INGALLS, OF ESTATE OF INGALLS v. Trustees of Mt. Oak Methodist Church

223 A.2d 778, 244 Md. 243
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1966
Docket[No. 439, September Term, 1965.]
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 223 A.2d 778 (INGALLS, OF ESTATE OF INGALLS v. Trustees of Mt. Oak Methodist Church) 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
INGALLS, OF ESTATE OF INGALLS v. Trustees of Mt. Oak Methodist Church, 223 A.2d 778, 244 Md. 243 (Md. 1966).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the caveat to the will of John Luther Ingalls who died on October 28, 1963 at the age of 84. The will was dated November 11, 1961 and named Arthur Morton Ingalls, the nephew of the testator as executor. The will was admitted to probate by the Orphans’ Court of Prince George’s County and letters testamentary were granted to the named executor who duly qualified as executor. The trustees of Mt. Oak Methodist Church of Mitchellville, Maryland, the American Red Cross, and a number of individual legatees under a previous will, each of whose shares of the testator’s estate had been either reduced or eliminated by the will admitted to probate, filed a caveat. After the executor had filed his answer to the caveat, seven issues were framed and sent to the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County to be tried by a jury.

At the conclusion of the caveator’s case, the Circuit Court (Powers and Meloy, JJ.) directed a verdict in favor of the caveatee (the executor) on each issue except the issues of undue influence (Issue No. 3) and mental capacity (Issue No. 4) and reserved its decision on those two issues. The caveatee again moved for a directed verdict in his favor at the conclusion of the trial on the remaining two issues. The Circuit Court again reserved its decision on those issues and submitted them *247 to the jury. The jury answered those two remaining issues in favor of the caveators, i.e., that the will admitted to probate was procured by undue influence and that the testator had lacked mental capacity at the time the will of November 11, 1961 was executed. The caveatee filed motions for judgment non obstante veredicto or in the alternative for a new trial. These motions were overruled by the Circuit Court, thereby allowing the jury’s verdict on the two issues to stand. An appeal was timely taken to this Court by the caveatee from the order overruling his motions.

Three questions are presented to us by this appeal. They are:

1. Did the trial court err in allowing Jesse Lee Hall, a lay witness, to testify in regard to his opinion that the testator was mentally incompetent on the day the will was executed ?

2. Should the trial court have directed a verdict for the caveatee at the close of all the testimony on the issue of mental incapacity of the testator at the time of the execution of the will?

3. Should the trial court have directed a verdict for the caveatee at the close of all the testimony on the issue of undue influence ?

The Court has concluded that all of these questions must be answered in the affirmative and the order of the trial court must be reversed.

In considering the facts, all conflicts in the evidence must be resolved in favor of the caveators and the Court must assume the truth of the evidence produced on their behalf as well as all reasonable inferences in favor of the caveators that may be drawn from the evidence. Tufts v. Poore, 219 Md. 1, 8, 147 A. 2d 717, 721 (1959). See also Smith v. Bernfeld, 226 Md. 400, 405, 174 A. 2d 53, 55 (1961).

Many of the facts are not in dispute, and are as follows: The testator was born on December 10, 1878 in Arkansas. His family moved to Maryland where he established a business selling farm implements and machinery, in partnership with Lyle L. Simmons. Their place of business was a store on Route 301 at Mitchellville, Prince George’s County.

The testator was a bachelor. In 1957 he had two living *248 brothers, Walter and James, a number of nieces and nephews, and several grandnieces and nephews. For many years he had been an active member of Mt. Oak Methodist Church, Mitchell-ville, being a member of both the official board and one of the trustees of that church. In 1957 or 1958 when that church had a reception for its oldest members, the testator was the oldest of the five or six persons honored on that occasion and was at that time made an honorary member for life of the official board and an honorary trustee.

Jesse Lee Hall, a member of the Maryland and District of Columbia bars, began to represent the testator sometime between 1935 and 1940. He advised him in regard to his income tax returns, his delinquent customers and various landlord-tenant matters.

When Mr. Simmons died in April 1957, the testator, who had bequeathed certain things to his deceased partner, called upon Mr. Hall to make a new will for him. This apparently was the will of April 11, 1957. In this will, the testator, after providing for a suitable marker for his grave and a bequest to the trustees of Mt. Oak Methodist Church of $5000 to provide for the perpetual upkeep- of the testator’s family lot in Mt. Oak Cemetery, provided for a number of bequests to his nieces, nephews, grandnephews, his two' brothers and to various friends and employees. In Item Twenty-first,—the residuary clause— the testator provided that after the payment of the costs of administration, taxes and the legacies, the residue should be divided equally between the trustees of Mt. Oak Methodist Church and the National (sic) Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Jesse Lee Hall and LeRoy Hall were named executors and were directed to sell all real estate not specifically devised. If either of the Halls predeceased the testator, Reeves Blandford was named as executor in the place of the person predeceasing the testator.

The testator executed another will on October 25, 1958. In this will he continued many of the legacies in his 1957 will, added new legacies and reduced the amounts of various legacies. There was also a provision for abatement of legacies if the estate was not of sufficient size to pay all legacies, with the provision, however, that the legacies which should pass to the chil *249 dren of his brothers Walter and James or their children in Items Third and Fourth should abate first, proportionately, and thereafter all remaining legacies should abate proportionately including the legacies to Walter and James in Items Third and Fourth. The residuary clause—Item Nineteenth—was identical with that in the 1957 will.

The testator executed three codicils to the 1958 will. They were dated January 7, 1959, August 4, 1959 and May 21, 1960, respectively. The last codicil to the 1958 will recited the testator’s agreement with Arthur Morton Ingalls and his wife (hereinafter mentioned) and a conveyance to them of 2 acres of land out of the testator’s farm at Mitchellville, for which reasons he revoked the specific legacy of $5000 to Arthur Morton In-galls (but not the $1000 legacy to Arthur’s daughter, Janie).

On November 11, 1961, the testator executed the will which is the subject of the caveat in the case at bar.

In comparing the 1958 will and three codicils to that will with the challenged 1961 will, the 1958 will and codicils had 41 legatees whereas the 1961 will had 34 legatees. Seventeen of the named legatees in the 1958 will and three codicils do not appear in the 1961 will, but 10' old friends of the testator who were not named in the 1958 will and three codicils are named in the 1961 will. It is significant to note that every member of the family of the testator received legacies in the 1961 will except the two grandnieces.

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223 A.2d 778, 244 Md. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingalls-of-estate-of-ingalls-v-trustees-of-mt-oak-methodist-church-md-1966.