Keller v. Gill

48 A. 69, 92 Md. 190, 1900 Md. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 13, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 A. 69 (Keller v. Gill) 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
Keller v. Gill, 48 A. 69, 92 Md. 190, 1900 Md. LEXIS 14 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court':

The bill of complaint filed in this case on June sixteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, assails the validity of a deed of conveyance made by a certain Henry H. Keller to his two daughters, who, with their husbands, are the appellees on the record now before us. The plaintiffs below, who are the appellants here, are three granddaughters and one grandson of the grantor. The deed bears date May the twelfth, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, and was filed for record three days later. On the thirtieth of May, or just eighteen days after *191 the deed had been executed, Henry Keller died. The deed conveyed to the two daughters all the real estate that Keller owned ; and the inventories filed in the Orphans’ Court since his death show that he was worth but seventeen dollars and a half in personal property. The grounds upon which this conveyance is attacked are, first, mental incapacity on the part of the grantor ; and secondly, fraud on the part of the grantees.

Whilst there is not sufficient evidence to establish a lack of mental capacity, though there are circumstances which indicate that Keller had but an imperfect comprehension of the contents of the deed, the whole atmosphere surrounding the transaction is filled with unmistakable signs of fraud. Upon looking through the record and scrutinizing the conduct of the beneficiaries under the deed, and after giving to the undisputed facts their appropriate probative value, it is impossible to escape the conviction that these grandchildren were made the victims of a scheme devised by the grantees and imposed upon the. grantor with the selfish view of acquiring all his property under the' sham and the guise of a conveyance founded on a pretended valuable consideration. Fraud is always more or less masked. The most bungling, no less than the most adroit perpetrator of it, seeks to hide the evidence of his handiwork, and to give to the result accomplished the semblance and the outward show of honesty. The more skilful the agent, the more difficult the detection. But in almost every instance there is unwittingly left some trivial clue which leads to discovery, or the thing done is so far at variance with what ought naturally to have been expected that-it can by no reasonable explanation be referable to any other cause, though the precise steps taken to reach the end achieved may not be readily traced.

To get a proper view of the situation with which we are now dealing we must go back a few years and ascertain the surroundings of the parties. Keller had four children — a son and three daughters — at least the record shows no others. The son died some twenty-two years ago, leaving two infant children, one a boy the other a girl, and they, now past their *192 majority, are two of the plaintiffs in the case. One of the three daughters died about fourteen years ago, leaving two daughters and they are, with their husbands, the other plaintiffs in the case. The grandson lived with his grandfather for nearly twenty-two years, and when the grandson married he took the grandfather’s house in Manchester, Carroll County, and the grandfather occupied a room therein until a few weeks prior to his death. Some two or three years before Keller died his wife departed this life. She left an estate of a few thousand dollars. This, or at least a part of this, seems to have been invested in promissory notes payable to her. Of these notes, one for between nine hundred and a thousand dollars, was made by Susan Eckenrode and her husband, two of the appellees ; one for between eight hundred and a thousand dollars was made by Mary E. Gill, another appellee ; and one for one hundred and twenty-three dollars was made by Howard M. Keller, one of the appellants. These notes, together with a will which Keller had executed, were kept by him in his secretary in his room at Manchester. It does not appear whether the wife’s estate was her statutory separate estate or not, but the notes were not reduced into possession by Keller in the life-time of his wife and they belong to her estate upon which no administration has ever been taken out. Some two or three weeks before Keller died he was induced by one of the grantees in the deed, namely, Mrs. Gill, to go from his home in Manchester, to her house, about nine miles distant in Baltimore County. At that time Keller was in bad health. After he reached Mrs. Gill’s house he was attacked with cramp colic to which it seems he had been subject, and he took to his bed. He appears never to have rallied or to have left his bed again. Shortly after he had gone to Mrs. Gill’s, and whilst he was in a physically weak condition, Mrs. Eckenrode, another of the grantees in the deed, called upon Mr. Baltozer, a magistrate living in Manchester, and asked him to prepare a deed from her father conveying his property to her and her sister, Mrs. Gill. At her request Mr. Baltozer went to the house of Mrs. Gill the same day, and upon enter *193 ing the room-where Keller was in bed, this is what took place : “ I went in,” said the witness Baltozer, “and spoke to Mr. Keller and he said he wanted me to write a deed, he wanted to deed his property to' his two daughters. I asked him what was to be the consideration named in the deed, he said two thousand dollars for the property in town, two hundred for one lot and one hundred and fifty for another lot; I said then that will make two thousand, three hundred and fifty dollars for all. I then went down stairs and prepared the deed. After the deed was prepared I took it upstairs for Mr. Keller to sign. He sat up in bed and wrote his name.” The acknowledgment was taken before R. Hooper Gill, the husband of one of the grantees. Mrs. Eckenrode was in the house during this time, having gone there from her home in Manchester, after she had sent Mr. Baltozer to Mrs. Gill’s. No money was paid by the grantees in the presence of the draftsman of the deed, and though Keller never left the house alive and is not shown to have spent a dollar during the remaining eighteen days of his life, not a cent of this alleged consideration has been accounted for by his administratrices, who are the grantees in the deed. If they ever paid the consideration they have come into possession of it again and they have failed to make a return of it as part of the assets of his estate. ' Their failure to make a return of it is strong evidence until explained that they never paid a penny of it.

In a few days after the deed had been executed, by means of which the two daughters procured a title to the whole of their father’s real estate, the son-in-law Gill, with the aid of Mrs, Eckenrode, removed from Keller’s house in'Manchester and took to the house of Mrs. Gill, Keller’s bed-room furniture, including the secretary containing the notes and will. By this act they obtained possession of all the personal property he had except the trifling articles enumerated in an inventory filed in the Orphans’ Court and aggregating in value the sum of seventeen dollars and fifty cents. By the same act they obtained possession of the will and of the notes due by them to Mrs. Keller’s estate. Within two weeks after Keller’s *194 death, letters of administration upqn his estate were granted by the Orphans’ Court of Carroll County to Mr. and Mrs. Gill and Mr. and Mrs. Eckenrode.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 69, 92 Md. 190, 1900 Md. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-gill-md-1900.