Frush v. Green

39 A. 863, 86 Md. 494, 1898 Md. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 4, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 39 A. 863 (Frush v. Green) 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
Frush v. Green, 39 A. 863, 86 Md. 494, 1898 Md. LEXIS 21 (Md. 1898).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This proceeding originated in Circuit Court No. Two, of Baltimore City, by a bill in equity filed on July eighteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety-five. The bill w'as filed by Miss Fannie Brengel Frush against sundry defendants. It recites in substance that the plaintiff was the niece of one Luther M. Frush, who had died five days prior to the filing of the bill. That on July the eighth, or five days anterior to his death, which occurred on the thirteenth, he purported to execute a deed of trust conveying to one George A. Horner all the property, real, personal and mixed, of which the grantor was then possessed. That by the deed of trust, [496]*496after making provision for the payment of his debts and reserving a life-estate to himself, the grantor gave all of the ground rents owned by him to his sister, Mrs. Leas; two thousand dollars to his sister-in-law, Mrs. Sarah E. Frush; three thousand dollars to Miss May Callender Dotterveich; a piano to the plaintiff, and the entire rest and residue of his estate to four of the eight children of another sister, Mrs. Green—one of these four being the wife of the trustee, Horner. The bill proceeds to describe the cordial relations that existed between the plaintiff and her uncle, and to allege that until within a month prior to his death Luther M. Frush had been on bad terms with, and quite hostile to, his sister, Mrs. Green, and many of the members of her family. The bill charges that the deed was procured by the exercise of undue influence, and that at the time the deed purports to have been executed, the grantor was not of sound mind and memory, capable of making a valid deed or contract. It prayed that a decree might be passed vacating and annulling the instrument. Six days later four children of William W. Frush, a deceased brother of Luther Frush, filed a petition in the case asking to be made co-plaintiffs, and leave was granted accordingly. Subsequently, for satisfactory reasons, one of these four new plaintiffs caused the bill to be dismissed as to himself. Later on all the defendants answered, Mrs. Sarah E. Frush admitting the averments of the bill, the others denying them, and a great mass of testimony was taken. The Court below dismissed the bill on final hearing and from that decree the plaintiffs have brought the cause up to this Court on appeal.

The record is voluminous—it contains eight hundred and seventy closely printed solid pages, which have been patiently perused. It recounts with minute and graphic detail a family wrangle over a dead man’s estate; and it abounds with indications of the bitterness which such a contest usually engenders. To attempt to reconcile the flatly conflicting statements of many of the witnesses would be a hopeless task indeed ; and it would swell this opinion far beyond [497]*497any reasonable limit, if we ventured into an analysis of the vast mass of evidence before us. A general outline of the leading and controlling events in the drama with which we have to deal and a summary of the conclusions which we have finally drawn from a careful view of the whole field will solve the questions that confront us.

William Frush, the father of Luther M. Frush, lived for many years on Madison avenue in Baltimore City. At the time of his death his family consisted of himself, his son Luther, who was a bachelor, his daughter Mrs. Leas, who was a widow, his daughter-in-law Mrs. Sarah E. Frush, the widow of a deceased son, and his granddaughter, Miss Fannie Brengel Frush, who was the daughter of Mrs. Sarah E. Frush. Mrs. Sarah E. Frush was the daughter of Dr. Leas. After the death of her mother her father married again, his second wife being the Mrs. Leas just mentioned—the daughter of William Frush. Thus Mrs. Sarah Frush became by marrying Mrs. Leas’ brother, Mrs. Leas’ sister-in-law, whilst prior to that Mrs. Leas by marrying Mrs. Sarah Frush’s father had become Mrs. Frush’s stepmother. When Dr. Leas married the second time, Mrs. Sarah Frush was a child ten years of age living at her father’s home. After she became a widow, Mrs. Frush with her infant daughter—now Miss Fannie Frush—left her father’s house and went to reside with her deceased husband’s father, William Frush. There Mrs. Frush and Miss Fannie made their home until the death of William Frush in eighteen hundred and ninety-two. When Dr. Leas died, his widow—the daughter of William Frush—returned to her father’s home. Upon the death of the wife of William Frush, about eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, Mrs. Sarah Frush became the house-beeper. Upon the death of William Frush, Luther Frush assumed his father’s place as the head of the household, and Mrs. Sarah Frush continued in the position of housekeeper for her brother-in-law. It was in this domestic circle that Miss Fannie grew from childhood to womanhood and the great preponderance of the evidence leads us to believe that [498]*498she was a source of pride to her Uncle Luther, and the person of all others upon whom was centered such affection as his rather selfish and undemonstrative nature was susceptible. It is certain that he spoke of her at various times and to numbers of persons in the most kindly terms, and apart from the utterly trivial and inconsequential differences of opinion between them on rare occasions there is, if we lay out of view for the moment the testimony of the individuals who are interested in sustaining this deed, no suggestion from any reliable source that the current of his feelings towards her ever changed till the day the deed of trust was made. In addition to his affection for her, which impressed more than one observer as rather that of a father for his child than that of an uncle for his niece, he repeatedly declared to disinterested witnesses-^-witnesses who can have no possible motive for misrepresenting or perverting the truth—that he intended to provide liberally for her. And these declarations were made when there was no question of his mental capacity to transact his business with intelligence and understanding. That he was warmly attached to Miss Fannie’s mother is equally clear from the evidence. She was, as Dr. Bevan says, a woman of as big a heart as he ever.saw about a sick. man. She had been faithful in her management of his household and when a distressing and progressive disease smote him with a heavy hand she was unremitting in her watchfulness and attention. There was every reason for the existence of the affection towards Miss Fannie which the witnesses describe—it is consistent with his declarations and his conduct up to the making of • the deed. If it be not true that this kindly relation existed between the uncle and niece and if he really regarded her as a “terrible woman”—as some of the appellees pretend that he said she was—there is but one mode of reconciling these inconsistent declarations, and that is by imputing to Luther Frush a low, repulsive duplicity that does not harmonize with his character as portrayed by the evidence. It is of vital consequence to the contesting beneficiaries under the [499]*499deed that it be shown there were no cordial relations between Miss Fannie and her uncle, and they accordingly furnish the evidence themselves. At the very outset we meet a conflict between wholly disinterested witnesses who have nothing at stake in the pending cause, and these beneficiaries under the deed—'Mrs. Leas, a sister, who gets all the ground rents ; Mrs. Green, a sister, whose four children get nearly or quite one-half and perhaps more than one-half of the estate—Mrs. Horner, one of Mrs. Green’s children who gets one-fourth of that half—Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
39 A. 863, 86 Md. 494, 1898 Md. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frush-v-green-md-1898.