In Re Ritter

128 A. 765, 148 Md. 127, 1925 Md. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 A. 765 (In Re Ritter) 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
In Re Ritter, 128 A. 765, 148 Md. 127, 1925 Md. LEXIS 11 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Sidney M. Ritter lived in Baltimore County on her small farm, .with her husband and family. It was a leasehold property of about nineteen acres and three roods, subject to■ a ground rent of one cent, which apparently has not been paid for many years, so we shall speak of the property as. freehold for the purposes of this opinion. Mrs. Ritter died in 1868 and devised and bequeathed the farm and the stock and farming, implements to her surviving son, Howard T. Ritter, on conditions subsequent which were stated in this *129 form by the will: “the said Howard T. Ritter is to pay my oldest son, John T. Ritter, the sum of ($300.00) three hundred dollars within six years from the date of my death, and he the said Howard T. Ritter is to take eare of and provide a home for his brother, George E. Ritter, who is a lunatic, as long as he lives, to be kept and provided for at home on the place where I now live, and he the said Howard T. Ritter is to take care of and provide a home for his afflicted brother, Hiram A. Ritter, also to take care of and provide a home for his aged father, Thomas Ritter, during his life.” This quotation embraces everything in the will that has any bearing on the questions here.

The devisee of the farm accepted the gift, lived on it, and discharged his obligations until his death on October 31st, 1887, when he gave by his will the farm and the stock and the farming implements to William Howard Owings. The devise of the farm, so far as it reflects on the question involved on this appeal, read thus:

“Item. I give, devise and bequeath unto my nephew, Wm. Howard Owings, son of Henry Owings, and now a resident of Baltimore City, my farm and premises on which I now dwell situated in the Second District of Baltimore County, Maryland, and containing 19% acres of laud, more or less, it being the same piece or parcel of land that was conveyed to me from my mother, Sidney M. Ritter, by will dated on the first day of April, 1867, to him the said Wm. Howard Owings, his heirs and assigns, in fee simple; to have and to hold the same, subject to the following conditions and qualifications, viz: He shall take my place and stead, and do what I am required and held to do under and by the provisions of my mother’s will aforesiad, in providing and caring for my two brothers, George E. Ritter and Hiram A. Ritter.”

William Howard Owings took possession of the farm under the will, and now holds it. George E. Ritter and Hiram A. Ritter both survived their brother, Howard T. Ritter. *130 In 1901, a bill of complaint for an accounting was filed by Hiram A. Eitter in his own name and in the name of his insane brother, George E. Eitter, against William Howard Owings, charging that George E. Eitter had been placed on October 13th, 1886, in the Maryland Hospital for the Insane, where he remained as an insane pauper; and that Hiram A. Eitter had been forced on March 22nd, 1901, to leave his horn© on the farm because of cruelty of treatment by Owings, who was alleged to have failed to provide him with food and clothing so that he was driven to rely upon charity for his home and support. The defendant denied the allegations on February 5th, 1902; and, pending the proceedings, Hiram A. Eitter died. Carville D. Benson became his administrator, and the court passed a decree on January 23rd, 1904, directing that the defendant and his wife pay to the administrator the sum of two hundred dollars and the funeral expenses, and the further sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars a's counsel fees for solicitors for complainants and the costs; and dismissing the bill upon the payments being made. Nothing was awarded to the co-plaintiff, the lunatic, the sums named were paid, and the bill was dismissed.

On the dismissal of this bill, the lunatic, George E. Eitter, was the surviving beneficiary under the will of Sidney M. Eitter, and he was incurably insane in an asylum where he was maintained at the expense of the State.

The mother in her will called George E. Eitter a lunatic, and he was found by inquisition had in the Circuit Court for Baltimore Oounty, to be an insane pauper, and, accordingly, on Hovember 11th, 1886, was committed to Spring Grove State Hospital, from which he escaped on July 12th, 1887. He returned to the farm, where he was given a comfortable home and clothed and fed until in July, 1888, he voluntarily left, completely disappeared and was at large until July 3rd, 1891, when he came back to the farm. He was again given a home, fed and clothed, and the afiirmative, positive proof is that William Howard Owings continued *131 fully to perform and discharge all his obligations to the lunatic until, without his instigation or knowledge and in his absence, the law officers came and took him back to the State asylum, to which he was committed but from which he had escaped.

The testimony of Dr. Percy J. Wade, the alienist and superintendent of Spring Grove State Hospital, where Eitter came under his personal observation, was to the effect that it was not safe for Eitter to he at large and that it was necessary to keep him confined all the time in a hospital for the insane. There is not a particle of evidence offered in contradiction, and, on the other hand, the instances of misconduct, — of attack upon the daughter and wife of Owings, threats of violence and to kill, and, on one occasion, of an actual attempt on the life of a neighbor with a loaded shotgun, — which were narrated in the proof, without any attempt at palliation or denial, afford convincing illustration that the confinement in an insane asylum was necessary. The record is persuasive that it would have been an injustice to Eitter not to have put and kept him where he would at once he prevented from doing injury to others and, in physical ease and comfort, he cared for, waited on and nursed with a skill and attention which was wholly beyond any possible performance or obligation on the part of Owings.

The lunatic was kept as a public patient in Spring Grove State Hospital until be died, on January 11th, 1918. Owings paid the funeral expenses, but beyond visiting him and taking or sending Mm quite frequently delicacies, he contributed nothing to the expense of his maintenance at the hospital.

One other phase requires statement. In 1911, William Howard Owing's desired to borrow $1,000 of Eedmond C. Stewart, trustee, to be secured by a mortgage on the farm. When the title was examined the provision with respect to George E. Eitter was discovered, the circumstances were investigated, and, when it was found that George E. Eitter *132 was an old man, hopelessly and violently insane, and committed to a public institution, it was determined to accept the farm as security for the loan, but, in order to remove any doubt as to the title, Mr. Stewart frankly said that he had advised the institution of proceedings for the appointment of a committee of the person and property of the lunatic in order that a release might be obtained of the personal right of the lunatic to have a home and maintenance on the farm. Accordingly, some three weeks after the making of the said loan and mortgage, a petition was filed on March 18th, 1911, for the writ de lunático'

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Bluebook (online)
128 A. 765, 148 Md. 127, 1925 Md. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ritter-md-1925.