Whitehurst v. Taylor

4 Balt. C. Rep. 695
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedApril 30, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 695 (Whitehurst v. Taylor) 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
Whitehurst v. Taylor, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 695 (Md. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

O’DUNNE, J.

Mr. Marbury, Sr., in argument, characterized this case as (save only one) “the most fascinating, interesting and unique,” in his long experience at the Bar. Limited by my less expansive horizon, I fully concur in his diagnosis, and make additional comment, that it far exceeds anything that has come under my brief judicial observation in the thoroughness of its preparation on both sides, in skill of execution, and masterly presentation, oral argument alone lasting more than three whole days. It may be justly styled “a cause celebre.” It has human and professional interest, from other angles:

(a) It exemplifies strict adherence to some of the finer traditions of the Bar. Mr. Marbury, Sr., found that under certain inevitable aspects of the case, it would become necessary for him to testify, even to a now comparatively minor matter. He, therefore, withdrew from active personal participation in the trial work, and turned it over to the firm of Barton, Wilmer, Ambler & Barton. lie was only persuaded to take part in the argument, on the special invitation of the Court.

(b) When the New York settlement or compromise had been effected, with[696]*696out his knowledge or consent, and in a way in which he believed his client had been grossly defrauded by Mr. Ascher, then her own counsel in New York, and when later, nearly a year after the settlement, Ascher sent him a check for his proportion of the fee, some $2,000, he declined to participate in the fee and returned the money, and here denounced him in oral argument.

(c) The cause is interesting and refreshing from another angle. It presents an “oasis” in the desert of “expert testimony.” Mr. Bert O. Farrar, handwriting expert connected with the Treasury Department in Washington, D. C., having been retained by the complainant’s counsel for his opinion on the genuineness of Charles E. Whitehurst’s signature in the prayerbook, and after having given frank opinionate evidence in complainant’s favor as to the signature “Charles” in the prayer-book being genuine, he admitted inability to satisfactorily determine the other signature “Claire,” unless he knew the conditions under which it was written, as those satisfactorily accounting for the hesitation and “patchwork” there present, but of which he said he had evidence of similar patchwork in other writings of Charles. More important on the refreshing element of candor in expert testimony, was his willingness freely to admit, not only in Court, but previously to counsel retaining him, that the word “Wifey” in the disputed letter was, in his opinion, not written in “sequence,” that it “overhangs” other parts of the text, which it would not overhang if written in sequence, and that the “W” in “Wifey” has more of the characteristics of the writing of “Claire” than that of “Charles.” Such candor in opinionate expert testimony, if generally adopted by experts in all lines, would soon relieve that branch of evidence from the stigma which has justly been attached to it, and to which Chief Justice McSherry so ably paid his respects in the two Berry Will Cases in 93 Md. at 568-9 and 96 Md. 57.

(d) This case is interesting for the additional and unique situation presented in the necessity of establishing by expert testimony the law of New York as to the requirements for common law marriage. On which branch was called Judge Frank S. Hiseoek, former Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals of New York State, as expert on the side of the defense, and Mr. Benjamin A. Matthews, of Harper and Matthews, 74 Trinity place, N. Y., practitioner there, as “expert” called for the complainant. And, as is usual with experts, they do not agree on the law of New York. There is nothing unique or novel in a lawyer not agreeing with a judge as to what the law of his State is; but Judge Hiseoek is no longer judge, having been retired as Chief Judge of New York Court of Appeals recently, on reaching the 70-year age limit, and has again become a lawyer and practitioner.

(e) Additionally interesting is this cause, because of one of the contributions to the work of W. L. Marbury, Jr., and William R. Semans in the form of a most able brief of over 50 pages, analyzing, criticising and distinguishing all the New York cases cited by the experts on both sides. So complete is it as a piece of legal work that it is well worthy of publication as a ‘“monograph” in some law journal. As against this, Mr. Vernon Cook has filed a brief of some 200 printed pages in the form of a late text book, evidently acquired for the purposes of this case, and recently published by Otto E. Koegel, D. C. L., counsel U. S. Veterans’ Bureau and Professor in National Northwestern Law School. Both briefs are on the narrow point of common law marriage (all of hath of which briefs I have carefully read in connection with my part of the work of this case, in violation, probably, both of “union hours” and “Sunday work” laws), but with intense interest and complete bewilderment, from which I emerge with the belief that there is not a case in all the New York decisions on New York common law marriage directly decisive of whether agreement only constitutes the contract of marriage, or whether it also requires cohabitation and repute.

(f) Of additional interest also is this ease, because it presents a new question under the laws of evidence, never, I think, flatly decided in Maryland, whether, under the disability evidential act, one party to a contract can be heard to testify where the other party is dead and the suit is against distributees as such. If the Maryland statute is applicable here, the complainant would be ineligible to testify to her own alleged marriage with the deceased, Charles E. Whitehurst, because of his death.

[697]*697(g) Of additional interest, because a $16,000 settlement had in fact been made by the Whitehursts with one of her New York counsel, Mr. Aseher, under circumstances where he made it appear both to her and to the New York Courts that the settlement was for $31,000 by certified check to her order, whereas he in fact both demanded and received $5,000 in cash at the same time, with no recital in the release of assignment to Mrs. Taylor (mother of the Whitehursts), of the amount received, other than $5.00, and then Mr. Aseher withheld from his co-counsel, Mr. W. L. Marbury, Sr., both the fact of and amount of settlement, and it was in this connection that Mr. Marbury refused to accept his portion of the fee when sent him by Mr. Aseher, nearly a year later, on the ground that the settlement was a fraud on their client, the eonrplainant, and in connection with the whole circumstances of the case, the solicitors for complainant are asking that the deed of assignment by complainant be set aside as not binding on her.

(h) The last additional unique feature is perhaps the fact that the Court finds for the complainant on practically all the issues of the case, except the one issue of marriage, which is the only issue having for complainant other than purely academic interest.

It is needless to further multiply illustrations of the specially fascinating legal features of this case, of which a record of some 3,000 pages fairly teems with additional examples.

I will, therefore, briefly state such conclusions as I have been able to come to on the major and controlling questions.

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Related

Berry v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
53 A. 720 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1902)
Denison v. Denison
35 Md. 361 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehurst-v-taylor-mdcirctctbalt-1928.