Weels v. Justice

1 Balt. C. Rep. 115
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJune 10, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 115 (Weels v. Justice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weels v. Justice, 1 Balt. C. Rep. 115 (Md. Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

WRIGHT, J.

This case is in some respects a remarkable one. The plaintiff, a poor, illiterate, ignorant woman, while employed in the spring of 1888 to assort waste paper, &c., in a junk shop in this city, tods among the contents of a bag of such material in a package, what the witnesses describe as two United States gold certificates. She takes them — unaware of their value — to her home, the house of the adult defendant, with whom she resides and to whom, it appears, she gives her entire earnings in return for her board and lodging. When the plaintiff reaches this home she hands the certificates to a child of said defendant, Sarah E. Justice, as she would have handed her a toy. The child soon tiring of them places them upon a table. About this time a young man, William E. Conroy, a warm admirer of the elder daughter of said Sarah E. Justice, appears upon the scene: he examines the certificates and expresses his opinion that they are not counterfeit and worthless, but that they are valuable. With the assent of the plaintiff he is intrusted with these certificates to find out their value and to exchange them for cash. He was to receive for his services, according to the plaintiff’s testimony, twenty-one dollars; but according to the testimony of all the other witnesses present, namely: Sarah E. Justice, Annie, the said elder daughter, and Conroy himself, the said Conroy demanded five hundred dollars, in case he should be successful, for his1 services, which demand was assented to by the plaintiff. He leaves, taking with him the certificates; and the next day he exchanges them for two thousand dollars in notes, and hands this money to said defendant, Sarah E. Justice, as he supposes, for the plaintiff; he receives two hundred and fifty dollars for his services, having been induced by the said defendant to accept one-half of the sum he had previously demanded. The plaintiff is informed by the said defendant of the success of the agent, and the money is shown to her, but she never has the pleasure and satisfaction of handling it. The defendant, Sarah, claims that when she exhibited this money to the plaintiff, the latter said, “Thank God for it; for I have been praying to the Virgin Mary to find some money, so you could buy a stall with it, for I know you will never marry then.” The said Sarah further says that the plaintiff said, “Nellie, take the money and buy yourself a stall,” and when the plaintiff was asked by said defendant what she wanted done with the balance, she answered, “Buy us everything we need; you, me and the children.” The only other witness present at the time of this _ conversation was the defendant, Annie Justice, who swears substantially to the same conversation. The defendant, Sarah, considers this a gift of the money, and acts accordingly; purchases a stall and disposes of the money, the plaintiff appearing to have received only a pittance from the proceeds of the certificates.

The plaintiff denies that she ever made such a gift, and files her bill in this case, and asks that the stall may be declared her property and that the defendant, Sarah, account for the money retained by her. One week before the original bill was filed, the plaintiff appears to have executed a [116]*116transfer of all her right, title and interest in said stall to the two infant defendants, daughters of said Sarah E. Justice. The existence of this paper seems not to have been known to the plaintiff’s counsel when said bill was filed, as no mention is made of it and no relief asked against the said infants. On the 28th of February, 1890, the plaintiff files her amended bill, making the said infants defendants, charging that the said assignments was obtained by fraud and duress and asking that the -said paper may be can-celled and declared null and void.

It is conceded by the defendant’s counsel that the plaintiff’s title to the said certificates was good as against every one but the rightful owner, and such I conceive to be the law (see 3 Lawson’s Eights, Bemedies and Practice, Section 1313 and cases cited). This being so, and no claim every having been made by any one outside of the parties to this suit, the case must be decided as between these parties on the same principles as if the property up to the time of the alleged gift had been and was the property of the plaintiff.

In the decision of the questions involved it is necessary to consider the circumstances and the relations of the parties.

The plaintiff is an illiterate and an ignorant woman, and I cannot perceive either from her actions or her evidence that she was possessed of that natural or acquired shrewdness that has been discovered in her by the defendant’s counsel. From the evidence of the defendant, Sarah E. Justice, when the plaintiff came to live with her, she was in sore straits. Says Mrs. Justice in answer to the 16th cross-question, repeated, “I took her in on account that no one else would take her, and she told me she would give me what she made to help me and the children along.” In'answer to the 11th cross-question she says, “She didn’t pay me no board at all. When she came to live with me, I was standing in the market, and she told me she would give me what she made. I had to board her, pay for her washing and ix-oning, and whatever she needed had to come out of that money. She didn’t all the time make full weeks. Some weeks she would make thi-ee dollars; some weeks three seventy-five, I had to do for her the same as one of my children.” To the 12th cross-question she says of the plaintiff, “She didn’t want to board with me; she told me if I would take her to live with me she would give me what she made. * * * Of course, when she gave me her money, I reckon she supposed I was to do by her as one of my children.” And to the 8th question in chief she says, “I bought her medicine with my own money. I gave her money to go to.the doctor with. It’s hard to say what I didn’t do for her. No one would notice her or have anything- to do with her.”

Hei-e, then, we have, according to the testimony of the defendant, Sarah Justice, a poor waif, with no home, looking for a place of vest, and giving up all she should be able to earn in return for this home. She thus becomes entirely dependent on the said defendant; from her alone was she to i-eceive what should be considered by said defendant necessai-y for her support and maintenance; and if the plaintiff is to be believed, she was on one occasion treated with harshness because she retained fi*om her weekly earnings a small sum with which to pay for mending her shoe, and was consequently unable to give Mrs. Justice more than two dollars on that occasion.

This poor illiterate creature is the one who is said to have made this extravagant gift, to have stripped herself of this sum so singularly acquired, and which to one in her situation meant eomfoi't and ease, and to have voluntarily fallen back into the dependent position previously existing; and Sarah E. Justice, who was already in receipt of all the eai-nings of the alleged donor, is the one to whom the gift, in the first instance, is alleged to have been made. Surely, such a gift, made under such circumstances, should be most carefully scrutinized. The parties cannot be said to have dealt with each other on equal terms. The alleged donee was in the position of a superior, and the alleged donor- in the position of a dependent. This home, such as it was, meant a great deal to this- woman; for it she had surrendered her independence, and she doubtless would have submitted to much injixstice before she would have rebelled. More than this, however, the said defendant, Sarah E.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weels-v-justice-mdcirctctbalt-1890.