Smith v. Shuppner

93 A. 514, 125 Md. 409, 1915 Md. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 93 A. 514 (Smith v. Shuppner) 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
Smith v. Shuppner, 93 A. 514, 125 Md. 409, 1915 Md. LEXIS 207 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Constable, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the correctness, of the rulings of the lower Court upon tl e trial of issues framed by the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City and sent to a law Court for determination, upon a caveat filed to the probate of the last will and testament of Regina Barbara Stoll. The issues were four in number: (1) Execution of the will; (2) testamentary capacity of the testatrix; (3) undue influence exercised upon the testatrix; (4) fraud practiced upon her. At the close of the caveator’s testimony prayers were offered by the caveatee asking the Court to' instruct the jury to find for the caveatee on each issue. The Court instructed the jury, as a matter of law, to find for the caveatee on the first, third and fourth issues, but refused to so instinct as to the second issue— testamentary capacity. The prayers’granted were conceded by the caveator, so no question arises in this appeal from the ruling thereon. At the close of all the testimony, this rejected instruction was again asked and again refused; and the case being submitted to the jury on this one issue of testamentary capacity, the finding was in favor of the caveatee.

All of the prayers offered by the caveator were granted by the Court, so the exception to the prayers refer .only to those granted on behalf of the caveatee. Of the eight exceptions to the testimony, the first and second have been abandoned, and we will consider the remaining in their numerical order. But first, we will give a synopsis of the facts, so far as we deem necessary, in order to determine the different questions here presented.

*413 The testatrix, at the time of her death, was the widow of John Stoll, who had predeceased her by about a month. • They were an old German couple and had been engaged in the butchering and market business for many years in Baltimore City. They were childless, and left as their next of kin, nephews and nieces of each. The will in question was executed on the 20th day of March, 1910, when the testatrix was about eighty-two years of age. She died on the 19th day of August. 1913. John Stoll, the husband, who was a few years older, executed his will on the same day as his wife, and died on the 17th of July, 1913. Both had executed wills on the 31st of January, 1910, in which the disposition of their property was practically the same as in the wills of March 20th, 1910, with the exception of the residuary clause and the appointment of executors. Sometime after the execution of the prior wills, it was discovered that the party who had prepared them had, without authority, inserted his name as co-residuary legatee and executor. At first codicils were executed to correct this, but, finally, the wills were redrawn. Each will provided for a life estate for the surviving husband or wife. The husband distributed his estate, after the death of the surviving wife, among his and his wife’s relatives and certain friends, with the residue to George Shuppner, Sr., naming him also as executor. The will of the wife, after the death of the husband surviving her, distributed a part of her estate by specific legacies and devises principally to the children of George and John Shuppner, close friends for years of both the husband and wife, and died intestate as to the residue of her estate, naming also George Shuppner, Sr., executor.

The only testimony as to testamentary capacity produced by the caveator, other than non-expert, was that given by Dr. Irving J. Spear, who based his opinion of the mental incapacity of the testatrix upon the facts recited in the testimony of the witnesses for the caveator, whom he had heard testify, he never having seen the testatrix.

*414 The third exception was to the refusal of the Court to permit the following question to be answered: “What instructions did you give your father in regard to the new allotment of shares due to Mr. Stoll by virtue of his ownership of shares of stock in the Old Town Bank that stood in his name ?” This question was asked George P. Shuppner, son of George Shuppner, executor of both wills. Young Shuppner had been left, under the will of John Stoll, after the life estate of Mrs. Stoll, some shares of bank stock. It is impossible to tell from the Record whether this question has reference to a point of time after the death' of the life tenant or not. But assuming it referred to a time between the deaths of the Stolls, it is difficult to see on what ground it could be admissible. If Shuppner was claiming that the right to subscribe to the new allotment of stock belonged to him, as against the life tenant, that would not make it admissible under the only issue in this case. It' could in no wise affect the question of the mental capacity of the testatrix; nor could his thought that he was entitled to it, in any manner, tend to discredit him.

The fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh exceptions all relate to questions asked George Shuppner, the executor and caveatee, under cross-examination, and can all be treated together, since they involve the same principle. Under the will of J ohn Stoll, three ground rents had been left to three women friends of the Stolls by the name of Erederick. Three months before the death of Mr. Stoll, deeds had been executed conveying them to a third party, who in turn executed deeds conveying them to George Shuppner as trustee for Mr. and Mrs. Stoll. The title was in Mr. Stoll, and Mrs. Stoll joined in the deeds for the purpose of releasing her inchoate right of dower. From the testimony admitted, it is clear that this was a transaction of John Stoll about his own property; and to have gone further into the particulars than was gone, could have' had no bearing1 upon the issue. The whole matter was irrelevant.

*415 The eighth exception also relates to the estate of John Sto.l. Karl A. M. Scholtz was the attorney who drew the wills of March 20th, 1910, and was counsel for the executor in settling the estate of John Stoll. The caveator offered in evidence during the cross-examination of Mr. Scholtz, a letter written by him as attorney, to one of the beneficiaries of the will of John Stoll apprising her that the testator had conveyed before his death a lot of ground, which' under his will, he had devised to her, hut that by a codicil, she was bequeathed five hundred dollars in lieu thereof; and calling attention to the clause in the will about revoking devises as to anyone contesting the will. The caveator contends that since the testimony would show that the codicil was executed before the conveyance was made, the statement, that the legacy was in lieu of the devise which lapsed, was erroneous, and that the letter shows bias upon the part of Mr. Scholtz. The Court refused to admit the letter. This letter had to do entirely with the employment of the attorney in the settle-men f of an estate other than the one under controversy, and admitting there was error in the statement in the letter, we do not think it presented a proper subject for cross-examination in the trial over the will of Regina Stoll. Every attorney employed to assist in the settlement of an estate is presumably interested in keeping the estate from being the object of af1' ] . and the fact that an attorney calls attention of a prospective litigant to the effect of litigation instituted by him, adds nothing, in the way of discrediting that attorney, to the admission that he is'the attorney so employed.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 514, 125 Md. 409, 1915 Md. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-shuppner-md-1915.