Robbins v. Dorsey

132 A. 633, 150 Md. 265, 1926 Md. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 10, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 A. 633 (Robbins v. Dorsey) 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
Robbins v. Dorsey, 132 A. 633, 150 Md. 265, 1926 Md. LEXIS 24 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In nineteen hundred and five or six George W. Bobbins and Ida M. Bobbins, his wife, came to Annapolis to live. Bobbins acted as agent for the Union Tea and Coffee Company, and his wife carried on a grocery store until some three or four years before this suit. Through economy and thrift they amassed a modest competence, represented by an *267 assessment on the tax books of Anne Arundel County of $2,683 in the name of George TV. Robbins for 1923. $2,251 of this assessment was on a house, lot and garage on Wood-lawn Avenue, in the village of Germantown, near Annapolis, which had been conveyed to Robbins apparently in 1920.

Robbins’ duties as agent and salesman fox the Union Tea .and Coffee Company required him to operate a delivery truck, and on April 6th, 1923, suit was instituted against him and that company in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County by William A. Dorsey, for some cause not clearly disclosed by the record, hut which it may be inferred grew out of bis operation of that truck. The company was “discharged from the said suit,” hut subsequent proceedings therein resulted in a judgment against Robbins for $225, which was entered on November 9th, 1923.

On October 9tli, 1923, Robbins, together with his wife, Ida M. Robbins, conveyed the property on Woodlawn Avenue to Wiuson G. Gott, trustee, who immediately reconveyed it to them as tenants by the entireties. On February 6th, 1924, a writ of execution was issued on the judgment against Robbins. In executing that writ the sheriff levied on a truck, which was the only property he could find in Robbins’ name, and offered it for sale. The highest bid he received therefor was $95, and as Robbins as an insolvent debtor had claimed his statutory exemption of $100, the sheriff did not sell the truck, but returned the writ unsatisfied. On June 12th, 1924, the appellee filed the bill of complaint in this case to set aside the deeds of October 9th, 1923, on the theory that they were executed voluntarily to hinder, delay and defraud the appellee and other creditors of George W. Robbins.

Robbins and his wife first demurred to the bill, and upon the demurrer being overruled, they filed an answer setting up the following defence; that although the property stood in the name of Robbins, they believed, until informed to the contrary, that it was in his name and that of liis wife as tenants by the entireties, and that the deeds had been executed to effect what had been their real intention when the *268 property was purchased; that it was purchased with funds jointly belonging to them, which had been accumulated through their joint efforts, and in support of that defence they alleged that, prior to October 9th, 1923, they had p;aid off a mortgage for $2,000 on the property in question and also a mortgage for $1,000 on property owned jointly by Robbins and his son, to whom, on October 9th, 1923, he conveyed his interest in that property. Eurther answering, they denied any intention of delaying, hindering or defrauding the creditors of Robbins, and Robbins individually denied that he had concealed any of his property for any such purpose.

Testimony was taken in connection with those issues and at its close a decree was entered annulling the deeds of October 9th, 1923, and directing the defendants George W. Robbins and Ida M. Robbins, his wife, to bring into court within thirty days the amount of the judgment, interest and costs, and in default thereof directing the property to be sold and such judgment interest and costs to be paid ont of the proceeds thereof. This appeal is from that decree.

The testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Robbins in substance was that for some fifteen years the license for the grocery store was in her name, that she carried on that business, and that the “funds” or “proceeds” from that store were put in with “Mr. Robbins’ earnings,” as well as her profits from keeping boarders, as they had no separate account, and that, the son’s wages as well'as the earnings of Mr. Robbins were also deposited to the same account; and that, as the property was bought with their joint earnings, they believed that the property had been conveyed to them jointly until they were informed to the contrary after the appellee had sued Robbins. Not only was this testimony uncorroborated, as neither tho son, nor the conveyancer who drew the deeds conveying the property to Robbins, testified, but it was so incomplete and vague as to be without any substantial probative force. That is, it did not disclose whether the store was a profitable or an unprofitable venture, or if it was profitable how much it earned or who financed it, or what the wages of the son *269 were, or what profits if any were made by Mrs. Robbins from her boarders, or how many she had or when she kept them. The only other witness for the appellant was Andrew Krause, who said that Robbins, after Dorsey had sued him, told the witness that his (Robbins’) property was not in danger as it was in his name and that of his wife jointly.

The record evidence, together with the testimony of Win-son G. Gott, demonstrates that the deeds of October 9th, 1923, to which Gott was a party, were voluntary and without valuable consideration, unless the testimony to which we have referred was sufficient to justify the conclusion that, when the property was conveyed to Robbins, the deeds of conveyance, as a result of fraud or mistake, failed to express the true intention of the parties to them, and that the deeds vesting the title to' it in Mr. and Mrs. Robbins as tenants by the entireties were executed to correct that mistake. But the testimony falls far short of that, for while Mr. and Mrs. Robbins both say that they believed that the title to the property stood in their joint names, they fail to show any reason for that belief, and a mere belief that the true meaning and effect of a deed is contrary to that clearly and definitely expressed by its language cannot ordinarily be regarded as a sufficient reason for reforming or correcting it where, as under the circumstances of this case, the rights of creditors would be affected by the change. And there is in the case no evidence whatever that the deed by which the property was conveyed to Robbins was in any manner affected by fraud or mistake. It does not appear that the draftsman1 who drew the deed failed to follow instructions given him, nor, indeed, that any instructions were given him, or if they were, what they were, or even who’ he was. The contention of the appellants appears to be that Mr. and Mrs. Robbins were justified in believing that the property was conveyed to them, as tenants by the entireties from the assumed fact that it was paid for1 from their joint earnings, but that inference was not justified by the facts of the case. As we have already stated, it does not appear what if any *270

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 633, 150 Md. 265, 1926 Md. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-dorsey-md-1926.