Graves v. Spedden

46 Md. 527, 1877 Md. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 13, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 46 Md. 527 (Graves v. Spedden) 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
Graves v. Spedden, 46 Md. 527, 1877 Md. LEXIS 65 (Md. 1877).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By this record it appears that John Spedden died in August, 1873, intestate, leaving four sons, five daughters, and the children of two deceased daughters as his sole heirs-at-law and distributees of his personal estate. In January, 1874, a bill was filed by the eldest son for a sale, for the purpose of partition of certain real estate of which his father died seized and possessed, and to this bill all the other heirs-at-law were made defendants. No question is made as to the necessity of a decree for the sale of this property, but the daughters and adult grandchildren aver in their answers, that the three sons, Robert, William [533]*533and Charles, were advanced by their father in his life-time by the conveyance to them of his “Home Farm,” and that Hugh, the other son, had borrowed of his father $1500 secured by his notes which his father in his life-time destroyed, with a view of giving this sum of money to Hugh as an advancement, and they ask that these advancements may be brought into the estate for division with the other property, and that the sons may be excluded from any participation in the proceeds of the sale of the real estate sought to be sold under this bill, and in all the property which the deceased held at the time of his death. The same question is presented by some of the defendants by a petition or cross-bill, and whether these benefits to the sons are to be treated as advancements or as absolute gifts, is the only question which this appeal requires'us to decide.

In this State as in England, a gift of money or property by a parent to a child, is presumptively an advancement, but this presumption may be repelled or rebutted by evidence proper for the purpose. In other words, whether such a gift takes the character and legal properties of an advancement or those of a full and absolute gift without a view to a portion or settlement, depends on the intention of the donor, and that intention may be ascertained by parol evidence of the donor’s declarations at the time of executing the conveyance or making the gift, or of the donee’s admissions afterwards, or by proof of facts and circumstances from which the intention may be inferred. These propositions have been so firmly established by a series of adjudications in this Court as to be no longer open to controversy. Stewart vs. Patterson, 8 Gill, 55 ; Parks vs. Parks, 19 Md., 323; Cecil vs. Cecil, 20 Md., 153; Clark vs. Wilson, 27 Md., 693. The law as thus settled, must be applied to the proof and the facts and circumstances of each case as it arises. In this sense it appears that the father, in consideration of natural love and affec[534]*534tion, conveyed by deed, his home farm to his three sons, Robert, William and .Charles, on condition that it should never be sold out of the Spedden family, and reserving to himself a life estate therein. The deed itself affords no solution of the difficulty. Neither the restriction upon alienation nor the reservation of a life estate indicates any intention of the donor to make it other than an advancement, which the law declares it to be where the conveyance is silent as to its design in this respect. Nor do we find in any of the facts or circumstances of the case, apart from the declarations of the donor proved by parol evidence, anything from which we can draw the inference of a contrary intention. But if the declarations of the donor, upon which the appellees rely, be admitted' in evidence, and proved by a competent witness, they are conclusive of the question.

The testimony thus relied on is that of Robert Spedden, the complainant, who was called as a witness by his brothers, who were some of the defendants to the bill, but had the same interest in the question at issue as himself. This witness, after stating several previous conversations with his father, in which the latter expressed his wish to deed this farm to his three sons, to whom it was afterwards conveyed, testified in substance, that in the last conversation before the deed was drawn, his father urged him to have it prepared, saying life was uncertain, and to this witness replied he could not have it drawn without some papers to draw it by ; his father then said he would write the directions and give them to him the next time he came over, and then assigned as another reason for giving his boys more than his girls, that both his grand-fathers had done so, and added, you boys have made the most of my money, and I am determined you shall have the most-of it, and you are standing in your own light in not .having the deed prepared.” The next time witness went over, his father gave him written directions prepared by himself [535]*535for the preparation of the deed. These directions, which were produced in evidence, seem to have been faithfully embodied in the instrument which was afterwards executed. The witness then further testifies that when his father gave him these instructions he said, you are a county commissioner, and when you go to town you can have the deed prepared ; that he went to town the following Monday, and gave the instructions to Reuben "W. Hall, and got him to prepare the deed ; on the next day witness took the deed over to his father, who read it over and said it was all right, and ought to have been done before: I wanted to give the farm to you hoys, and you stood in your own light in not having it done before; and he further said, “ when this deed is executed I am going to destroy Hugh’s notes:” witness then said to him, “I thought you once said Hugh had gotten his part,” to which his father replied, “I did say so, but there has something accumulated since, and I have changed my mind;” and further said, “when I destroy Hugh’s notes it will make him fully equal with you and William in the land, but not quite as much as Charlie ;” that his father then also said, “ I want you hoys to have that much more than the girls, and all the rest of my property I want divided equally among all my children; this will give you $1000 or $1200 more apiece, and that will he a nice little present for each of you,” and asked witness not to mention this, as the girls might he jealous if they found out the hoys would get more than they did ; that his father then appointed the following Saturday, which is the usual business day in that part of the county, for the execution of the deed, hut finding that the magistrate was absent from home, he afterwards postponed it until the next Saturday, and on that day his father, witness and his brother William, and the magistrate, met by appointment at a neighboring school house, and the deed was signed and acknowledged, and then delivered by his father to witness to he taken to [536]*536the clerk’s office to he recorded, which witness did, and it was duly recorded.

Now, it is contended hy the appellants that these declarations are inadmissible because they were not made “at the time” the deed was executed. But we do not understand that in either of the cases referred to the Court intended to lay it down as an inflexible rule that such declarations were inadmissible unless made exactly cotemporaneous with, or at the very instant the act of signing the deed, which perfected the gift, took place. When they declared that the character of the estate conveyed in respect to its being an advancement or an absolute gift follows the intention of the donor, and that such intention .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Md. 527, 1877 Md. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-spedden-md-1877.