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
Doyle v. Rody, 25 A.2d 457, 180 Md. 471, 1942 Md. LEXIS 167 (Md. 1942).

Opinion

Delaplaine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The issue in this case is whether Matthew T. Doyle, now deceased, had sufficient mental capacity to open two accounts in the First National Bank of Westminster in December, 1939, in trust for himself and his brother, William F. Doyle, appellant.

After separating from his wife in Delaware in 1937, Doyle, having no children, lived in a boarding house in Baltimore. In 1939, when he was sixty-eight years old, he was paralyzed in his right arm. He was examined at the Mercy Hospital Clinic on December 1, 1939, by Dr. Philip F. Lerner, a specialist in neurology, who found that he had cerebral arteriosclerosis, senile deterioration and softening of the brain, and an increase in blood cells, which caused him to be mentally abnormal and confused. However, on December 3, he was able to visit his brother in Westminster, returning to Baltimore on the following day.

On the evening of December 6, 1939, Doyle wandered into the Southwestern Police Station in a dazed condition. He was unable to tell his name, but mumbled that he had been robbed. The desk lieutenant ordered the turnkey to give him a cell and search him for marks of identification. He wore an overcoat and two suits of clothes, but no stockings. The turnkey found that he had three bottles of medicine, §26.47 in cash, and a bank book of the Savings Bank of Baltimore showing that he had on deposit in that institution more than §11,000. Pie also had a note book containing the name of Mrs. Edgar Patterson, who, when called on the telephone, was found to be his niece. Mrs. Patterson and her husband arrived shortly afterwards and took him *474 to their home on Wickham Road, gave him hot tea, and put him to bed.

On the following day Mrs. Patterson took her uncle in a taxicab to the savings bank, where he inquired about an old bank book. From there she took him to his boarding house on Fayette Street to get some clothes. Unable to recall the number of the house, he walked up and down the street with his niece for some time until they finally located the right place. On returning home Mrs. Patterson took his bundle of clothes and a tin box to his room, but had great difficulty in persuading him that his clothes had not been left in the back yard. Taking him upstairs to his room, she finally convinced him that his clothes had not been thrown away. On the next morning she called her family physician to attend him, but just as the doctor arrived at the front door, Doyle darted out the back door, refusing to have any medical attention. On Saturday, December 9, he went for a walk, saying he would be back in time for lunch, but he never returned. That evening he appeared again at his brother’s home in Westminster, where he said: “The Pattersons have been trying to hold me, and I want to stay here with you people. * * * Those people are ganged up against me and I am afraid of them.” On the following Monday his brother took him to see a lawyer to arrange for a disposition of his estate. On Tuesday, December 12, he was taken to the First National Bank, where he signed a draft for §11,427.71 on the Savings Bank of Baltimore. The Savings Bank asked for a doctor’s certificate showing that there was no mental disability of the depositor; so, on December 16, Doyle was taken to the First National Bank again, and given a physical examination by Dr. W. Glenn Speicher, of Westminster, in the presence of Dr. Lewis K. Woodward, president of the bank. Dr. Speicher observed that Doyle had suffered a slight stroke, indicating a hemorrhage in the brain, and that he had some cerebral pressure which affected his mental faculties to some extent; but he certified on the back of the draft that Doyle was of sound and disposing mind.

*475 It was on December 22 that a joint savings account of §11,000 and a joint checking account of S427.ll were opened in the bank in trust for Matthew T. Doyle and William F. Doyle, joint owners, subject to the order of either, the balance at the death of either to belong to the survivor. These trusts, if valid, would disinherit Doyle’s wife, another brother, the issue of a deceased brother, and the issue of a deceased sister. On December 30 Doyle, then in a semiconscious and stuporous condition, was removed, upon Dr. Speicher’s advice, to the University Hospital in Baltimore. Dr. Harry V. Langlettig, a specialist in internal medicine, diagnosed his case on that day as hypertensive cardio-vascular renal disease, cerebral hemorrhage and generalized arteriosclerosis. Doyle died on January 8, 1940.

Benjamin F. Rody, administrator of the estate, alleged in the bill of complaint that Doyle’s mind had been so greatly weakened that he did not understand that he was establishing trusts, and that the defendant had induced him to establish them by artifice and undue influence. The chancellors decreed that the bank accounts were the property and estate of Matthew T. Doyle, deceased, and were payable to the administrator.

It is expressly provided by statute in this State that no will shall be valid unless the testator is of sound and disposing mind and capable of executing a valid deed or contract. Code, 1939, Art. 93, Sec. 335. This rule is likewise applicable to disposition of property by creation of a trust. It has been stated by this court that a testator, to be considered of sound and disposing mind, must understand the nature of his act and its effects, the extent of the property of which he intends to dispose, the person to whom he means to give it, the manner in which he is disposing of it, and the relative claims of the different persons who are or should be the objects of his bounty. McElwee v. Ferguson, 43 Md. 479, 484; Davis Denny, 94 Md. 390, 50 A. 1037. The fact that the grantor in a conveyance was debilitated by illness at the time he executed it does not necessarily imply an ab *476 sence of sufficient capacity to dispose of property by gift or otherwise. The weakening of a person’s mind is not sufficient to destroy the validity of his conveyance where he still retains a full comprehension of the meaning, design and effect of his act at the time of its execution. Inasmuch as the law looks in such cases to the competency of the understanding, it is manifest that advancing years and bodily infirmities do not of themselves deprive a person of capacity to enter into a contract or dispose of property by will or otherwise. . Birchett v. Smith, 150 Md. 389,133 A. 117; Cronin v. Kimble, 156 Md. 489, 144 A. 698. While the law presumes sanity and testamentary capacity, yet when it appears that a person was in such an enfeebled condition of mind and body immediately before and immediately after the date of a transaction as to render him incompetent to transact business, the presumption arises that he was unable to understand what he was doing at the time of the transaction, and the burden of proof as to his capacity to dispose of his property at that particular time is imposed upon the grantee. Brown v. Ward, 53 Md. 376, 387, 396, 36 Am. Rep. 422; Davis v. Denny, 94 Md. 390, 50 A. 1037; Ralston v. Turpin, 129 U. S. 663, 9 S. Ct. 420, 32 L. Ed. 747.'

In the case at bar Dr. Lerner and Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dougherty v. Rubenstein
914 A.2d 184 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2007)
Marmaduke v. Dyer
119 A.2d 367 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2001)
Sellers v. Qualls
110 A.2d 73 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2001)
Oliver v. Hays
708 A.2d 1140 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1998)
Robinson v. State
702 A.2d 741 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1997)
Evans v. State
585 A.2d 204 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1991)
Cook v. State
578 A.2d 283 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1990)
Bohnert v. State
539 A.2d 657 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
State v. Conn
408 A.2d 700 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
Millison v. Secretary of Health & Mental Hygiene
359 A.2d 247 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1976)
Harold v. Radman
355 A.2d 477 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1976)
Slicer v. Griffith
341 A.2d 838 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
A. B. Veirs, Inc. v. Myers
311 A.2d 448 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1973)
Benjamin v. Woodring
303 A.2d 779 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1973)
Webster v. Larmore
299 A.2d 814 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1973)
Jackson v. Jackson
238 A.2d 852 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1968)
Williams v. MORAN, ETC.
236 A.2d 274 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1967)
Sachs v. LITTLE, OF ESTATE OF LITTLE
226 A.2d 283 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1967)
INGALLS, OF ESTATE OF INGALLS v. Trustees of Mt. Oak Methodist Church
223 A.2d 778 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A.2d 457, 180 Md. 471, 1942 Md. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-rody-md-1942.