Nelson v. Patrick

97 A. 633, 128 Md. 504, 1916 Md. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 97 A. 633 (Nelson v. Patrick) 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
Nelson v. Patrick, 97 A. 633, 128 Md. 504, 1916 Md. LEXIS 93 (Md. 1916).

Opinions

On the 28th of November, 1904, Albion H. Patrick, of Wicomico County, Maryland, purchased from W.G. Smith and E.W. Smith a vacant lot in Salisbury, Maryland, on which, during the years 1905 and 1906, he erected a dwelling house, costing between twelve and thirteen hundred dollars, in which he and his family resided until the time of his death. In March, 1908, he caused the lot and improvements to be conveyed by William G. Smith, E.W. Smith and Lily R. Smith, his wife, to his wife, Elizabeth A. Patrick. He died intestate in December, 1911, and in July, 1914, Mrs. Patrick died intestate leaving four brothers and three sisters her only heirs at law. In October, 1914, Mr. Patrick's two children by his first wife, his only heirs at law, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County against the brothers and sisters of Mrs. Patrick and their respective wives and husbands to have the deed to her declared null and void on the ground that their father, at the time of its execution, was not capable of making a valid deed or contract. Two of the heirs of Mrs. Patrick answered the bill, admitting the facts alleged and consenting to a decree, but the remaining five heirs denied the averments of the bill and resisted the relief prayed, and this appeal is from the decree of the Court below setting aside the deed and appointing a trustee to convey the property to the plaintiffs.

The record contains between three and four hundred pages of testimony, most of which is cumulative, and consists of the *Page 506 statements of the great number of witnesses examined of the length of time they had known Mr. Patrick and of their opinion as to his ability to make a valid deed or contract. It would serve no useful purpose to discuss this evidence at length, and we shall confine ourselves to a reference to the more important and significant facts upon which we base our conclusion.

Mr. Patrick was a farmer of very moderate means, and until the last five years of his life resided on his farm in Wicomico County, about four miles from Salisbury. He and his second wife, Elizabeth A. Patrick, were married about twenty-six years. They never had any children, but at the time of their marriage Mr. Patrick had four very young children, two boys and two girls. One of the girls was drowned about 1893. The other children lived with their father and stepmother. Lulu B. Hearn, one of the plaintiffs, married Dallas Hearn, of Salisbury, and left home in 1910. George died in 1911, and Howard B. Patrick, the other plaintiff, lived with his father and stepmother until his father's death, and with Mrs. Patrick until her death in 1914. The relations between the members of the family were of the most cordial and friendly character, and Mrs. Hearn states that the plaintiffs never gave Mrs. Patrick a cross word, and that "she was as good as any stepmother ever was."

In 1904, Mr. Patrick, realizing that his health had become impaired and that he was no longer able to do the work on his farm, and moved, it seems, by a further consideration to which we shall hereafter allude, determined to sell his farm and to move to Salisbury to live. He, accordingly, on the 28th of November, 1904, purchased the vacant lot on Smith street from W.G. and E.W. Smith for $250.00, paid $100.00 on account of the purchase price and took from them a receipt showing for what the money was paid. He then moved with his family to Salisbury and began the erection *Page 507 of his dwelling house on the lot. He employed W.J. Johnson or William J. Johnson Co. to do the work, and the record contains a statement rendered him by William J. Johnson showing the work done and materials furnished in the erection of the house; a number of receipts for money paid him by Mr. Patrick on account as the work progressed, and Mr. Patrick's check, dated March 17th, 1906, for the final payment of $279.85. On the day Mr. Patrick purchased the lot his son, Howard B. Patrick, purchased from W.G. and E.W. Smith the adjoining lot for $250.00, and paid $50.00 on account of the purchase price. Howard B. Patrick made a further payment of $25.00 on his lot on January 21st, 1905, and when Mr. Patrick, on February 3rd, 1906, made the final payment of $150.00 on his lot, he also paid the balance of $175.00 due on Howard B. Patrick's lot, giving the vendors his check on the Salisbury Building, Loan and Banking Association for $325.00. Howard B. Patrick testified that he borrowed the $175.00 from his father, and the record contains a receipt from his father, dated May 4th, 1909, for the principal and interest of said loan, amounting to $181.12.

In March, 1908, Mr. Patrick employed Henry D. Powell, a surveyor and justice of the peace, to survey the two lots, pointed out to him the lines of the lots and assisted him in making the survey. After the survey was made he asked Mr. Powell if he could prepare a deed and what his charge was, and when Mr. Powell told him that he charged $1.00 for writing a deed, he remarked that a lawyer would charge $5.00. He then told Mr. Powell that he wanted the deed for his lot made to his wife, Elizabeth A. Patrick, and the deed for the other lot made to Howard B. Patrick. He paid Mr. Powell for writing the deeds and for taking the acknowledgments, and Mr. Powell prepared the deeds, took them to Dr. Smith and, after witnessing the execution of the deeds by the grantors and taking their acknowledgments, he left them with Dr. Smith. The deeds were recorded on *Page 508 the same day they were executed, and Howard B. Patrick, who was engaged in business in Salisbury, testified that his father attended to the matter without his knowledge and handed him his deed one night after he got home.

From January 6th, 1906, to the time of his death, Mr. Patrick had a bank account in the Salisbury Building, Loan and Banking Association, in which he from time to time made deposits and on which he checked, and he also held certificates of deposit of said association on which he received four per cent. interest. After the completion of his dwelling Mr. Patrick, in order to secure safe investments that would yield him a larger income than he could realize from his certificates of deposit from the bank, purchased at different times three other lots in Salisbury and erected small houses on them to rent. One of these houses was built as late as 1908 or 1909. In 1907 he served on the petit jury of the fall term of the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, attended Court every day during the session, which lasted fourteen days, and was on the panel in a will case the trial of which began on October 3rd and was not concluded until October 8th.

In all of the various transactions to which we have referred Mr. Patrick made his own contracts, saw that they were properly performed, took care of his means, and maintained a home for himself and family without, so far as the record shows, the assistance of any one, and not one of the parties with whom he dealt in the various transactions to which we have alluded noted anything in his conduct or manner that indicated that he was not at the time perfectly capable of attending to the particular business in which he was engaged.

Now the evidence relied on to show that in March, 1908, Mr. Patrick was not capable of making a valid deed or contract consists mainly of the testimony of the two plaintiffs and Dr. Dick. The plaintiffs testified that he was subject to attacks of epilepsy; that during these attacks he was unconscious and was liable to fall, and that for several days afterwards *Page 509

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Bluebook (online)
97 A. 633, 128 Md. 504, 1916 Md. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-patrick-md-1916.