Lipson v. Evans

108 A. 470, 135 Md. 127, 1919 Md. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 13, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 A. 470 (Lipson v. Evans) 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
Lipson v. Evans, 108 A. 470, 135 Md. 127, 1919 Md. LEXIS 120 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

*128 Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the second appeal in this case. The first appeal was from an order of the lower Court overruling a demurrer to-the bill of complaint. The order was reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings. The case is reported in 133 Md. 370. Thereafter, by leave of Court, the plaintiffs filed an amended bill to which the defendant demurred. The Court overruled the demurrer, and this appeal is taken by the defendant from that order. The demurrer admits the facts which are well pleaded. Those facts substantially are as follows: William H. Evans, a resident of Baltimore City, died in January, 1917, leaving a last will and testament by which he appointed the plaintiffs in this suit his executors and they duly qualified. He left surviving-him a widow and two children, and two grandchildren. About the year 1890 the defendant was employed for some months as a domestic in the house of said deceased. She left the service of William H. Evans> and was absent for about six years, and in 1906 she returned and was again employed as a domestic in his home. When first employed her name was Mary Elizabeth Myers; upon her return she gave her name as Mary Elizabeth Lipson, saying she had married a man named Lipson, who had died. 'She then had two little boys who, she stated, were the children of herself and the said Lipson.

'In 1909 Wilhelmina H. C. Evans, the wife of William H. Evans, received information to the effect that sexual intimacy existed between said Evans and the defendant. The plaintiffs have no knowledge as to when this illicit relation began, but they charge “upon informlat-ion and belief they aver that from a period as far back as 1909 and thence continuously down to the time of his death, the defendant occupied towards the said William H. Evans the position of mistress, and the said defendant was guilty of relations with the said William H. Evans which were illicit on her part and adulterous on his part.”

*129 During Ms lifetime, William IT. Evans became the owner of a large amount, of bonds of the Mapos Central Sugar Company, a corporation of the State of Delaware, whose secret tary and treasurer is a resident of Philadelphia where’ his office is located, and said company has no officer or resident agent in this State.

On August 19th, 1915, William II. Evans loaned to the Mapos Central Sugar Company honda of said company to the amount of $126,000 par value for the purpose of permitting said company to pledge said bonds to the West India Finance Company of New York as collateral security for loans to said sugar company, which gave four receipts aggregating $126, 000.00 par value to said Evans. One of these receipts was for $20,000.

After the death of William H. Evans., the plaintiffs fonnd all of these, receipts among his effects., except the receipt for $20,000 par value of said bonds. They thereupon made inquiry of the secretary and treasurer of the sugar company as to the missing receipt, and were informed by him that all four of said receipts had been mailed to William II. Evans, and inclosed a copy of a letter from him of August 28th, 1915, acknowledging receipt of said receipts. On June 1, 1911, the plaintiffs were informed by the secretary of the sugar company that the defendant had made formal demand upon him “for the coupons, of these bonds as they mature and has sent me a copy m|ade by her or her son of the receipt given by the Mapos Central Sugar Company and .endorsements thereon.” A copy of these papers was sent to the plaintiffs and by which it appeared that the body of a receipt from the Mapos Sugar Company to William II. Evans for Mapos bonds par value $20,000, dated August 19, 1915, and the body of two endorsements, both dated September 18, 1915, upon said receipt, were enclosed in a. letter of March 13, 1911, from the defendant to the secretary of the company. The copy of defendant’s letter, and of the. receipt for the bonds and two assignments, dated September 18, 1915, en *130 dorsed upon the receipt, oue an assignment from Evans to the' defendant and one a reassignment, upon certain contingencies from the defendant to Evans, are set out in full in the opinion in Lipson v. Evans, 133 Md. 373, and, therefore, need not be herein inserted.

The receipt is a copy, except the signature of the original receipt given by the Mapos Sugar Company to William H. Evans for said $20,000 par value of Mapos bonds, and said receipt was duly signed by the sugar company, and is now in the possession of the defendant, but the plaintiffs do not know whether the endorsements thereon were signed by said Evans.

In the fifth paragraph of the bill it is alleged:

“That assuming said endorsements on the back of said receipt to have been signed and sealed by the said William H. Evans and the said defendant, respectively, then your orators aver that the legal interpretation or meaning of said endorsements is an attempt on the part of.the said William H. Evans to make a conditional donation of said bonds to the said defendant, to take effect upon his death, provided he should die before the said bonds should be returned by the Mapos Central Sugar Company to which he, had loaned them for the purpose aforesaid; and that it was the meaning and effect of the two endorsements and the purpose and intention of the parties that the defendant should have no interest in said bonds or right or title to them during the lifetime of said William H. Evans, and that if they should be returned by the said Mapos Central Sugar. Company during the lifetime of the said William H. Evans, that they should continue to be the property of the said William H. Evans.
“And your orators, upon information and belief, aver that the title to said bonds remained in the said William H. Evans up to the time of his death, and upon the appointment and qualification of your orators as his executors, devolved upon them, and the title to said bonds is now in your orators, and that the possession by the defendant of the receipt and the endorsements thereon, as above mentioned, is a cloud upon the title *131 of your orators to said bonds and an obstacle to your orators receiving from the Mapos Central Sugar Company the said bonds when they may be returned to said company and be ready for redelivery, and in the meantime prevents your orators from receiving the income or interest upon said bonds to which they are justly entitled.”

The demurrer does not admit the legal construction placed by the plaintiffs upon the emdorsemlents.

The bonds were pledged by the Sugar Company to tbo West India Finance Company and that company still holds possession of them. After the date of said endorsements three semi-annual instalments of interest upon said bonds— the same being coupon bonds payable to bearer — were paid to William H. Evans. The defendant never made any claim to said coupons or of title to the bonds until after the death of said Evans. It is alleged: “That the said attempted gift of said bonds by the said William II.

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Bluebook (online)
108 A. 470, 135 Md. 127, 1919 Md. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipson-v-evans-md-1919.