Morse v. National Central Bank

132 A. 598, 150 Md. 142, 1926 Md. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 132 A. 598 (Morse v. National Central Bank) 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
Morse v. National Central Bank, 132 A. 598, 150 Md. 142, 1926 Md. LEXIS 16 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Maria Dittmar, on the 24th day of January, 1873, de- - posited with the German Savings Bank of Baltimore City the sum of two thousand eight hundred and twenty-five dollars and fifty cents, and received from the bank a deposit book therefor No. 5755. On the 5th day of May of the' same year she made a further deposit of one hundred dollars, and on July 30th she withdrew from the bank the sum of twenty-seven dollars and seventy-five cents. The two deposits, as well as the withdrawal, were entered on the book-given to her.

On May oth, 1873, the same day upon which she made the deposit of the one hundred dollars above mentioned, Mrs. Dittmar deposited with said bank four hundred dollars, and received from it a deposit book No. 6117, in which the deposit of four hundred dollars was entered.

About a week prior to the death of Mrs. Dittmar, which occurred on November 26, 1922, at the age of ninety years, while she was ill and at the time unconscious, her grandson, Wm. A. Codd, went to her home and took from her locked bureau drawer, without her knowledge and direction, cer *144 tain articles belonging to' her, consisting of jewelry, fire insurance papers, deed for cemetery lot, savings account books and check book on the Drovers and Mechanics Bank, the two deposit books of the German Savings Bank above mentioned, and a savings account book of Herman Dittmar, the husband of Maria Dittmar, in the German Savings Bank, though Herman Dittmar had died forty-eight years prior to such time.

Codd, it seems, had to some extent looked after the business affairs of Mrs. Dittmar after she became unable to do so, and upon her direction had drawn money both from the Savings Bank of Baltimore and the Eutaw Savings Bank for her support and maintenance, as well as to pay taxes and expenses upon her property. He knew that she kept her valuables in the drawer mentioned, but he did not know of the existence of the deposit books of the German Savings Bank, as he ha'd never seen them nor had he ever heard his grandmother mention them. These things were all removed from the drawer, as he says, to keep them from being scattered, and were, after the death of his grandmother, given to his aunt, Mrs. Mary E. Morse, the appellant, who lived with her mother, Mrs. Dittmar, and who became administratrix of her mother.

The record discloses that these deposit books o± tne German Savings Bank were first given to one George Loclen; the son-in-law of Mrs. Morse, and her first legal advisor in the settlement of her mother’s estate. The books were in his possession at the time of his death, which occurred in September, 1923, when they were returned to Mrs. Morse and she, in the same month, presented them to the National Central Bank, the successor of the German Savings Bank, and demanded payment of the amount claimed by her upon them. Payment was refused upon the ground that there was nothing owing thereon, and suit was thereafter instituted to recover the amount so claimed by the appellant. The case was heard by Judge Frank, sitting without a jury, in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, *145 and a verdict was rendered by him in favor of the defendant, and upon such verdict a judgment was entered for defendant’s costs. It is from that judgment the appeal in this case was taken.

In the trial of the case eight exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court; one upon the prayers and seven to the admission of evidence.

The plaintiff offered one prayer, which was rejected, while fbe defendant asked for six instructions. Of these, the fourth was granted and the others refused. The court was asked by the plaintiff’s prayer to rule as a matter of law that should it “find that the deposits entered in the two pass books offered in evidence were credited to the account of Maria Dittmar, then the burden of proof is upon the defendant to establish by the preponderance of the evidence that the saic! funds have been paid out by the defendant upon the authority of the deceased Maria Dittmar, and if the court sitting as a jury shall find that the defendant has not met this burden of proof, either as to all or to part of the said deposits, then, if the court sitting as a jury further finds that the accounts in question were savings accounts, the verdict of the court sitting as a jury shall be for the plaintiff for the amount of said deposits (less sums which halve been shown to have been paid out as aforesaid) plus interest on the deposits at the rate of five per cent, per annum, compounded on the first day of January and the first day of July in each year, to the date of trial.”

By the defendant’s fourth prayer, which, as we have said, was granted, the court instructed itself, sitting as a jury, that should it find “that for a period of more than forty-five years prior to the date on which demand was made by the plaintiff’s intestate for the payment to her of the amounts shown by the two savings- bank books offered in evidence, no demand or claim of any kind had been made on the defendant or its predecessors by the plaintiff’s intestate or on her behalf, for said sums or any part thereof or any interest thereon, that then it is incumbent on the plaintiff to prove by a *146 preponderance of evidence, and not only by the production of the books themselves, that the amounts shown on said books had not been paid by the defendant.”

In passing; upon these prayers the court was called on to decide upon the facts of this case, whether there existed a presumption arising from lapse of time, that the amount once owing to appellant’s intestate, by reason of said deposits, had been paid.

It is said in 21 B. O. L. 128:

“In all civilized countries where the. law is administered as a science, having a reference to the peace, quiet and progress of society, as well as to the protection of individual lights, it has been thougiht wise that there should be some limit to litigation, some boundary beyond which contests or matters open to contest should be regarded as settled. Early in the judicial history of England the presumption of payment was raised after a great lapse of time between the creation of an obligation and an attempt to enforce it in the courts. This presumption became a part of the law of the United States and is applied in ail jurisdictions. * * *
“The presumption rests, not only on want of diligence in asserting rights, but on the higher ground that it is necessary to suppress frauds, to avoid long dormant claims, which, it has been said, have often more cruelty than justice in them; that it relieves courts from the necessity of adjudicating rights so obscured by the lapse of time and the accidents of life that the attainment of truth and justice is next to impossible. In a word, * * * the most solemn of human obligations lose their binding efficacy and are presumed to be discharged after many years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 A. 598, 150 Md. 142, 1926 Md. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-national-central-bank-md-1926.