Michael v. Smith

92 A. 762, 124 Md. 116, 1914 Md. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 A. 762 (Michael v. Smith) 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
Michael v. Smith, 92 A. 762, 124 Md. 116, 1914 Md. LEXIS 6 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

*118 Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

- Mrs. Harriet E. Smith, of Harford County, Maryland, widow of James Smith, died on the 28th of November, 1912, leaving one son, William A. Smith, and one daughter, Annie F. Michael, her only next of kin and heirs at law. She left a will, dated the 31st of May, 1909, by which she gave $1,000.00 to her daughter; $500.00 to Martha E. Michael, the child of said daughter, and bequeathed all the rest and residue of her estate to her son, who was appointed executor. After her death the will was offered for probate in the Orphans’ Court of said county, a caveat thereto was filed by the daughter, and issues involving the execution of the will, testamentary capacity, undue influence, fraud, duress and knowledge of the contents of the will, were sent to the Circuit Court for Harford County for trial.

The case was subsequently removed to the Circuit Court for Howard County, and during the trial in that Court, which resulted in a verdict for the defendant, caveatee, on all the issues, the plaintiff reserved eighteen exceptions, the first seventeen being to the rulings of the Court on the evidence, and the eighteenth to its action on the prayers. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony the Court directed a verdict for the defendant on all the issues except the issues of undue influence, fraud and duress, and in this Court the exceptions to the action of the Court below on the prayers and to the rulings on the evidence referred to in the fourth, seventh, ninth, tenth and fifteenth exceptions are abandoned.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Michael, testified that she was married in 1883, and thereafter lived at Orkington, in the neighborhood of Aberdeen, Harford County, where her father and mother resided; that her father, J ames Smith, owned a farm called the Swan Creek farm, which was located across the road from the farm on which he resided; that he made a will about 1885, in which, in order to give her and her brother “an equal amount of land,” he added one of the fields *119 of the Swan Creek farm to the home place which he gave her; that her mother told her of the provisions of said will and of her father’s purpose to divide his property so that each child would get one-half of it; that her mother also told her that her brother said that he ought to have the whole of the Swan Creek farm, and that he was not pleased with the will; that after that “the relations between her and her brother were not good; he didn’t speak to her; she would meet him on the road and look at him to speak and he would pass her by; if she went into the house where lie was he would get up and go out, disappear; they never had any words, but he just seemed to shun her”; that her father made his last will in 1895, and died in 1905, and that her brother did not speak to her until the morning after her father died, when “he just said, ‘Good morning.’ ” It appears that a few years after the execution of the first will James Smith conveyed the Swan Creek farm to his son, and conveyed another farm, called Purgatory, to his daughter, and it also appears from the report of the case of Smith v. Michael, in 113 Md. 10, to which, by agreement contained in this record, reference may be made, that, by his last will, executed in 1895, he left his home farm to his wife for life, and after her death to his daughter, and that of the rest and residue of his estate (not including the personal property on his farm, which he gave to his wife,) he gave ono-third to his wife, and directed that the remaining two-thirds should be held and invested by his executor’s, his wife and son, the income therefrom to be paid to his wife during her life, and the corpus to be divided, after her death, equally between his son and daughter. In 1908, Mrs. Michael filed a bill in equity to compel her mother and brother to give bond and to render an account of her father’s estate. Mrs. Michael further testified that for two or three years after her father’s death she never heard anything about his estate; that her brother never referred to it. and that she asked her mother to ask him about it, and she said that she would rather she, *120 Mrs. Michael, would ask him; that she told her mother that she knew that she, witness, could not ask him because he would “fly into a rage,” and that she thought her mother ought to find out; that she also told her mother that witness thought he “was transferring property in his own individual name,” and that she knew that he “did not have any property of his own”; that she only wanted what was hers at the proper time, and wanted to' know something about the estate, and that her mother replied that she knew that the witness did not want anything but her own; that Mr. Lee had told him that “it was lawful for him” to so transfer the property, “and that it would not give her any trouble”; that she, witness, told her that she would be better satisfied if it was done in his name as executor, and that she did not see how that would give her any trouble. The witness was then asked the following question: “You have said that you asked your mother for information about your father’s estate and you have explained what she said; how frequently did you do that ?” and she replied, “I asked her three or four times before I took counsel; I told mother that if brother would not-.” The defendant objected to her proceeding further with her answer, and the first exception is to the ruling of the Court sustaining the objection. In the next question she was asked what her mother said to- her on the three or four occasions that she applied for information, and she replied: “I told her that I could not talk to brother, and that she would have to be the go-between, and that I wanted to know something the next time I came home. I told her that I would not take counsel without notifying her.” The witness was then asked: “What did she say to you ?” And replied: “ T can’t tell you anything, Anne,’ and I told her I would not do anything that I thought wrong, but I wanted what was mine, and I wanted them to give me an accounting of my father’s estate, and I told her if they didn’t do it I was going to take counsel.” In reply to the next question, she said she did take counsel and subsequently brought suit, *121 meaning tlie suit to which we have referred. It is evident from this testimony that the plaintiff secured, without objection, the evidenco that was excluded by the Court, viz, that if she did not get the information she wanted she would consult counsel, and that the plaintiff was not prejudiced by the Court’s ruling.

The plaintiff was asked if she remembered anything about a tax suit against her father’s estate, and having said she did, she was then asked what her mother said to her about the suit and what her mother told her her brother said about it, and she replied: “Mv mother told me that while she was in Aberdeen on one occasion, she met Air. Wells, the County Treasurer, and was told about the taxes being due on the property. My brother was in the store, or at least he came from some place, and used some very foul language to Mr. Wells. He told her not to pay it, as they could not make her pay it. Afterwards a suit was brought against them and they had to pay it. She told me herself that she would have paid the taxes, but brother would not let her pay them.” Then follows the following questions and answers: “Q.

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Bluebook (online)
92 A. 762, 124 Md. 116, 1914 Md. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-v-smith-md-1914.