Quillen v. Bell

149 A. 462, 158 Md. 677, 1930 Md. LEXIS 77
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 1930
Docket[No. 23, January Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 149 A. 462 (Quillen v. Bell) 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
Quillen v. Bell, 149 A. 462, 158 Md. 677, 1930 Md. LEXIS 77 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

*678 Bowl, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A decree in this case held that land, the title to which was in the name of the defendant, Ada Bell Quillen, was impressed with a resulting trust in favor of heirs of her father, now dead, and she has appealed from that decree. John T. Keas was joined as defendant because of a power of attorney given him by Mrs. Quillen in 1928, and recorded; it gave him power of disposition over the properties concerned, and. the decree annulled the power. The question to he decided is entirely one of fact, on testimony taken and documents exhibited. The principles of law have been sufficiently discussed by this court in previous cases. Moran v. O’Brien, 156 Md. 221; Springer v. Springer, 144 Md. 465; Dixon v. Dixon, 123 Md. 44. And see Brantly’s note to Dorsey v. Clarke, 4 H. & J. 551.

The actual contestants are all children or grandchildren of Emory E. Bell, Sr., late of Worcester County. And the plaintiffs contended, and adduced testimony to show, that he dealt in land for himself, but, because of his wife’s unwillingness to sign papers, made a practice of having title taken in the name of a friend, at first, and then of an unmarried child, as his children came of age, and, for protection of his own interest, and to be free to borrow on properties thus bought, took mortgages for the full values in his own name. The defendants deny these main contentions of fact.

The following facts are undisputed. Mr. Bell, Sr., in the 1870’s and the 1880’s, kept a general store at Berlin, in the county, and was an exceptionally good business man. He sold the store at a time not stated exactly, but apparently before 1889. And he was for a period of years tax collector in the county. He had, in 1879, bought and paid for one piece of the land in controversy, called the Kelson land, and while he owned the store also worked that land. Keas, as a witness for the defense, said, “every day that was good, he was out working on this land he had.” The title to that-land, however, was put in the name of John R. Purnell. There were several other properties conveyed in 1884 and 1885 to Henry T. Bell, the oldest son of Mr. Bell, Sr., and in 1887 *679 the son executed mortgages for the full values on two tracts. In 1888 another tract was conveyed to Henry, and he gave his father a bond of conveyance on it on the same day. In 1889 Henry T. Bell became insolvent, and made an assignment to trustees, and the land was sold, and bought in the name of John R. Purnell, and Ada E. Bell, subject to the mortgages by Henry T. Bell. Xominal amounts only were paid for the mortgaged tracts, but substantial amounts were paid in deferred payments on the other tracts. Receipts for the nominal purchase money were given, as to two tracts, to the father, Mr. Bell, Sr., and, as to one, to Ada E. Bell. That part of the land so bought which was conveyed to John R. Purnell was later conveyed by Purnell and wife to Ada E. Bell. And simultaneously with the various conveyances to Ada E. Bell, she executed mortgages to her father on the properties not already mortgaged. The Kelson property, which had. been bought and paid for by the father in 1879, but conveyed to John R. Purnell, was also1 conveyed by Purnell and wife to Ada E. Bell in 1889, and the property mortgaged by her to her father. The total of amounts secured by the mortgages was $3,800. Ada E. Bell, then twenty-three years old, was the oldest child next to Henry. It seems impossible to determine with certainty from the record how many farms or lots were transferred to- Ada E. Bell, or to determine the total acreage. They seem to have been acquired by Purnell and Henry Bell from nine owners or groups of owners, and in some instances several tracts or lots were conveyed in single deeds. The total of values was estimated by John T. Keas in 1904 at $9,000, and the plaintiff Dr. Emory E. Bell in his testimony valued all the properties together at about $50,000. There seem to be now substantial equities over and above the mortgages. Assignments and reassignments written on the papers show a borrowing by the father on several of the mortgages.

The father, during his lifetime, collected rents from the properties, and paid taxes on them, sold one or more tracts, procrrring conveyances from the daughter, and timber was sold from one tract and the money from the sale was applied *680 to expenses of another child, a son. It is conceded that the properties were used largely for the benefit of the family.

Further undisputed facts are that Ada E. Bell, on the day before her marriage, in February of 1904, conveyed all the properties held by her, except two acres reserved by her from one parcel, to her sister Henrietta, who never married. And in the year 1904, also, the father assigned the mortgages on the properties to his seven living’ children, in undivided, but unequal shares. Mrs. Quillen testified that she had paid off the mortgages, and they should have been released, but it was after the alleged satisfaction of them that the father, with the knowledge and acquiescence of Mrs. Quillen, assigned them to- the children.

Mr. Bell, Sr., died in 1906. In the administration upon his personal estate the.mortgages were not included as part of his assets, and they are still outstanding. The mother of the parties died in 1919. In 1923 Henrietta Bell conveyed by deed to her sister Ada, then a widow, a one-half interest in the properties, and her will, executed in 1920 and probated in 1924, devised all interest of Henrietta to Ada E. Quillen.

Of the disputed testimony much consisted in alleged statements of Mr. Bell, Sr., subsequent to the acquisition of the pi’operties, and we are not permitted to consider any of these except such as may have been uttered in conferences with the defendants. Dixon v. Dixon, 123 Md. 44, 63. The plaintiff Dr. Emory E. Bell, a son, testified that in 1889, when he-, the witness, was fifteen years old, John R. Purnell, to the witness’ knowledge, bought in the properties which had stood in the name of Henry T. Bell, in pursuance of an agreement he had with the father to buy and convey to the father when directed, and that afterwards the father paid Purnell the necessary amounts for those properties and had them conveyed to Ada. And both Dr. Bell and his brother Raymond testified to- statements by the sister’s, Ada and Henrietta, that the properties belonged to their father, and testified to family conferences in 1904 about the transfer from Ada to Henrietta, and the assignments of the mortgages to the children, at *681 which conferences the father dictated the actions to be taken, and all children agreed. It was testified that the properties were taken ont of Ada’s name solely because of her coming marriage, and that the marriage was postponed twice until the transfer could be arranged. After the transfer, papers relating to the properties were kept together in an iron box called by the parties the estate box, and papers of the administration upon the father’s estate were kept in it too. Henrietta, Ada, and Hr. Bell all had access to the box when they desired. Some of the exhibits in the case, including a can-celled note, are endorsed with the word “estate” in the handwriting of the daughter Henrietta. Charles E.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 462, 158 Md. 677, 1930 Md. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quillen-v-bell-md-1930.