Heineman v. Bright

720 A.2d 1182, 124 Md. App. 1, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 171
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1998
Docket1557, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 720 A.2d 1182 (Heineman v. Bright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heineman v. Bright, 720 A.2d 1182, 124 Md. App. 1, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 171 (Md. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

SHERRIE L. KRAUSER, Judge

(Specially Assigned).

Jacklyn Kay Heineman (Ms. Heineman) and her daughter, Toy Michelle Evans, (appellants) appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City entered in favor of appellees, Julie W. Bright and her sisters, as personal representatives of the estate of their father, G. Wendel Heineman (the Estate). That judgment awarded to the Estate certain bonds that Ms. Heineman claimed Mr. Heineman gave her during their marriage. Because we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the only testimony available to support Ms. Heineman’s claim, we affirm the entry of summary judgment by the circuit court based on that deficiency in the evidence. We therefore decline to determine whether appellants would have had a right to a jury trial had this dispute not been resolved by the entry of summary judgment.

Facts

Ms. Heineman is the second wife and widow of G. Wendel Heineman, who died on July 11,1992. Prior to their marriage on October 27,1989, Ms. Heineman and Mr. Heineman executed a prenuptial agreement in which each party included a list of assets to which the other waived any right. Mr. Heine-man’s listed assets, to which Ms. Heineman waived all rights, included 29 Maryland Transportation Authority bearer bonds.

At the time of Mr. Heineman’s death, those bonds were held in a safe deposit box titled jointly in the names of Jacklyn Kay Heineman and G. Wendel Heineman, with right of survivor-ship. Until February, 1991, those bonds had been held in a safe deposit box titled solely in Mr. Heineman’s name. Ms. Heineman contends that Mr. Heineman transferred the bonds to the jointly titled box in accordance with his intent to give *4 those bonds to her. She therefore refused the Estate’s request to relinquish those bonds upon Mr. Heineman’s death and instead moved them to an account she held jointly with her daughter Toy Michelle Evans.

On August 11, 1993, the Estate sued Ms. Heineman and her daughter seeking, inter alia, the return of those bonds and all interest that had accrued on them after July 11, 1992. The Estate propounded interrogatories to Ms. Heineman on November 11, 1994; she never responded to them. Discovery was closed on January 12, 1995, by agreement of the parties and court order. The Estate then filed a motion for summary judgment, and appellants filed an opposition to that motion on March 5, 1995. In support of their opposition, appellants presented affidavits from Ms. Heineman and John Fox Graham, Jr., an investment executive who handled Mr. Heine-man’s accounts, relating conversations in which Mr. Heineman said that he transferred the bonds to the joint safe deposit box in order to give them to his wife. Neither by reply nor in .the hearing on the motion did the Estate object to appellants’ reliance on those witnesses. On June 5, 1995, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City entered judgment in favor of the Estate upon its motion for summary judgment. Ms. Heine-man appealed to this Court, which vacated the judgment and remanded this matter to the circuit court for further proceedings concerning the question of ownership of the bearer bonds. In an unreported opinion, Heineman, et al. v. Bright, et al., No. 1516, September Term, 1995, 111 Md.App. 735 (filed July 5,1996) a panel of this Court held:

[Mr. Heineman’s] conduct in placing the bonds in the joint safe deposit box together with his subsequent statement that he had given the bonds to [her] are sufficient evidence of donative intent and delivery to present a question for a jury with regard to whether there was a valid inter vivos gift of the bonds.

The issue of the admissibility of the proffered evidence was not then before the Court of Special Appeals. The Court found, however, that the proffered evidence established “that there was a genuine dispute of material fact regarding wheth *5 er [Mr. Heineman] made an inter vivos gift of the bonds to [his wife].”

The trial court stayed all proceedings during the pendency of the appeal. After both parties filed unsuccessful motions for reconsideration in this Court, they both filed petitions for writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals, which were denied on December 11, 1996. On December 31, 1996, the Estate moved to exclude Ms. Heineman’s testimony because it included statements made by and transactions with the decedent that were inadmissible under the Dead Man’s Statute. Md. Code (1974, 1995 Repl.Vol.), § 9-116 of the Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article. 1 A week later, Ms. Heineman notified the Estate of her intention to call Rosalie Welsh, a family friend, to testify that Mr. Heineman told her of his intention to give Ms. Heineman the bonds shortly after opening the new safe deposit box. On January 17, 1997, ten days later, the Estate moved to exclude the testimony of Ms. Welsh and Mr. Graham because of Ms. Heineman’s failure to identify those witnesses before the discovery deadline which had passed two years earlier.

At the conclusion of a hearing at which the trial court granted that motion, the court considered the Estate’s oral motion for summary judgment against both appellants. Because the court had excluded all relevant evidence in support of Ms. Heineman’s claim, it granted summary judgment against both appellants. There was no specific discussion of the claim of Ms. Evans. Appellants now appeal the trial court’s granting of both the Estate’s motion to exclude evidence and its motion for summary judgment.

Exclusion of Witnesses

Appellants concede that Ms. Heineman failed to answer interrogatories and that she identified two fact witnesses only after the expiration of a discovery deadline to which appellants, through counsel, had agreed. Nevertheless, appel *6 lants argue that they were unfairly prejudiced by opposing counsel’s inaction. Specifically, they complain that opposing counsel should have either contacted their counsel to discuss Ms. Heineman’s failure to respond or sought to compel her answers before moving to exclude the testimony of her witnesses. Appellants apparently contend that Ms. Heineman’s failure to respond to interrogatories lawfully propounded by the Estate should be excused by opposing counsel’s failure to remind her of her obligation. This, argument misconstrues the obligations of counsel.

A party is required to answer lawfully propounded interrogatories “within 30 days after service of the interrogatories.” Md. Rule 2-421(b). Ms.'Heineman’s answers were therefore due on or before December 14, 1994. Md. Rules 2 — 421(b); 1-203(c). The parties had agreed, and the court ordered, that all discovery be completed by January 12,1995. See Md. Rule 2-401(b). Ms. Heineman concedes that she never answered the interrogatories which requested that she identify all fact witnesses and summarize the material facts within their knowledge. She contends nonetheless that the trial court should not have excluded her witnesses without any effort by opposing counsel to resolve the discovery dispute, as she claims Maryland Rule 2-431 requires. 2

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Bluebook (online)
720 A.2d 1182, 124 Md. App. 1, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heineman-v-bright-mdctspecapp-1998.