Wise v. Swartzwelder

54 Md. 292, 1880 Md. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 54 Md. 292 (Wise v. Swartzwelder) 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
Wise v. Swartzwelder, 54 Md. 292, 1880 Md. LEXIS 90 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Brent, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants filed the bill in this case for the purpose of setting aside a deed from Margaret Wise to Peter Swartzwelder, dated the sixteenth of January, ÍSÍS, by which she conveyed to him a house and lot, in the City of Hagerstown.

By agreement a decree pro forma, dismissing the bill, was passed by the Circuit Court for Washington County, and from that decree this appeal is taken.

It is apparent from the record, that, although the value of the property involved is not large, the case has been productive of much feeling. The testimony is unusually voluminous, and so conflicting that the learned Judges who heard the case below, reached different conclusions.

We are not disposed to review the testimony at length. To do so would very greatly extend this opinion; and in contrasting the testimony of the witnesses, it would be almost impossible to avoid remarks upon it, which might he construed into reflections upon witnesses who may have testified in perfect good faith. It is also wholly needless, as the conclusions only which we have deduced from the whole proof, are to govern the decree to he passed.

We think upon the ¿ntire case as developed, that the burden of proof is on the complainants. Ho such confidential relations are found to exist between the parties to the deed as to throw that burden upon the defendants, who are the heirs-at-law of the grantee. Keeping this rule in view, we have not thought that the case is one of unusual difficulty.

[294]*294In 1846 Mrs. Wise lost her husband. The only real estate, which he possessed, was this house and lot, which had been the home of himself and family. Dying insolvent, upon a creditors’ hill the house and lot were decreed to he sold. At the sale, which was in 1851, Peter Swartzwelder, a bachelor brother of the widow, became the purchaser of the property for fourteen hundred and thirty dollars, and subsequently for the consideration of love and affection he made a conveyance of it to the sister, Mrs. Wise. Some time afterwards the house was enlarged and remodeled, and for this Peter Swartzwelder paid an additional sum of four thousand dollars.

That this house and lot were regarded by the brother as the absolute property of the sister is unquestioned from the proof. It was evidently his purpose to furnish her with a house and home, of which she could not he deprived. She lived there as owner, and he hoarded with her. The warmest and kindest affection existed between them, and thus they lived in the utmost harmony until the sister died, on the 16th of February, 1875.

Mrs. Wise had no income, except what she received for the hoard of the brother, and from the rent of a room, as a lawyer’s office, after the house had been enlarged. Other means, when required for her own comfort or the support of the house, it is fairly to he inferred, were furnished by him. Her children were not with her. Her daughter had married, and the two sons seem to have been wanderers, only occasionally communicating with her, or returning to her home when they needed money, and this was generally given them from her slender means, or by the brother.

In 1874 the health of Mrs. Wise became seriously impaired, and in the fall of that year she became hopelessly sick with dropsy complicated with disease of the heart. From about Christmas of that year to the time of her death, on the 16th of February, following, her sufferings are described by all the witnesses as being of the [295]*295most severe and intense character. One month before her death the deed in question was executed, and it is charged that at the time she was mentally incapable of making a deed.

Great physical suffering oftentimes shatters and destroys the mind, but it does not necessarily produce such result. The law recognizes the fact that the mind may he competent, though the body is aged, and stricken by disease and suffering.

There is no doubt that about the time when this deed was executed, the mind of Mrs. Wise often wandered, that she sometimes fancied she saw visions which did not exist, that she failed at times to recognize persons whom she had known, and that she talked incoherently in her broken sleep or when awaking from it. But all these must have been temporary, whether resulting from opiates administered to allay pain or not, for witnesses, who are quite as competent to judge as those who testify to these hallucinations and wanderings, testify with equal credibility to her competency and unimpaired mind when they saw and conversed with her. Notably among these are two reverend gentlemen who called upon her for spiritual purposes. They, no doubt, from their profession, were familiar with sufferings of the sick bed, and it was their aim to teach patience and reliance, and to soothe pain by addressing their efforts to the mind of the sufferer. If the latter he impaired and gone, who more likely to discover it ? They think from their conversations with Mrs. Wise, that she was competent to make a deed.

But there are facts testified to by one of the witnesses as occurring near about the time of the signing of this deed, which, with the other proof on the part of the defendants, we think, is conclusive upon the question of competency. There is no escape from their truth without assuming that the witness has wilfully misstated. Unlike opinions upon the condition of the mind, they cannot be treated as errors of judgment.

[296]*296It is stated by this witness tbat on the day before the deed was executed, Mrs. Wise spoke to her about deeding tbe property to her brother, and said she had made up her mind to do so. She saw her again on the day, and before, the deed was signed, and conversed with her. She was “perfectly clear-minded, calm, and free from pain.” The witness left to attend to duties about the house, and saw the brother (Peter) with Mr. Tice, the magistrate, go into her room. About an hour afterwards she returned to the room, when Mrs. Wise told her “ she had signed the deed giving the propertjr to Peter, as she had told her the day before she was going to do.” This witness further says, “from these conversations, before and after the signing of the deed, I know that her mind, at the time of signing the deed, was as clear as mine this moment.”

After carefully weighing and considering all the proof and circumstances of this case, we cannot reach the conclusion that Mrs. Wise was mentally incompetent at the time she executed this deed. On the contrary, notwithstanding her advanced age and her bodily sufferings from a fatal sickness, we think the weight of the testimony shows that her mind survived, and that she knew and understood what she was doing.

It is to be regretted that the magistrate who took the acknowledgment is not living. But the presumption cannot be avoided, that he would not have taken the acknowledgment of a party to a deed, whom he believed to be mentally incompetent to execute and acknowledge it.

The question of undue influence rests entirely upon the devotion and affection of Mrs. Wise to her brother, and the belief of the witnesses that she would do anything he asked of her. This of itself is not sufficient ground for declaring that a deed has been obtained by undue influence. Perhaps, connected with the fact that a mother had taken her property without cause or apparent reason from her children, Courts of equity might hold the deed to be invalid. But the circumstances of this case take away the [297]

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Bluebook (online)
54 Md. 292, 1880 Md. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-swartzwelder-md-1880.