Ex Parte the Estate of Bristor

81 A. 25, 115 Md. 614, 1911 Md. LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 A. 25 (Ex Parte the Estate of Bristor) 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
Ex Parte the Estate of Bristor, 81 A. 25, 115 Md. 614, 1911 Md. LEXIS 170 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Jane B. Moore Bristor, on September 16, 1910, wrote to a representative of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church a letter in part as follows:

“As I have entered my seventieth year and am an invalid from exposure and wounds received upon battle fields of the Rebellion where with my mother I worked to relieve the wounded, I am putting my affairs in order to be ready for the great summons. Lately I have given my pictures and books largely to Lincoln University and Asheville Industrial School, Ib O., and as I read again in The Land of the Vedas of the awful condition of women in India, I long to do something for their relief. If I had known that special work would be allowed, then several deeds that have been made to the American Board would have been in favor of my beloved church * * * I intend to prepare—that is, my lawyers will—two deeds, one of which will give to my son, my only living child, about forty years old, and single, nearly one thousand dollars per year in ground rents and in which he is to have a life interest only * * * I have always supported by son. He is not a strong man, and at one time early in life he had an attack of melancholia and wandered from home hoping to get a position. He is a member of the Presbyterian Church, perfectly moral in his habits; but, in my opinion, persons who have had mental trouble should not marry, and Charles would be a prey if I left him all I have made or even all I have inherited. I provide for him amply, but at his death these rents in which he has a life interest go to the Presbyterian Board for special work among destitute girls in India, China and Africa. The other deed will convey a number of ground rents to you for the same work.” (It was stated elsewhere in the letter that these rents would amount to about $1,000 per year.) “What I have reserved for *616 myself, my son’s and my own use, will probably be deeded to you later on, or at least some to borne and some to foreign. My tastes are all literary, and I greatly wished to do some good work in that line before I go, but more was to be made by attending to investments, and I have made in twenty years more than three times what was left me by my mother, besides giving away about thirty thousand dollars * * * I want to deed now lest I should be called away suddenly * * * My mother was very much impressed many years ago by the satement in the Life of Wesley, that he attended so faithfully to all his affairs that he left directions what should be done with any loose change that might be found in his pockets at the time of his death.”

This letter, sealed in an envelope, was handed by Mrs. Bristor to her son Charles to be mailed. He performed this duty after he had opened and’ read the letter and had it copied by his attorneys, o Soon afterwards he filed a petition in Circuit Court Ho. 2 of Baltimore City for an inquisition as to his mother’s sanity. He alleges in substance in the petition that his mother has been for more than ten years past “of that degree of unsoundness of mind that unfits her to be in possession of her property and to be clothed with the power of alienating any part of her estate;” that she has been “a woman of strong personality and active mentality; that she was a nurse on battlefields in the Civil War and during her subsequent years has suffered from the exposure and’ hardship to which she was subject in that honorable service;” that her husband, from whom she was divorced, is deceased; that she has been for many years interested in the temperance cause, but more recently has devoted all her time, thought and energy to the Woman’s Suffrage cause and the work of Foreign Missions; that to such an extent has she thought and written upon these movements and so largely has she contributed to their advancement, especially in the case of mission- work in foreign fields, (that her mind, enfeebled by advancing years, is now controlled by delusions on the subjects indicated, and especially that of foreign missions, and that she is deprived of reason and judgment and *617 is impelled to give nearly all of her property to foreign mission work to the exclusion of her relatives who have had every reason to expect to he the natural objects of her bounty.

This application was supported by the petitioner’s affidavit, and a writ was issued by order of the Court directing the sheriff of Baltimore City to inquire by a jury “whether the said Jane B. Moore Bristor be so far deprived of her understanding that she is altogether unfit and unable to govern herself or to manage her affairs.” A jury of fourteen members was empaneled and after a prolonged and contested hearing, twelve of the jurors, being a sufficient number under the law (Alexanders Chancery Practice, 224), joined in a finding that Mrs. Bristor was of unsound mind and incapable of the government of herself or the management of her property. After the return of the inquisition to the Circuit Court a motion to quash was filed by Mrs. Bristor upon various grounds, of which the only ones necessary to be considered were that the inquisition was tried and heai’d by the sheriff’s deputy and not by the sheriff in person, and that the finding was against the evidence and the weight of the evidence adduced before the jury. A complete stenographic record was kept of all the testimony taken at the inquisition and was filed in the Court below as part of the proceedings. Upon the evidence thus presented the Court sustained the finding of the jury, confirmed the inquisition, and appointed a committee to assume control of Mrs. Bristor’s person and estate. In the oral opinion of the learned judge who passed the decree his conclusion was stated, as to the two specific objections we have mentioned, that the verdict of the jury was correct on the evidence, and that no satisfactory authority had been shown for invalidating the inquisition, on the ground that the sheriff did not personally preside, in view of the long established practice in Baltimore City for the chief deputy to conduct proceedings in this nature.

The first question we have to determine is whether the decree confirming the inquisition can be reviewed by this *618 Court, a motion to dismiss the appeal having been filed on the theory that the action of the Court below is final.

Section 107 of the Chancery, Article (16) of the Code provides: “The Court shall, have full power and authority, in all cases, to superintend and direct the affairs of persons non compostes mentis, both as to the care of their persons and the management of their estates, and may appoint a committee, or a trustee or trustees, for such persons, and may make such orders and decrees respecting their persons and estates as to the Court may seem proper.”

It is provided by Article 5, section 26, of the Code, that :■ “An appeal shall be allowed from any final decree, or order in the nature of a final decree, passed by a Court of Equity, by any one or more persons parties to the suit”, * * *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 25, 115 Md. 614, 1911 Md. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-the-estate-of-bristor-md-1911.