60 Md. 286 | Md. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal presents for review the rulings of the Court below on the trial of issues framed upon a caveat to the will of Firman Layman. This will was executed on the 4th of February, 1881, and the testator died on the 4th of March following, at the age of seventy-two years, leaving, surviving him, four children, and three grandchildren, children of a deceased son. The issues, three in number, were: 1st. Was the alleged will duly executed? 2nd. Was the testator at the time of its execution of sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding, and capable of making a valid deed or contract ? And 3rd, was it procured by the importunity or undue influence of Eliza Ross, or any other person or persons, at a time when he was unable to resist the same, and which deprived him of his free agency, so that the alleged will was not his free and unconstrained act ? At the trial three
1st. In the course of the testimony on the part of the caveator he offered to prove by Mrs. Buskirk, one of his witnesses, that shortly before the testator died, Mrs. Susanna Price, who was the daughter-of Eliza Ross, a legatee under the will, and the wife of James M. Price, one of the attesting witnesses thereto, told witness the contents of the testator’s will, and upon objection made by the caveatee, the Court refused to allow this testimony to be given to the jury. The appellant’s counsel in then-brief have, taken no notice of this exception and we therefore assume they have abandoned it. The ruling however was clearly right. There was no accompanying- offer to show that Mrs. Price had acquired knowledge of the contents of the will in any improper manner, or under such circumstances as would make this knowledge tend to sustain the affirmative of the issue relating to undue influence. Mrs. Price took no benefit under the will and there is no evidence in the record that she ever had or ever exerted any influence whatever over the testator. Eor aught that appears she niay have acquired this knowledge in many entirely innocent ways, as for instance, from the executor who drew the will and was afterwards entrusted .with its custody.
2nd. Samuel P. Wood, a witness for the caveatee, testified in chief that he had known the testator for many years, that he saw him frequently while he was sick and he talked as rational as he ever did, and, in witness’ opinion, was just as competent then, as he ever was, to make a valid deed or contract; that he was not easily swayed, was very positive and would carry his point; that he had heard him talk about his will and say he intended
3rd. The legal propositions stated in the caveatee’s first, second, third, fourth, and sixth prayers have been clearly established by repeated decisions of this Court, and no objection has been made to them by the appellant’s, counsel in their brief. They correctly announce the law as applicable to this case. But objection is made to the granting of his fifth prayer by which the Court instructed the jury “that the influence which will avoid this will must be exerted to such a degree as to amount to force or coercion, destroying free agency; it must not be the
This was one of the instructions granted in Higgins, et al. vs. Carlton & Scaggs, 28 Md., 115, and was approved by this Court as announcing a familiar principle of law so firmly established by numerous and uniform decisions that it is now too late to call it in question. But it is argued that it is not applicable to the facts appearing in this case, and this requires us to notice briefly what the facts alluded to as bearing upon this question really are. Mrs. Ross is the only person against whom there is any evidence whatever of the possession or exertion of any influence over the testator. She came to live with him about six months after the death of his wife and remained with him until his death, a period of about twenty-two years. He kept a hotel and she was his house-keeper, and, according to the testimony of one of the witnesses on the part of the caveator she was a good house-keeper, and in the opinion of commercial travellers kept the best house on the Eastern Shore; that the testator had great respect for her judgment and opinions both as regards house-keeping and outside matters. But there is also evidence tending to show that during this period she was not only his house-keeper but his kept mistress, and this is relied on as the peculiar circumstance which makes this instruction inapplicable in the present case. The law unquestionably condemns such relation, and it may also be true that it looks with suspicion upon any influence thereby acquired, and that in such a case whenever it appears that any important benefit has been secured to the mistress by a testamentary instrument, to the prejudice of the lawful
It is further insisted there was error in the refusal to grant the caveator’s second prayer, to the effect, that while it is true that the undue influence to avoid a will must be exercised in relation to the will itselfj still if the jury believe that at or near the time when this will was executed the testator was in other important transactions, so under the influence of Mrs. Eoss, or other person or persons benefited by the will, that as to -them he was not a free agent, but was acting under undue control, the jury may, if they please, and all the circumstances in the case in their opinion will justify it, find even in the absence of evidence bearing directly on the execution of the will, that in regard to that also, the same undue influence was exercised.
It is admitted that this prayer is founded upon a part of the judgment of the Lord Chancellor in Boyse vs. Rossborough, 6 House of Lords Cases, 51; where, after stating the general rule that the undue influence must be an influence exercised in relation to the will itself, and not an influence in relation to other matters or transactions, his Lordship adds: “But this principle must not be carried too far. Where a jury sees that at and near the time when the will sought to be impeached was executed, the alleged testator was, in other important transactions, so under the influence of the persons benefited by the will, that as to them he was not a free agent, but was acting under undue control, the circumstances may be such as fairly to warrant the conclusion, even in the absence of evidence bearing
Rulings affirmed, and cause remanded.