Ogden v. Ogden

1 Md. Ch. 284
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedJune 5, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Md. Ch. 284 (Ogden v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogden v. Ogden, 1 Md. Ch. 284 (Md. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Bland, Chancellor,

This case standing ready for hearing, and the solicitors of the parties having been heard, the proceedings were read and considered.

.Laying aside such of the allegations of the parties as are neither admitted nor sustained by proof, with the irrelevant testimony, and the case is this: — Amos Ogden, owing to some unhappy circumstances, had separated, and lived apart from his wife, during a period of about thirty years before his death; he had no children; and his wife survived him. At the time of his death he had a considerable estate; consisting of lands lying in Baltimore county, lands in the Big-bcnd of Green river in Kentucky, and some personal property. About ten years before his death, his niece Nancy Ogden, then about seventeen years of age, was brought to live with him. He maintained and educated her; and she managed his household aífairs; in which situation he became so attached to her as to consider her as his adopted child.

Some time in the early part of the year 1817, John W. Ogden, a nephew of Amos', and a cousin of Nancy's, visited and addressed her; a mutual attachment was formed, and they became engaged to be married at a convenient time thereafter. On the [285]*285first of May, 1817, Amos Ogden bound himself, by a bond, to distribute most of his personal property among Amos Ogden of Stephen, Nancy Ogden, and Sarah Burket. Under these circumstances, on the 22d of May, 1817, he wrote a letter to his brother Benjamin Ogden, the father of John W. Ogden, of which the following extract is all that is material to this case:—

“ Bear Brother—

“ With joy, on the 17th of April last, I received your favour by your son Capt. John W. Ogden, together with my land papers on Phillips, and have to regret, that I have been compelled in giving you so much trouble in the arrangement of my business. But mean to compensate, if giving the largest part of that land will compensate, to your children. I shall deed to your daughter Mary T. Harpenden, and your son Stephen T. Ogden, two hundred acres each, and the remainder to your son John W. Ogden, and his expected spouse Nancy Ogden of our dear brother Stephen, as joint tenants, and to the survivor in fee simple for ever. I have got to inform you, and my loving sister Nancy Ogden, your dear wife, that my dear adopted daughter Nancy Ogden of Stephen, and your son John W. Ogden, is expected to be married some time between this and next spring, as will best suit his return to Maryland. I can tell you, my dear brother, (though my heart bleeds at the idea of her leaving me forlorn of any child to comfort me in my advanced age of life,) I rejoice to think, that she is agoing to be connected to so worthy a man as your son; and I have no doubt but that the Lord will bless them in their affections. She has lived with me nearly ten years, and has conducted herself in such an amiable manner, that both at home and abroad she is beloved. As to the things of this world, I shall bestow on her, at her parting with me, about six thousand dollars worth of real and personal property; and at my death, if blessed by Bivine Providence, at least as much more. You and I do not agree as to the real value of the land in the Big-bend; I should be loth to convey that land to a stranger for less than ten dollars per acre. You will recollect, brother, that there is a great many people in Europe, and as soon as opportunity will admit, will emigrate to America.”

This letter was endorsed in the same handwriting, thus:— “ Copy sent Benj. Ogden.”

Amos Ogden, on the 27th of May, 1817, a few days only after he had written this letter to his brother, made his will, in which, among other things, he says: — “ And whereas it is agreed and [286]*286expected, that my nephew John Wesley Ogden of Benjamin, and my niece Nancy Ogden of Stephen, will be married to each other some time early this ensuing winter; therefore I give unto them the said John Wesley Ogden and Nancy Ogden, as joint tenants and to the survivor in fee simple, seven hundred acres of land in the State of Kentucky, it being a part of .a tract of land, that I purchased from a certain Philip Phillips, out of his twenty-two thousand one hundred and seventy, on the north side of Green River, and to begin at the upper corner of said survey,” &c. “ I also give to them the said John Wesley Ogden and Jfancy Ogden, as joint tenants and to the survivor in fee simple for ever, part of a tract of land lying and being in Baltimore county, and known by Taylor’s Purchase, it being part of that part of Taylor’s Purchase that I bought of the real estate of William Lux, and was deeded to me by Samuel Moale-, Esqr. as trustee by order of the Honourable Chancellor, and to be strictly included within the following metes and bounds, courses and distances,” &c. “ But it is to be understood, and so my will is, that the said John Wesley Ogden and Nancy Ogden, shall not be entitled to the said part of Taylor’s Purchase, except they shall pay, or cause to be paid, such debts or balances of such debts, and to such persons as I shall charge against her the said Jfancy Ogden, and only charged and credited on the pages of this my will, and that in my own handwriting,” &c. “And whereas I have had many services from Amos Ogden and Nancy Ogden and Sarah Burket, and to secure them in part for such services, I have given to them my bond for the conveyance of all my personal property as hereto annexed, and dated 1817,” &c.

The marriage of John W. Ogden and Nancy Ogden was solemnized on the 25th of December, 1817, and they lived with their uncle until his death, which happened on the 10th of February following, without his having altered or revoked the will he had so made and published. The original letter of the 22d of May was received by Benjamin Ogden, to whom it was directed; and was sent by him to John W. Ogden, but miscarried, and has been lost. The copy now produced was seen in the hands of John W. Ogden as early as the month of August previous to his marriage ; but how he obtained possession of it does not appear; it has been however proved to be an exact copy, and altogether in the handwriting of the late Amos Ogden.

The witnesses speak of the verbal declarations of the late Amos Ogden of his affection for his niece Jfancy ; of his intention to give [287]*287her a marriage portion; to bestow upon her some of his property, or to provide for her in some way or other; and some of the proofs describe a contract essentially different from that deduced from the letter. But the plaintiffs cannot be allowed to use the letter as evidence of a contract in connexion with a part only of the verbal testimony, rejecting- the rest. The whole must be taken together; and then the verbal proof, instead of sustaining, materially differs from and falsifies the terms of that contract, which it is contended is shewn by the letter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Md. Ch. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-ogden-mdch-1827.