Upman v. Thomey

125 A. 860, 145 Md. 347, 1924 Md. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 125 A. 860 (Upman v. Thomey) 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
Upman v. Thomey, 125 A. 860, 145 Md. 347, 1924 Md. LEXIS 105 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

■On June 3rd, 1921, John Thomey and others, children, residuary legatees, and heirs at law of Margaret Thomey, a resident of Baltimore County, who died in April, 1921, leaving a last will which.was in due course probated in the *349 orphans’ court, of that county, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County against Edward N. Thomey, also a son of the decedent, for the purpose of setting aside a’ deed from her conveying to' him a tract of land on the Old Frederick Hoad in that county subject to a life estate in the grantor, on the ground that it had been obtained through misrepresentation and coercion. A demurrer to that bill was filed, but before it was heard the complainants, with the leave of the court, filed on September 23rd, 1921, an amended bill. To that bill the defendant and Teresa Upman, who, having originally been a party plaintiff, had through an amendment of the pleadings been made a defendant, demurred, and on April 21, 1922, those demurrers were sustained, with leave to the plaintiffs to file an amended bill, and on August 7th, 1922 a third amended bill was filed. On November 17th, 1922, a demurrer to that bill also was sustained with leave to further amend and, on December 2nd, 1922, a fourth amended bill was filed. Copies of that bill were served on each of the defendants and they were each summoned to appear to it, although it contained no prayer for process. They appeared, however, and again demurred to the bill, but the court overruled that demurrer on September 13th, 1923, and from that order the defendants appealed. The question before this Court, therefore, is whether the demurrer to what we will call the fourth amended bill of complaint should have been overruled. In dealing with that question it will be unnecessary to refer to the averments of ’the first three bills, since they were all included substantially in the fourth amended bill, further than to note that the first and second bills contained prayers for process against the defendants named in them, while the third and fourth bills contained none.

The fourth amended bill was filed by John Thomey and Agnes Thomey, his wife, Henry Thomey and Elizabeth Thomey, his wife, Peter Thomey, widower, Annie E. Benzel and Peter Benzel, her husband, Catherine Stigler, widow, and Mary Brown, widow'. In it the complainants charge *350 that Margaret Thomey, late of Baltimore County, died in April, 1921, leaving to survive her as her only heirs at law eight children, to wit: “John Thomey of said county, whose wife is Agnes Thomey; Henry Thomey, also of said county, whose wife is Elizabeth Thomey; Peter Thomey, a widower, of the State of Virginia; Annie E. Benzel, of said Baltimore County, whose husband is Peter Benzel; Catherine Stigler, a widow, also of said county; and Mary Brown, a widow, of the City of Baltimore, State of.Maryland, who are the above plaintiffs, and Edward N. Thomey, single, of said county, and Theresa Upman, a widow, of said City of Baltimore.” That at the time of her death she was seised of a tract of land on the Old Frederick Road in Baltimore County, and that she left a last will dated May 20th, 1901, a certified copy whereof was filed with the bill, in which, after disposing of certain personal property, she devised the residuum of her estate which included the land referred to in the following manner: “All the rest and residue of my property, real, personal and mixed, I direct to be divided into nine equal parts, and I do hereby devise and bequeath one of said equal parts to and unto each of my nine children. Further I do hereby constitute and appoint my son, Edward, the executor of this my last will and testament directing directing him to divide and distribute my property as above set forth.” And that will was on June 8th, 1921, duly admitted to probate in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore County. That subsequent to the execution of that will Frank Thomey, one of the residuary legatees, died unmarried and intestate, leaving as his only heirs at law his brothers and sisters named above, and his mother. That after the will was executed it remained in the possession of Edward N. Thomey, who alone of all the children of the testatrix knew its contents, although his brothers and sisters knew that it had been made, and it remained in his possession until the death of his mother in 1921. That Mrs. Thomey at the time of her death was about ninety-six years old, and for some fifteen or twenty years prior to her death *351 liad been in feeble health mentally and physically, and that during that period Edward N. Thomey, one of the defendants, her son, lived with her, and to quote from the bill, “he and she being during most of that time the only occupants of the household, had assumed absolute and unlimited control over her person, affairs, business, money and property and effects of every kind, and subjected both her and them to the dominance of his own will and desires, selling the produce usufruct of lier real estate, and collecting the rents and profits therefrom during all that time, without paying over or accounting to her in any way for the same.” It further charges that on or about the first day of Hay, J!)l 1, the defendant, Edward N. Thomey, without the direction, authority or knowledge of Margaret Thomey, his mother, caused to be prepared a deed from her conveying to himself all of her real estate, and that “by the exercise of undue influence, coercion, misrepresentation, fraud and deception by hint upon and over his said aged mother, obtained her signature to and acknowledgment of said deed; and shortly thereafter caused the same to be recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore Oonnty.” The bill then malíes these charges:

“That at the time of the execution of such alleged or pretended deed, the said Margaret Thomey was about eighty-five years of age; that she was unable to read, or write even her own name, as is evidenced by her mark, instead of her signature, to said pretended deed; that even though such pretended deed was read to the said Margaret Thomey at the time of its alleged execution and acknowledgment (which your orators verily believe, and therefore charge, was not then or at any other time in fact done), she was at the time mentally incapable of comprehending or understanding its meaning and purpose, and, further, that the said Margaret Thomey was at that time and for some years prior thereto had been, in such weak and enfeebled condition of mind as rendered her incompetent to transact any business or affair of importance, or to comprehend the consequence thereof.
*352 “That the said Edward N.

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Bluebook (online)
125 A. 860, 145 Md. 347, 1924 Md. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upman-v-thomey-md-1924.