Owings v. Currier

47 A.2d 743, 186 Md. 590, 1946 Md. LEXIS 236
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 13, 1946
Docket[No. 150, October Term, 1945.]
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 743 (Owings v. Currier) 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
Owings v. Currier, 47 A.2d 743, 186 Md. 590, 1946 Md. LEXIS 236 (Md. 1946).

Opinion

Marbury, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed by the appellant against two daughters of his deceased wife by her first marriage, for the purpose of having declared null and void two separation agreements which he had made with his wife after marriage, and of having established his statutory right as surviving spouse in certain real estate conveyed to the defendants by his wife about six months before her death. The defendants set up the agreements as a bar to any right appellant might have in the property left them by their mother. The issue before the Court was the validity of these agreements. From a decree dismissing the bill, the appeal was taken here.

It appears from the record that at the time of the marriage, in 1932, Mrs. Owings owned a forty-five thou *592 sand dollar residence property near Annapolis, and the appellant testified that he was then worth about twenty-thousand dollars in personal property. On September 21, 1942, the first separation agreement was executed. The appellant’s testimony as to what occurred is that they separated on September 3, 1942. At the time he was working at the Experimental Station and he gave her practically all the money he made, but they did not seem to get along, and finally one day they decided they were going to see a lawyer. Mrs. Owings went to see her lawyer. He came and talked the matter over with both of them. Mrs. Owings wanted more money than appellant could give her, so the only thing he could do was to leave. He said he was forced to leave but did not explain how. After he left, they apparently saw each fairly frequently, and at times went out to dinner together. Then appellant contracted pneumonia, his wife visited him, and looked after him, and he finally returned to live with her in June, 1943. He then lived at her home until her death in February 1945. At the time they became reconciled, they executed a second agreement dated June 3, 1943.

The first agreement of September 21, 1942, recited that differences had arisen between Owen P. W. Owings and Anna T. Owings, his wife, in consequence of which they had separated and intended for the future to live apart, and desired to enter into an agreement as to their personal and property rights. Appellant covenanted with his wife that she could at all times live separate and apart from him and free from his authority, and he would not molest her in any way; that all property, real, personal and mixed, that she then had or might thereafter acquire, or such property as was held by her subject to his marriage rights, should be her sole and separate property wholly free fom any rights of the appellant during her life or after her death, with full power to her to • convey, assign, charge or will the same as if unmarried, and that the appellant would not, at any time, claim any right in any such property as husband, widower, *593 heir, next of kin or successor, and that appellant would execute such deeds and papers as might prove necessary or convenient to enable her to deal with her said property as if unmarried. In consideration of this agreement by the appellant, Mrs. Owings covenanted that she would not molest him, would not incur any debt or obligation on his account, would hold him harmless from any and all liabilities incurred by her, and would not bring any suit of any kind to compel him to pay her support, maintenance or alimony, waiving all her rights thereto. She further agreed that she would not claim any interest as a wife, widow, heir, next of kin or successor in his property, and that she would execute any necessary papers to permit him to dispose of his property. The agreement also states that it is fully understood by the parties, that it shall be a full release and discharge of each in the property of the other. There was another provision that notes outstanding in various banks, amounting in all to $690, should be paid by the parties in equal amounts, and inasmuch as the appellant had no property subject to attachment or execution, Mrs. Owings retained his furniture and silverware as security for his carrying out this obligation.

The second agreement recites the first agreement and the fact that the parties had agreed to live together again, and, therefore, it became necessary for them to nullify the other contract insofar as their individual personal rights were concerned, but to confirm the same so far as it related to their individual property rights. The parties agreed that such property rights should remain as set forth in the first contract and confirmed the latter with the proviso that each party might provide for the other by will, but this provision is stated to be not mandatory but discretionary. Appellant also agreed that he would pay his wife as long as he was earning the salary he was then receiving, the sum of $25 a week, and would continue to pay her a sum commensurate with his earning capacity, and that neither party would incur any debt or obligation on account of the other.

*594 On August 9, 1944, Mrs. Owings conveyed to the appellees, who, as above stated, were her daughters by her first husband, the remainder after her own death of her real estate in Anne Arundel County, reserving in herself the power to mortgage, sell or convey the property. She died without having executed this last power, so that the appellees became vested with title to the property, subject to the curtesy or marital interest of the appellant in case the agreements are invalid, as he claims, or free of such rights of the appellant if the agreements are valid.

The appellant was asked why he signed the first agreement, and he said because he did not have money to keep the property up. He had spent the greater part of the money he had when married in the support of his wife and her home during the first 10 years of their marital life. It was an expensive piece of property, his earning capacity was not great, he was dissatisfied, and he thought the best thing for him to do was to leave; that his wife agreed to it, and said that if he would sign off she would release him from any alimony, so he said all right. He was advised that he could get an attorney to represent him, but he did not do so. On the date of the signing of the first agreement he was worth altogether six or seven thousand dollars. He acknowledged signing and executing the second agreement, and said, that, after the reconciliation, he and his wife got along all right. His wife excuted a will, about which she told him, which left the real estate in trust for the use of her daughters and for him for a period of five years, at the end of which time the trust should cease and the property should vest in the daughters, subject to an owelty for his benefit for five thousand dollars which was to be a lien upon the property. She also left him her engagement ring and her automobile. This will was made on May 4, 1944, while they were' living together, and less than one year before her death. If the subsequent deed to the real estate is valid under the separation agreements, then, of course, the will is inoperative as to the *595 real estate. However, the appellant renounced this will. He was requested to sign the deed to the appellees, and he said his explanation of why he did not sign it was because he did not care to sign it. He had signed some papers and would not sign any more.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 743, 186 Md. 590, 1946 Md. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owings-v-currier-md-1946.