Tillinghast v. Lamp

176 A. 629, 168 Md. 34, 1935 Md. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1935
Docket[No. 62, October Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 176 A. 629 (Tillinghast v. Lamp) 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
Tillinghast v. Lamp, 176 A. 629, 168 Md. 34, 1935 Md. LEXIS 126 (Md. 1935).

Opinion

OFFUTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Anna E. K. Tillinghast is the surviving sister of Anna Katherine Lamp, who died in Baltimore City on January 25th, 1932. J. George Lamp is the surviving husband of Mrs. Lamp, and Charles F. W. Tillinghast and Samuel F. Leroy Tillinghast are sons of Mrs. Tillinghast.

At her death she left a considerable estate, including both real and personal property, which she disposed of by a will dated February 19th, 1931, in the following manner : To her husband, J. George Lamp, she left a legacy of $10,000, a life interest in her home property at Park Heights Avenue and Clarke Lane, in Baltimore City, and a stall in the Broadway Market; to her nephew, Charles F. W. Tillinghast, 200 shares of the preferred stock of the William Schluderberg-T. J. Kurdle Company; to Samuel Leroy Tillinghast the net income from 200 shares of the same stock left in trust until he arrives at the age of forty, then to him absolutely, and to those two a policy of life insurance for $10,000 on the life of her husband, and the remainder of the estate in her home property; *38 to her sister Anna E. K. Tillinghast, 600 shares of the preferred stock in the Schluderberg-Kurdle Company, her stock in the Equitable Trust Company, her jewelry, and all the rest and residue of her estate. And she appointed J. George Lamp, her husband, executor of the will.

The will was in due course admitted to probate; on February 3rd, 1932, letters testamentary on the estate were granted to J. George Lamp; and on April 7th, 1932, he filed in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, where the will had been probated, a renunciation of the provisions for his benefit which it contained, anú an election to take in lieu thereof his legal share of the real and personal estate of Anna, his wife.

Mrs. Lamp married J. George Lamp on November 24th, 1921. On November 20th of that year, in contemplation of her approaching marriage, she executed a deed in which she covenanted and agreed to make no claim as wife or widow against his estate. On November 16th, 1921, she deposited to her credit, in a savings account in the Equitable Trust Company of Baltimore City, $20,000, and on December 2nd, 1921, she had on deposit in a checking account at the same bank $10,576.88. On November 30th, 1921, the title of the savings account was changed so as to read: “Anna K. Lamp. In trust for self and J. G. Lamp joint owner subject to the order of either, the balance at death of either to belong to the survivor.” On December 2nd, 1921, the balance to her credit in the checking account was transferred to an open or checking account having the same heading.

At the death of Mrs. Lamp, J. George Lamp claimed the balances in these two accounts as his own individual property, and he also claimed full legal rights to her estate as the surviving spouse.

On September 13th, 1933, Anna E. K. Tillinghast filed the bill in this case against him individually and as executor of the will of Anna K. Lamp, and against the Equitable Trust Company, in which she asked the court (1) to assume jurisdiction of the estate and direct its administration; (2) to annul the gifts and transfers of the funds *39 in the checking and savings accounts, and to declare the same a part of the estate of Anna K. Lamp; (3) to require Lamp to account for any sums withdrawn from said accounts after his wife’s death; and (4) to declare the renunciation and election of J. George Lamp null, void, and ineffective. On November 7th, 1933, she amended the bill by adding an additional prayer for relief, in which the court was asked to decree that, contemporaneously with the deed of November 20th, 1931, Lamp had executed a separate deed, also in contemplation of marriage, releasing her estate and property of every kind from any marital rights or interest he might have therein, or, in the alternative, to decree that she was led by the fraud of Lamp to believe that the deed which she signed and which he also signed contained a provision that he would release and relinquish all rights which he had or might have in her estate, that she signed that deed in the mistaken belief that it contained such a provision, that it be reformed by including such a provision in it, and further to decree that Lamp cannot now claim any marital rights in her estate.

The defendants demurred to the bill, and the demurrer being overruled, answered. Evidence was taken, the case was heard, and after those proceedings the court decreed:

“That the entries on said signature cards created a trust in the deposits above named whereby at the death of either the said J. George Lamp or Anna K. Lamp, his wife, their survivor became absolutely entitled to the funds then on deposit to the credit of each of said accounts in the Broadway Branch of the Equitable Trust Company, and that the said J. George Lamp at the death of his said wife, Anna K. Lamp, became entitled to the sums then on deposit in each of such accounts referred to in said cards.
“2. That the said J. George Lamp is entitled to the interest and estate in the real and personal property whereof his wife died seized and possessed, which he took under the law, by virtue of his said renunciation; as a result of which he does not take any interest or estate in said prop *40 erties under the last will and testament of the said Anna K. Lamp, deceased.
“3. That this Court take jurisdiction over the further administration of the estate of the said Anna K. Lamp, deceased.”

This appeal is from that decree.

The questions which this court is asked to consider are these: (la) Did >J. George Lamp ever execute a deed releasing his marital rights in his wife’s estate, or (lb) fraudulently induce her to believe that the deed of November 20th, 1921, which she and he signed, operated to release her estate from any marital rights which he had or might claim, as well as release his estate from any marital rights which she might have or claim? (2) Were the transfers of the funds in her two accounts with the Equitable Trust Company valid and effective? And (3) did his act in taking out letters testamentary under the appointment in his wife’s will, and his occupation of property left to him under it, estop him from renouncing the provisions for his benefit therein contained, and electing to take his statutory share as surviving spouse in her estate?

Before coming to the facts of the case, there are certain questions of evidence which must be considered because of their effect upon the issues involved in these questions.

This is an action against an executor as such. Therefore the provisions of Code, art. 35, sec. 3, that in such a case “no party to the cause” shall be allowed to testify to any “transactions had with, or statement made by the testator,” are applicable, if the subject-matter of the suit is within the scope of that statute. There can be no doubt that so much of it as relates to the bank deposits is within the scope of the statute (Farmer v. Farmer, 137 Md. 72, 111 A. 464; Martin v. Munroe, 121 Md. 679, 89 A. 319; Taylor v. Brown, 65 Md. 366, 4 A.

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Bluebook (online)
176 A. 629, 168 Md. 34, 1935 Md. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillinghast-v-lamp-md-1935.