Von Buchwaldt v. Schlens

91 A. 466, 123 Md. 405, 1914 Md. LEXIS 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 91 A. 466 (Von Buchwaldt v. Schlens) 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
Von Buchwaldt v. Schlens, 91 A. 466, 123 Md. 405, 1914 Md. LEXIS 134 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The original bill in this case was filed in October, 1911, by the appellant, Mrs. Alice Wilkens Von Buckwaldt, to set aside a deed of trust executed by her on the 8th of October, 1900.

After the testimony had been taken the bill was amended, and now avers as the grounds upon which she seeks to have the deed annulled, that she was born in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1877, and has resided since 1879 in Germany; that by reason of her “continuous residence abroad” she “has, at no time, been able to read, write, speak or understand” the English language, and that in October, 1900, “while temporarily in the City of Baltimore — under the influence hereinafter more particularly mentioned, she was constrained to execute, against her will, to her brother-in-law, Gustav A. Schlens, the defendant, and husband of her sister, Henrietta Wilkens Schlens, now deceased,” the deed of trust in question. The influence referred to above is stated in the next (sixth) section of the bill as follows:

“That shortly before the execution and delivery of said deed of trust she became engaged to be married to the defendant, said Christian Von Buchwaldt, whom she afterwards married; that said engagement was strongly objected to by the mother of your oratrix, *407 who endeavored to prevent your oratrix from becoming the wife of said Christian Yon Buchwaldt, and that under the constraint and most urgent importunities of her mother she was finally induced to execute said deed of trust, upon the belief hereinafter mentioned, and said deed, with that understanding, was prepared for the purpose of restoring amicable relations between your oratrix and her mother.”

In the next paragraph she states “that she was finally induced to sign the deed upon the belief that she could, at any timo thereafter, should she so desire, revoke the same;,— and that hut for said belief she never would have executed” said deed; that after executing the deed she returned to her home in Germany, and about four months later she decided “to put her property in trust,” and notified “Gustav A. Schlens, trustee,” to have the deed recorded, believing that she could at any time thereafter “revoke the same.” The bill then avers:

“Recently, however, upon notifying said Gustav A. Schlens, trustee, of her desire to revoke said deed, she, greatly to her surprise, was informed that the deed as executed by her was irrevocable and that it could not be revoked except under and by virtue of a decree passed in a cause to which all the parties, who by the terms of said deed had an actual or contingent interest in said property, were made parties, so as to be heard by the Court.”

It is to be observed that- the bill does not allege that the deed was procured by fraud, hut the claim to the relief sought is based upon the averments that she was constrained to execute it, “against her will,” by the constant and most urgent importunities of her mother for the purpose of restoring amicable relations between them, and that she acted “upon the belief that she could, at any time thereafter, should she so desire, revoke the same.”

*408 The rules applicable to cases of this kind have been so often and clearly stated by this Court that it is only necessary to repeat what has already been said, and to give a reference to some of the cases illustrating the application of these principles. In the early case of Todd v. Grove, 33 Md. 188, where the relation of the parties was that of principal and agent, the Court, speaking of gifts between parties standing in a confidential relation, and after a review of many of the English and American cases, said: “From the doctrines announced by these authorities, it is plainly deducible, as well as positively decided, that a gift obtained where such relation exists, as we have shown did exist between the parties in this case, is prima facie void, and the burden is on the donee to establish to the full satisfaction of the Court, that it was the free, voluntary, unbiased act of the donor; that a Court of Equity, on grounds of public policy, watches such transactions with a jealous scrutiny, and to set them aside it is not necessary 'to aver or prove actual fraud, or that there was such a degree of infirmity or imbecility of mind in the donor, as amounts to legal incapacity to execute a will or a valid deed or contract,” The'doctrine there announced was applied in the case of Williams v. Williams, 63 Md. 371, and in the case of Whitridge v. Whitridge, 76 Md. 54, Judge McSherry quotes the following statement of Lord Romilly in Cooke v. Lamotte, 15 Beav. 239, as follows: “The rule in cases of this description is this: Where those relations exist by means of which a person is able to exercise a dominion over another, the Court will annul a transaction under which a person possessing that power takes a benefit unless' he can show that the transaction was a righteous one. It is very difficult to lay down with precision what is meant by the expression 'relation in which dominion may be exercised by one person over another.’ That relation exists in the cases of parent, of guardian, of solicitor, of spiritual adviser and of medical attendant, and may be said to' apply to every case in which two persons are so situated that one may obtaixx con *409 siderable influence over tlie other. The rale of the Court, however, is not confined to such cases. Lora) Cottehtham considered that it extended to every case in which a person obtains by donation a benefit from another to the prejudice of that other person and to his own advantage, and that it is essential in every such case, if the transaction should be afterwards questioned, that ho should prove that the donor voluntarily and deliberately, performed the act, knowing its nature and effect. It is not possible to draw the rule tighter or to make it more stringent, and 1 believe it extends to every such case.” After referring to other English cases and to Todd’s Case and Williams’ Case, Judge MoSiiejíiiy says: “But it is needless to multiply references to adjudged cases mi this subject — because it is the firmly settled law of Maryland that a gift or voluntary conveyance between living parties standing in the confidential relation of parent and child is ¡mima facie void, and when assailed by the donor or grantor, can only be upheld if satisfactorily proved to have been the free, voluntary and unbiased act of the person who made it.” The statement of the above rule obviously limits its application to cases in which the person holding ihe position of influence obtains some benefit from the person subject to- the influence, and where no such benefit is procured there is no reason why a Court of Equity should regard the transaction with such jealous scrutiny, or impose upon the grantee in a deed of trust the burden of showing that it was the free, voluntary and unbiased act of the grantor. In ihe case of Williams v. Williams, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
91 A. 466, 123 Md. 405, 1914 Md. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-buchwaldt-v-schlens-md-1914.