Schenker v. Moodhe

200 A. 727, 175 Md. 193, 1938 Md. LEXIS 195
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 1938
Docket[No. 60, April Term, 1938.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 200 A. 727 (Schenker v. Moodhe) 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
Schenker v. Moodhe, 200 A. 727, 175 Md. 193, 1938 Md. LEXIS 195 (Md. 1938).

Opinion

*196 Shehan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Edward J. Coleman died on the 17th day of June, 19.87, leaving an estate of approximately twelve thousand dollars. He left no relatives, and Dr. Paul Schenker, a coroner of Baltimore City, was appointed administrator, and took possession of the decedent’s estate. Charlotte Moodhe, the appellee, filed a second amended bill of complaint against the administrator and Paul Schenker, individually, and as coroner of Baltimore City, to compel the defendants to surrender to her property alleged to have been given to her by the decedent. The defendants demurred to the bill and, from an order overruling the demurrer, this appeal is taken.

The questions presented are whether the facts alleged are sufficient to support an inference of either gift causa mortis; a gift inter vivos; or of a gift by way of a declaration in trust. If the bill can be supported on any one of these three grounds, the ruling of the chancellor must be affirmed. For the purposes of the demurrer, all the facts alleged and well pleaded, together with the inferences to be fairly drawn therefrom, are accepted as true.

This case should be considered in the light of the principles relating to. gifts stated by Judge McSherry in Whalen v. Milholland, 89 Md. 199, 43 A. 45, and full consideration should also be given to the pronouncements of Judge Offutt in Brooks v. Mitchell, 163 Md. 1, 161 A. 261. The validity of the alleged gifts depends upon the legal sufficiency of the deliveries.

It was stated in the former case that: “These deathbed donations, to be upheld, ought to be above question or suspicion at all times, but more especially when they render inoperative, as they would in this case, the provisions of a will made at a calmer and more collected moment. The evidence to support them ought to be clear and free from uncertainty, for the temptation to seize upon disjointed sentences, uttered when the physical frame is prostrated and the mental faculties are failing, and to convert them into a deliberate gift of the bulk of a dying person’s estate, might be too often yielded to, *197 under the influence of interest or the promptings of avarice, and produce most grievous wrongs. The facility with which such gifts sometimes are proved is suggestive of great caution in weighing the evidence adduced to sustain them. To doubt them ought to -be to deny them. ‘Around every other disposition of the property of the dead the legislature has thrown safeguards against fraud and perjury. Around this mode (donatio mortis causa) the requirement of actual delivery is the only substantial protection, and the courts should not weaken it by permitting the substitution of convenient and easily proven devices.’ Keepers v. Fidelity Co., 56 N. J. L. 302, 28 A. 585. Mindful of the facility with which, after the alleged donor is dead, fraudulent claims of ownership may be founded on pretended gifts of his property asserted to have been made while he was living, it is but a salutary precaution which demands explicit and convincing evidence of every element needed to constitute a valid donation, whether it be a donation inter vivos or mortis causa. Even then fraudulent claims may prevail, but the rigid requirement of the clearest proof will at least diminish the number.”

Though delivery is essential to a valid gift, it may be either actual or constructive, but to be a valid constructive delivery it must be as defined in Brooks v. Mitchell, supra, where it is said (page 266) : “To be valid, a constructive delivery must not only be accompanied by words sufficient to show a donative intent, but must be of such a character as to completely divest the donor of dominion and control over the donation and to place it ‘wholly under the donee’s power.’ Pomeroy, Eq. Jur., sec. 1149.”

Following are illustrations of this rule: Where a donor gave to the donee a sealed package informing him that it contained bank books and money; an insurance policy; the key to a trunk; the key to a safe deposit box, accompanied by an order for its delivery; the key to a cupboard ; a trunk, box or other receptacle containing bank deposit book; a suit case containing valuable property. *198 Other cases illustrating the application of the rule are to be found in Pomeroy Eq. Jur., sec. 1149, and 18 L. R. A. 170, and 40 A. L. R. 1255. “The rule as thus stated is subject to this qualification, while the delivery may be constructive, it must be as nearly perfect and complete as the nature of the property and the attendant circumstances and conditions will permit” (28 C. J. 692), “and many of the cases in which the courts have, held a constructive delivery insufficient turn upon that qualification.”

It is settled in Maryland that there is no difference in the legal essentials of a good delivery in gifts inter vivos, and gifts causa mortis, but there is this added requirement, in establishing gifts causa mortis, that they must be made under the influence of the donor’s belief that his death is imminent, and there is also attached to such gifts a condition, express or implied, that they shall take effect only on the death of the donor. Conser v. Snowden, 54 Md. 175, 183; Taylor v. Henry, 48 Md. 550.

The transaction between Mr. Coleman and Mrs. Moodhe, on the 14th day of June, as alleged in the declaration, satisfied this requisite, for the bill alleges, “that on the evening of June 14th, 1937, the said Coleman told your oratrix that he would not be there after that week. He realized that death was imminent and that he could not be cured. He then told her that he had purchased and paid for a burial lot in Oak Lawn Cemetery and that she would find receipt for the same on the table among other papers * * *, he knew that death was imminent ■at the time as he said he would not live two days longer.” True to his prediction he died on the morning of the 17th of June, 1937. There can be no doubt that the attempted gifts of his property were made in anticipation of his early death and because of that expected event.

The legal sufficiency of the alleged deliveries is the question now to be. considered. Conceding the allegations to be true, were there gifts inter vivos, causa mortis, or in trust? -,

With- regard to the situation of the parties we find the *199 plaintiff and the decedent living next door to each other; the one, a man sick unto death and fully realizing it, calling for assistance to a neighbor who had been helpful and kind to him for several months, and then telling her, three days before he died, of his plan to compensate her, and how certain of his property and effects should be disposed of, and disclosing where such property and effects could be found. These parties were not related.

The bill alleges:

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Bluebook (online)
200 A. 727, 175 Md. 193, 1938 Md. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schenker-v-moodhe-md-1938.