Duttera v. Babylon

35 A. 64, 83 Md. 536, 1896 Md. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 35 A. 64 (Duttera v. Babylon) 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
Duttera v. Babylon, 35 A. 64, 83 Md. 536, 1896 Md. LEXIS 75 (Md. 1896).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint with which the proceedings in this case were begun is a creditor’s bill, and was filed by Martha A. Duttera against her step-mother and other defendants, most of whom are but nominal parties. It seeks to have vacated, annulled and set aside as fraudulent, and because procured by the undue inflnence of a yonng woman over an old man, a conveyance of a small parcel of real estate and sundry assignments of choses in action, which conveyance and assignments were all made by William Babylon, the father of the plaintiff, to Sarah Babylon, his second wife, and now his widow. The bill is founded on an alleged indebtedness claimed to have been due by the father in his lifetime to the daughter, and evidenced by a single bill purporting to have been executed by William Babylon, payable to the plaintiff, for twenty-six thousand and five hundred dollars. This single bill bears date the third day of March, eighteen hun[542]*542dred and eighty-seven. It was not signed by Babylon, but his name was appended to it, and what professes to be his mark was affixed. The body of the instrument and the name of the obligor are in the handwriting of Amos Duttera, the husband of the plaintiff, who signed it as attesting witness. On its face it sets forth that the sum of twenty-six thousand and five hundred dollars is the amount due to the obligee from her mother, Anna Barbara Bablyon, deceased, and it bears interest from its date. William Babylon was an aged man and a widower upwards of seventy-eight years old when this single-bill professes to have been given. He married his first wife, the mother of the plaintiff, in eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, and she died in eighteen hundred and eighty-six. Less than a year after-wards, and subsequent to the date of the single-bill, he married his second wife, a woman of thirty-two years of age, -and she is the only real defendant in the pending case. Before his death, which occurred in eighteen hundred and ninety-three, he made his will, wherein, after giving to his wife a small legacy of household furniture, he.declared that he had already conveyed to her the parcel of real estate above alluded to and had assigned to her certain mortgages and given her certain moneys, “ in lieu of all dower, rights or claims which she would otherwise possess in the property bequeathed and disposed of by this will.” He then directed all-his cash to be divided between his daughter and her two sons, and made the daughter residuary devisee and legatee. Prior to the date of this will, but after the date of the alleged single-bill, he and his second wife, the defendant, Sarah, conveyed by deed as a voluntary gift to one of the sons of his daughter, a farm of about one hundred and sixty-nine acres of land, valued at from eight to ten thousand dollars, and in like manner they also conveyed to the husband of the plaintiff a house and lot valued at six hundred dollars ; and he transferred to the plaintiff bank stock and a mortgage aggregating in value seventeen hundred and fifty dollars. Under the will, something over five thousand [543]*543dollars will pass to the daughter and her two sons. The total value of the property which the daughter, her husband and sons received from William Babylon in his lifetime, after his second marriage, and under his will after his death, is nearly eighteen thousand dollars.

The daughter, suing by one of her sons as next friend, now seeks to have the conveyance and the transfers made to the second wife, in lieu of dower, as declared in the will, set aside, to the end that the single-bill for twenty-six thousand five hundred dollars may be paid out of the proceeds of their sale and collection; though thereby the widow who voluntarily parted with her potential dower-right in the farm given to one of the plaintiff’s sons and her potential dower-right in the house given to the plaintiff’s husband, in total ignorance of the existence of the alleged single-bill, would be stripped of every vestige of interest in William Babylon’s0 estate.

We do not deem it necessary to go into an examination of the facts which throw, to say the least, grave suspicion around the genuineness of the single-bill, because there are other grounds upon which the decree dismissing the bill and denying the relief sought by the plaintiff must be affirmed. The answer denies that this conveyance and these transfers to Sarah Babylon, which are now attacked and assailed were made under the dominion of an undue influence or with an intent to hinder or delay the creditors of William Babylon ; and it further denies that they operate to so hinder or delay such creditors. It also denies that the decedent was a debtor of the plaintiff. If, conceding that William Babylon made his mark to the single-bill, it nevertheless appears with sufficient clearness and certainty from the evidence, that there was no consideration to support the obligation, then, as is perfectly obvious, the single-bill does not establish a debt which constitutes the plaintiff a creditor of her father; and if she be not a creditor, she has not, apart from all other objections, a standing in a Court of Equity to impeach the transactions which, as creditor, and only as creditor, she seeks to nullify.

[544]*544Now, there is not the faintest trace of evidence in the somewhat lengthy record before us to indicate that Sarah Babylon exerted or attempted to exert an undue or forbidden influence over her aged husband. The mere inequality in their ages furnishes of itself, without more, no ground to base even a conjecture of undue influence on when it is remembered, as the testimony shows, that William Babylon was, though feeble in body, a self-willed and rather strong-minded man. This feature of the controversy, in the absence of any evidence bearing upon it, calls for no further comment.

Whilst a husband cannot, by voluntary transfers and conveyances to his wife, lawfully strip himself of his property to the prejudice of his creditors, a wife to whom transfers are made in lieu of a potential light of dower, and who has relinquished her inchoate dower in other property on the faith of the validity of such transfers, cannot be treated as a mere volunteer entitled to no consideration at the hands of a Court of Equity. Her inchoate right of dower in lands is a substantial and valuable interest which will be protected and preserved to her, though it is not such a right as may be bargained and sold. Reiff v. Horst, 55 Md. 42. Nevertheless its release by the wife may constitute, even as against the husband’s creditors, a valuable consideration for a valid payment to her by him of such a sum as a Court of Equity may, in a given case, deem reasonable. Reiff v. Horst, supra. And as to personal property, though the husband may lawfully, as against his wife, dispose of it during his life, yet she is so far interested in it that he cannot part with it. to her detriment if the transaction be but colorable or be attended by circumstances indicative of fraud upon her rights. Hays v. Henry, 1 Md. Ch. Dec. 337 ; Feigley v. Feigley, 7 Md. 562 ; Sanborn v. Lang, 41 Md. 113; Rabbitt v. Gaither, 67 Md. 94. A widow to whom a bequest is made by her husband in lieu of dower does not take as a donee or volunteer, but as a meritorious purchaser and contractor. Durham v. Rhodes and wife, 23 [545]*545Md. 242.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A. 64, 83 Md. 536, 1896 Md. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duttera-v-babylon-md-1896.