Dudderar v. Dudderar

82 A. 453, 116 Md. 605
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 5, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 82 A. 453 (Dudderar v. Dudderar) 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
Dudderar v. Dudderar, 82 A. 453, 116 Md. 605 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered, the opinion of the Court.

The questions to be determined in this case have been raised upon exceptions to rulings of the Court below in the coui’se of the trial of issues which originated in the Orphans’ Court of Frederick County upon a caveat, after probate, to the will of Peter Dudderar, deceased. There were three of these issues and they involved the inquiries; whether the testator had knowledge of the contents of the will, whether it was procured from him by undue influence, and whether he had' the requisite testamentary capacity at the time of its execution. The issues were transmitted in the first instance to the Circuit Court for Frederick County and wTere thence removed to the Circuit Court for AVashington County where the trial occurred which has resulted in this appeal. There are five bills of exceptions relating to the admission of evidence and one which is concerned with the disposition of the prayers.

*608 The will was executed on July 2nd, 1910, and the testator died on the last day of the same month. IJe had been a widower for a number of years. His estate amounted to about six thousand dollar’s. In 1910 he had sold two farms which he then owned to two of his sons and had divided the proceeds equally among his nine children. He was eighty-four years of age when he executed the will. It first provided for the conversion of the estate into money and for the payment of debts and funeral expenses. It next bequeathed to the testator’s daughter Emma, in consideration of services she had rendered him, the sum of two hundred dollars, and to his grandson, William Westwood Dudderar*, his watch and chain. A provision then followed that the remainder of the estate should be divided into nine equal shares, one of which should be given to each of the testator’s eight living children and one to the children of a deceased daughter, “with the exception” that the shares of his sons, Warren E. and Daisy A. Dudderar, should be reduced $500 and $250, respectively, by reason of extra amounts given them in the sale of the farms they had purchased from their father. The appellee, who is the oldest son of the testator, was named in the will as its executor. The caveat was filed by the two sons whose shares were reduced.

The first exception was taken to the refusal of the Court to strike out part of the answer of Westwood Dudderar, a son of the testator, who, in answer to an inquiry as to whether he had talked to his father about the will after the date of its execution, testified: “I asked my father for the two old wills that he had started, and he said I could have them, told me to go to the desk and get them and read the one that was finished except the signing, as well as I can remember, then I asked him whether he had an intention to take this five hundred dollars off of Bud and two hundred and fifty dollars off of Daisy before the evening of the second, and he said he had not.” It is objected that the last sentence of the answer was not responsive to the interrogatory and that it is inadmissible as a declaration of the testator made after *609 the execution of the will. This objection was properly over-nil eel. When a witness is asked to state what was said to him by the other party to the conversation under inquiry it could not he held that his testimony was irresponsive merely because it included a question asked by the witness himself which elicited the declaration sought to be proved. While the interrogatory was directed to what the testator said on the occasion mentioned, the answer of the witness in the present instance, would have been unintelligible if it had eliminated the inquiry to which the former replied. Upon the general question as to the admissibility of the declaration thus sought to he excluded we are relieved of any difficulty by the decision of this Court in Griffith v. Diffenderfer, 50 Md. 466. It was there held that declarations made by a testatrix some months after the execution of her will expressing her dissatisfaction with its provisions and stating that she had been persuaded to make it were admissible for the purpose of proving her mental condition at the time of making the disposition in question. “It is a common practice,” said the Court, “to admit such testimony under issues involving testamentary capacity, and upon the same ground it ought to he received under issues of fraud and undue influence; provided they are made sufficiently near in time as to justify a reasonable inference that the mental condition which they are intended to denote, existed at the time of the execution of the will.” This rule is subject to the qualification that “where such declarations are made so remote as not to constitute part of the res gestae, they are not competent to prove the facts upon which the charge of undue influence is founded.”

The second exception relates to the admission in evidence of the draft of an unexecuted will written by the testator sometime in the year 1909. This differed in some important particulars from the will actually executed in 1910. It provided for a sale of the estate and a division of the proceeds among the testator’s children who might he living at the time of his death. It contained no exceptions with refer *610 ence to the shares of the two sons who had purchased the farms, but left them upon an equal footing with the other surviving children. There was a direction to t-he executor to pay the testator’s daughter Emma seventy-five cents per week from January 1, 1900, to the time of his death, and there was a bequest to the same daughter of a set of bedroom furniture and a sewing machine. In other respects the paper offered in evidence contained the same provisions as the will. The object of the offer was, of course, to show that the will in controversy was not in accord with the testator’s antecedent intentions, especially with reference to the dispositions in favor of the two sons whose shares were diminished. It is urged in opposition to the admission of this evidence that the testimony already in the case showed that the testator had previously referred to the paper as an incomplete will which did not express his wishes. We have been unable to find in the record any support for this contention. There is testimony to the effect that upon the occasion of the execution of the will on July 2, 1910, the testator pointed to his desk from which the paper in question was later obtained and said he had started “his business” twice and that it had never been finished. This does not amount to a statement that the paper which he had himself written a year before and which was unfinished only with respect to its execution did not represent his views at the fime of its preparation. The fact that it was not formally executed might affect the weight of the evidence, but its admissibility can not he open to serious doubt. In Griffith v. Diffenderfer, supra, it was ruled that evidence of a testator’s declaration in regard to his testamentary intentions, made a number of months before the execution of the will in dispute and before any improper influences are supposed to have been exerted, are admissible for the purpose of showing that the will is “consistent with the long cherished wishes of the testator; or that it is contrary to well settled convictions of what he thought was a just and proper disposition of his property.” The same rule was.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 453, 116 Md. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudderar-v-dudderar-md-1911.