Hammersley v. Bell

106 A. 339, 134 Md. 172, 1919 Md. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 6, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 106 A. 339 (Hammersley v. Bell) 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
Hammersley v. Bell, 106 A. 339, 134 Md. 172, 1919 Md. LEXIS 58 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The subject-matter of this controversy, is a continuation of the litigation between the parties: and was in part considered by this Court on former appeals:, and reported in Horner v. Bell, 102 Md. 435, and in Horner v. Bell, 105 Md. 114.

A brief reference to those cases will he required so as it may appear what questions were then determined by us, and what are the remaining ones now open for review, and involved on this appeal.

On the 8th of July, 1902, Elizabeth H. Bell and George D. Hammersley, grandchildren of Elizabeth B. Hammersley, late of Baltimore City, deceased, filed their hill of complaint *174 in Circuit Court Ho. 2 of Baltimore City against Albert H. Horner and Mary D. Hornea’, for the purpose of obtaining’ a decree, to annul, vacate and set aside cea’tain deeds made by Mrs. Hammersley to Albert H. Homer and Mary D. Homer the execution of which it was alleged was obtained by fraud and undue influence, and also upon the ground that .at the time of their execution, the grantor was not mentally capable of making a valid deed or contract.

. The four deeds directly involved in that controversy were dated July 29th, 1899, nearly three year’s prior to the grantor’s death, but were not recorded until June 13th, 1902, about one week after her death. By these deeds she assigned and conveyed away all of her property, and practically gave all of it to hea* son-in-law, Albert 1ST. Horner, to the exclusion of her children and grandchildren.

On January 20th, 1905, by a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, those deeds were set aside and declared to be null and void, and on appeal to this Court this decree, after a very careful consideration and a very full opinion by the late Judge Jokes, was affirmed. Horner v. Bell, 102 Md. 440.

Shortly after the return of the mandate of this Court to the Court below, Albert U. Homer on the 24th of February, 1906, recorded another set of four deeds, dated the 9th day of December, 1901, from Elizabeth B. Hammersley, purporting to convey the identical property to the same persons as did the deeds, declared void by this Court in 102 Md. 435, supra.

On the 22nd of March, 1906, the plaintiffs filed this bill against Albert H. Homer, Mary D. Horner and the administrator of Elizabeth B. Hammersley, wherein the same fraud and undue- influence are charged and alleged against the defendants with respect to the execution of these deeds, as were alleged against the first set of deeds in the former case.

The defendants answered the bill, and on October 11th, 1906, the case was heard on bill and answers and an order *175 was passed, appointing receivers, to take charge of the property.

On appeal to this Court, this order was, reversed on the 28th of February, 1907, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, on proof, as to the validity of the deeds. Horner v. Bell, 105 Md. 114.

The present case was not disposed of until the 2nd of March, 1918, at which time it was heard on hill, answers, exhibits and proof, including the evidence and the proceedings reported on the former appeal, 102 Md. 435.

From a decree setting aside and declaring null and void, the deeds mentioned in these proceedings, this appeal has been taken.

There can he no serious difficulty as to the proper disposition of the case, on its merits, either as to the law or on the testimony contained in the two records now before us.

The principles of law, applicable to the case, are well settled and the reasons on which they rest were clearly and fully stated on the first appeal, between the same parties and need not be restated on this. Horner v. Bell, 102 Md. 435.

The testimony in this case it will he seen is as satisfactory and convincing in support of the conclusion of the Court below that the deeds now in question should be annulled and set aside, as was the evidence in the first case, in which they were declared null and void.

In the first case it was said: “It would seem from a review of the evidence in the cause as to the character of the transaction here in question, and the relations of the parties thereto and to each other in connection with it, that it is clearly brought within the principle recognized and applied in a number of cases in this, Court and notably in the recent case of Zimmerman v. Bitner, 79 Md. 115, that when ‘a gift or conveyance’ such as here is the subject of controversy ‘is in question’ the onus is upon the done to prove to the satisfaction of the Court that the conveyance was, the free, deliberate and voluntary act of the donor, and made by him with *176 full knowledge as to its effect and operation; in other words, that he knew that the conveyance itself operated to- divest him of all title to the property, and to vest it in the donee.”

The deeds now in question, with the exception of the dates-, are identical with those assailed in the former" case, and are -clo-sely related, as parts of the same plan and are in effect substantially the same instruments.

. After a careful examination of the testimony disclosed by tbe record in tbis case-, and in view of the decision on the first appeal, presenting almost a similar state of facts between the same parties we have no doubt of tbe correctness of the decree of the Court below, vacating and setting aside tbe -deeds now in question, in these proceedings.

Mrs. Hammers-ley was no-t only an old woman, but feeble in health, and at the time of the execution of the deeds, was living in the same house with Mr. and Mrs. Horner, and under their care and protection. At this age, in her condition of health and under the circumstances- set out in the testimony, she conveyed all of her property for a nominal consideration to her son-in-law except a few small gifts- to her daughter and grandchildren, thereby not only depriving herself of all of her property, but making no provision whatever for a dependent son, who- was then living with her and the special object of her love and affection.

The relation of the parties to these deeds now in question and the circumstances under which they were executed, imposed the onus or burden upon the defendants of proving that the deeds were the deliberate and voluntary act of tbe grantor and made witho-ut undue influence or fraud upon the part of those benefited thereby. In other words, as stated by tbe authorities, the evidence- produced must show or it must be inferred therefrom, that the deeds wei’e “the free, deliberate and voluntary act” of the grantor and made “with full knowledge of their effect and operation.” Highberger v. Stiffler, 21 Md. 338; Zimmerman, v. Bitner, 79 Md. 125; *177 Berger v. Bullock, 85 Md. 442; Keller v. Gill, 92 Md. 190; Dawson v.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A. 339, 134 Md. 172, 1919 Md. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammersley-v-bell-md-1919.