Jaworski v. Jaworski

95 A.2d 95, 202 Md. 1
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1994
Docket[No. 94, October Term, 1952.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 95 A.2d 95 (Jaworski v. Jaworski) 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
Jaworski v. Jaworski, 95 A.2d 95, 202 Md. 1 (Md. 1994).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves conflicting claims of the descendants of Ludwig Jaworski, who died a widower, as to the respective ownership of various parts of a ten acre tract of land in Anne Arundel County, which had been owned by him. The decree of the Circuit Court for that County, which is complained of, confirmed ownership as to one parcel in a son who occupied a house thereon, which he had built, and denied effectiveness to the attempt made by another son, the holder of legal title as trustee, to effect a unilateral partition among the descendants as he saw fit.

In 1927 Ludwig Jaworski was living in Baltimore with his son, Leon. He and his wife had had five children, namely, John, Elizabeth, Frances ( Mrs. Jewer), Leon and Roland. Elizabeth had died in 1918. John died in 1944 or 1945. Leon, Frances and Roland were living in or near Baltimore City. Ludwig had some $500.00 *4 in the Kosciusko Loan and Savings Association, a house in Baltimore, No. 1605 Lancaster Street, and a waterfront' property containing ten and a fraction acres in Anne Arundel County. In December, 1927, Ludwig put the savings account in the joint names of Leon and himself, and the next day, conveyed the real estate to Leon by a deed duly executed and recorded. The deed was in fee simple without any reservation of life estates or powers by the grantor, but the understanding was that Leon was to hold the properties as trustee for his father and sister and brother. In July, 1931, Leon, the grantee of the said deed, executed a declaration of trust, to the effect that he held the property for the benefit of his father for life with full power in the father “to sell, mortgage, lease, or otherwise dispose of the remainder, as well as the life estate therein, including disposition by will,”. It also provided that after the death of Ludwig, so much of the property as remained should be divided into five equal parts, one-fifth to go to Frances, one-fifth to Roland, and the remaining three-fifths to Leon, all free of trust. This paper was executed with all the formalities of a deed but was not recorded. In April, 1935, Ludwig signed another writing, which purported to change the beneficial remainder interests in the property referred to in the declaration of trust, so as to apparently give Frances and Roland, in equal shares, the three-fifths interest which had been given Leon originally, although the language of the paper leaves it somewhat in doubt as to what was intended. This writing was neither acknowledged nor recorded, although it was witnessed, and none of the parties give it any weight or validity. The case, by common consent, was tried on the assumption that it was not to be considered at all.

This litigation, in substance, involves only the ten acres in Anne Arundel County. The property lies on the north side of Powhatton Beach County Road and has a frontage of 1144.98 feet thereon, binding along its northeast side on Stony Creek for a distance of about *5 600 feet, and has a depth, northerly from the road, varying from about 200 feet on the easternmost outline to something over 500 feet about the middle thereof. Frances and her husband had erected a shack on the property which had been used on weekends by the whole family. In 1941, there were disagreements between Roland and his family and Frances and her family. Roland wanted a division of the property. As a result, Ludwig, Leon and Frances all told him to hire a surveyor and have him plat a division of the property as the children had staked off their respective claims. Mr. J. Revell Carr of Anne Arundel County was employed by Roland, and in March, 1942, made a plat following the lines the children had staked out, which had been done according to a rough plat Roland had previously made. Leon denies that the property had been staked out but it is undisputed that he worked with Roland and Mr. Carr all day on the property and helped Mr. Carr to secure all the data necessary to prepare his plat. In this division of the property, Leon was allocated two lots, No. 1, containing 1.7 acres, and No. 4, containing 4.09 acres. Frances Jewer and John, her husband, were given two lots, Nos. 2 and 5, containing respectively 0.97 and 1.03 acres, and Roland and Margaret, his wife, were given Lot No. 3, which contained 2.66 acres. If there had been a division precisely according to the declaration of trust, Roland and Frances would each have received 2.09 acres and Leon 6.18 acres. Leon did receive in the Carr division %0ths of an acre less than an exact three-fifths, Frances %0ths of an acre less than her one-fifth, and Roland %0tks of an acre more than his fifth. Roland’s lot, on paper, was more desirable because it had more water frontage, but the north and northwest corners of his lot, so the Chancellor found, “are nothing but a deep precipitous gully, so that at least two-thirds of his Creek frontage is practically worthless”.

Following the survey, Roland, with the knowledge of all the family, and with the acquiescence and help of Leon, built a house on Lot No. 3, which had been al *6 located to him. He spent substantial amounts, immediately after the Carr Plat had been made, and eventually, expended some $9,000.00.

In April, 1943, Roland received a letter from Mr. Noah A. Hillman, a lawyer at Annapolis, advising him that Leon, the month before, had executed a deed to Frances and her husband for “two lots of land as shown on a plat which had been recorded with the deed at Annapolis.” These two lots were Lots 2 and 5, as shown on the plat. Roland was advised that Leon was willing to convey to him Lot 3 on the plat and he was directed to remove from Mrs. Jewer’s lot any building material and bricks thereon. The plat referred to by Mr. Hillman was .one made by J. Edward Hall in November, 1942. The effect of the division of the whole property shown on this plat was to cut off of Roland’s lot, as established by the Carr Plat, a strip of land 100 feet or more extending along its entire westernmost outline, so as not only to reduce the area of the lot from 2.66 acres to .82 of an acre, but to cut off its entire road frontage, and tuck it in behind Mrs. Jewer’s lot No. 2 at the end of a 16-foot right-of-way. It was proposed, as compensation, to give Roland Lot No. 4 near the west end of the property with a frontage of 141 feet on the. County Road. The Chancellor found that the value of this lot would not begin to compensate Roland for the damage caused to his Lot No. 3 by taking away the 100-foot strip and requiring him to use the right-of-way as his only means of ingress and egress.

After receipt of the Hillman letter, Roland referred it to Mr. Eldrige Hood Young, a lawyer in Baltimore who had represented the family for many years, and who had prepared the deed and declaration of trust. Many conferences were held over a period of several years but nothing was accomplished by way of settlement.

Ludwig died in September, 1946 without leaving a will. Some six months later,. Roland, having learned that Leon, notwithstanding the settlement conferences, had *7 executed and delivered a deed of some of the land which Roland was to get under the Carr Plat, to Frances and her husband, and a deed for another part thereof, to Robert Norris and his wife, the son-in-law and daughter of Frances, seemingly as her nominees. Roland then had Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
95 A.2d 95, 202 Md. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaworski-v-jaworski-md-1994.