Jaworski v. Wisniewski

131 A. 40, 149 Md. 109, 1925 Md. LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 131 A. 40 (Jaworski v. Wisniewski) 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. Wisniewski, 131 A. 40, 149 Md. 109, 1925 Md. LEXIS 170 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered tie opinion of tie Court.

Ignatius Wisniewski and Bronislawa, his wife, on August 8tl, 1911, by deed, duly executed and recorded, acquired as tenants by tie entireties tie leasehold interest in a property described as 1101 S. Kenwood Avenue in tie city of Baltimore, subject to an annual ground rent of $31.25. At that *111 time Mrs. Wisniewski had four children by a former marriage, Andrew, Joseph, Pete and Stanislaus Fiksak. In 1914, as a result of domestic difficulties, she and her husband appear to have separated for a time, and as an incident of the separation • she bought her husband’s interests in the Ken-wood Avenue property, and in order to transfer it she and her husband joined in a deed assigning it to George O. Wiedersum, who is turn assigned it to her, so that after that the title to it stood in her name alone. In 1923 she conveyed the property to Isabel T. Brady, who immediately reconveyed it to her. On Uovember 28th, 1924, she executed in duo form a last will and testament, and on the same day she died.

The deed from Isabel T. Brady to her contained this clause:

“To have and to hold the above described property with its appurtenances unto the proper use of the said Bronislawa Wisniewski for and during the term of her natural life and no longer and with full power and authority to said Bronislawa Wisniewski to sell mortgage lease or in any manner dispose of or encumber the property hereby conveyed or any interest therein, including the absolute estate with the right to dispose of and consume the proceeds of any sale mortgage or lease thereof in such manner as she may desire without any obligation on the part of any purchaser mortgagee or lessee to see to the application of said proceeds and with full power and to the said Bronislawa Wisniewski to dispose of the property above described by her last will as she may deem proper the intention being that said Bronislawa Wisniewski in the exercise of said power shall have the right to convey or will all interest in said property both life estate and remainder and in default of her exercising the said power to sell or will then with remainder over from and immediately after the death of said Bronislawa Wisniewski to James Fiksak, Henry Fiksak, Pete Fiksak and Joseph Fiksak their heirs personal representatives and assigns in equal shares as tenants in *112 common subject to the payment of the annual rent of thirty-one dollars and twenty five cents on the first day of January and July in every year.”

On December 16th, 1924, the appellee filed a written renunciation of the provisions made for him in his wife’s will, and on December 26th, 1924, he filed the bill of complaint in this case against the four sons of his deceased wife and the executor of her last will, in which he asked (1) that the Brady deeds be set aside, (2) or, that they and the will of Mrs. Wisniewski in connection with the appellee’s renunciation be construed, (3) that trustees be appointed to sell the property and distribute the proceeds, and (4) that the defendants be restrained from prosecuting any action to eject the appellee from the property. The several defendants answered, testimony was taken, and on March 5th, 1925, a decree was signed setting aside the deed from the decedent to Isabel T. Brady, and from Isabel T. Brady to- her, declaring that Mrs. Wisniewski was possessed of the property at the time of her death, and that the appellee had the same interest'therein that he had in the other personal property of the 'decedent which passed under her will. From that decree the defendants appealed.

The appeal raises three questions: First, had the appellee as the husband of Bronislawa Wisniewski any interest in the property involved in this proceeding after he had united in the deed conveying it to Wiedersum in order that he might convey it to' her; second, assiiming that he did have such'an interest, was he fraudulently deprived thereof by the conveyances from Mrs. Wisniewski to Isabel T. Brady and from her to Mrs. Wisniewski, and third, if he was, is he estopped by his conduct from asserting that fact in this proceeding

The evidence material to a consideration of these questions is uneontradicted and may be briefly stated. Frank Jaworski, the executor of Mrs. Wisniewski’s estate; testified that at about the time, the Brady deeds were executed Mrs. *113 Wisniewski asked Mm to' place certain monies which she had in the Gibraltar Building Association in her name in trust for herself and Jaworski, subject to the order of both, the balance at tbe death of either to belong to the survivor, and directed him, upon her death, to pay $200 for “masses and the priest and two hundred dollars for the new church” to “fix” her lot and erect a tombstone, and to divide the balance among three of her sons. That at that time she said that she did not want her husband to have anything, that she “'would not give him a straw,” and that she “had fixed her property or money that he would not get anything”; that she wanted it to go to her sons; that her sons, were sending her money but that her husband was not. He also testified that she and her husband lived together in the Kenwood Avenue house continuously until her death.

John A. Brady, an attorney at law, testified that ho drew the deeds conveying her husband’s interest in the property i<: her in 1914. In referring to the circumstances connected with that transaction he said: “The title continued in them until 1914 when there seemed to be a separation between the two people and they came to- me and asked me if the property could be put in the wife’s name. There was considerable negotiation in reference to the transfer, the husband was bolding out for more money and was dickering with his wife the same as he would with a stranger, and the tiling was carried on for perhaps four or five weeks and they made four or five visits, 1 think, to me together, and then each one came singly. At last it was agreed that the wife could have the property transferred to her providing she paid the husband one-half of the purchase price of that property. There had been no change in the market values at that time and I adjusted the matter, figured it right down to (nen the cost of recording the paper and left the equity in the property to- be worth so much money, and she paid her husband one-half the amount of that equity according to the purchase price of the property at that time, and she took the property there subject to the building- association mortgage, *114 which, she continued to pay weekly. * * * Mrs. Wisniewski, said- — she spoke very broken English — she said: “My man pays nothing, pay no taxes, no water, no ground, pay mono money, no eat, no book. My man no good. My boy is-good. My boy pay taxes and my boy pay it, me got house- and man got no house.” That is the way she talked. He was arrogant at the time. He said, “Go out; I want no- more-house. You take house, you have boys, you and boy take-house and give me my money and I get out.” He further-testified that the plaintiff, at that time, said: “ ‘Give me my money out of this -house and give the house to you and your boys.’ That is not the exact language. It was broken English, but that is whakhe said.”

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Bluebook (online)
131 A. 40, 149 Md. 109, 1925 Md. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaworski-v-wisniewski-md-1925.