Horner v. Bell

62 A. 736, 102 Md. 435, 1906 Md. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 62 A. 736 (Horner 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
Horner v. Bell, 62 A. 736, 102 Md. 435, 1906 Md. LEXIS 2 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

*436 Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, which set aside and annulled certain deeds to which specific reference is made in the decree and the nature and purport of which will appear in the following statement of the facts which gave rise to the controversy involved in the case. Elizabeth B. Hammersley, a widow and a resident of the City of Baltimore, died in that city on or about the 4th day of June, 1902. In her life time she had been possessed of considerable property, real, leasehold and personal. About a week after her death, on the 13th day of June, 1902, the deeds dealt with by the decree in the case were left for record in the Clerk’s office of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, which was the proper place for such instruments to be recorded, by Albert N. Horner, one of the appellants in this case. She left as her heirs and next of kin, a daughter, Mary D. Horner, one of the appellants, and wife of her co-appellant, Albert N. Horner; a son, William H. Hammersley; and two grandchildren, Elizabeth H. Bell, and George D. Hammersley, the appellees, who are the children of a son who predeceased her.

The deeds, which are the subject of controversy, four 'in number, all purport to have been executed and acknowledged by the deceased, Elizabeth B. Hammersley, on the 29th day of July, 1899, and were all left for record by Horner on the 13th day of June, 1902 ; and were noted consecutively as having been received at 2.15, 2.16, 2.17 and 2.18 o’clock, P. M. One of them conveyed to Elizabeth H. Bell, one of the appellees, “in consideration of five dollars and other good and valuable consideration,” a certain leasehold property on Pear-l street, in the city of Baltimore, for life on condition, “that she promptly pays all necessary expenses on said property within sixty days after their maturity;” and if this condition “be fulfilled then after the death of the said Elizabeth Hammersley Bell * * * to go to and become the property of each of the children of the said Elizabeth Hammersley Bell as may be living at the time of her death and to the descendants of any deceased child.” But if there shall be a failure “to pay said *437 necessary expenses within sixty days -after their maturity then the property” assigned by the deed “is to immediately vest in and become the property of Mary D. Horner, wife of Albert N. Horner, free of all trusts and uses,” &c.

Another conveyed for a like consideration a certain other leasehold property on Pearl street, said city, to George D. Hammersly, the other appellee, for life upon the same condition that he pay all necessary expenses within sixty days after their maturity aud if this condition be fulfilled, at his death, the property “to go to and become the property of Mary D. Horner, wife of Albert N. Horner;” but upon a failure to comply with the said condition upon the part of the said 'George D. Hammersly the property was to vest immediately in the said Mary D. Horner “free of all trusts aud uses,” &c. Another of these debts conveyed for a like consideration to the appellant, Mary D. Horner, “all of the personal property, goods and chattels and personalty contained in the two dwelling houses 108 North Green street and 2045 N¿rth Fulton avenue, this (Baltimore) city, therein belonging to the said Elizabeth B. Hammersly. “.To have and to hold” &c., “absolutely.” The fourth one of the deeds in question is a conveyance to the appellant Albert N. Horner in the terms following” in consideration of five dollars and other good and valuable consideration the said Elizabeth B. Hammersley doth hereby grant, assign and convey unto the said' Albert N. Horner, his heirs, personal representatives and assigns all. of the real estate, fee-simple, leasehold, ground rents and all other property and evidences of debt due of all kinds and description not mentioned in a personal property goods and chattel deed priorily executed by me — this shall include all notes, book accounts and insurance policies and all persons and corporations are hereby authorized to accept a certified copy of this paper as full authority and acquittance to them and this paper shall be a full release to them as against all other claimants at law or in equity the purposes and intent of the deed being to make an absolute grant of all the estate (not before deeded) of myself Elizabeth B. Hammersley, and to include *438 all the property deeded to me by my late husband, David L. Hammersley, deceased, to Albert N. Horner. To have and to hold all of said property to the said Albert N. Horner, his heirs, executors, personal representatives and assigns with all the right and appurtenances thereto belonging,” &c.

The appellees, as soon as they became aware of the deeds in question having been left for record filed the bill in this case in the Court below to have them set aside and annulled, alleging that they knew nothing of the said deeds “until they saw the notice of their having been recorded in the daily newspapers;” that the deeds purporting to have beep executed to them were never delivered to nor accepted by them; that the property pretended to be conveyed to them was subject to heavy ground rents, was in a dilapidated condition, was located in a part of the city “which is steadily deteriorating in ’value” and that it was comparatively of “little or no value while the estate and property so pretended to be conveyed to the said defendants, Albert N. Horner and Mary D. Horner, is of very large quantity and value;” that the deeds to the appellants were never legally delivered to them in the life time of the grantor; and that if the said deeds were executed at all by the said deceased they “were never intended to take effect in her life time and are therefore null and void.” They further charged that “Elizabeth B. Hammersley was advanced in age, being seventy-seven years old, and was not only infirm in body, but was also for a long time before her death, and at the time when said paper writings are alleged to have been executed, enfeebled and impaired in mind to such an extent as to render her unfit for the transaction of any business and wholly incapable of making a valid deed or contract; that she was particularly susceptible to influences surrounding her, and' residing with the said Albert N. Horner and Mary D. Horner, her feebleness and incapacity were taken advantage of by them, and she was induced, influenced and persuaded by said defendants * * * through fraud, misrepresentation and undue influence practised by them to sign said paper writings,” &c. The question is whether upon the record be *439 fore us these allegations of the appellee's bill are so far sustained as to justify the decree which is here under review. And this question is largely one of fact as to which we are not aided by any direct proof going to the charges made in the bill as grounds of relief; but the irresistible inferences from the disclosures of the record leave no doubt as to the propriety of the decree. In reaching our conclusions the testimony which has been made the subject of exceptions has been laid out of the case. It will not be necessary therefore to notice these exceptions further.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 736, 102 Md. 435, 1906 Md. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horner-v-bell-md-1906.