Baldwin v. Grymes

Decision Date15 October 1963
Docket NumberNo. 1,1
Citation232 Md. 470,194 A.2d 285
PartiesNancy D. BALDWIN, Executrix, etc., et al. v. Herbert L. GRYMES.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Paul F. Due, Baltimore (George D. Solter and Due, Nickerson, Whiteford & Taylor, Baltimore, on the brief), for appellants.

Ridgely P. Melvin, Jr., Annapolis (McWilliams & Melvin, Annapolis, on the brief), for appellee.

Before BRUNE, C. J., and HENDERSON, PRESCOTT, HORNEY and MARBURY, JJ.

HORNEY, Judge.

This appeal involves a question as to whether the money in controversy was property owned by the resident of a home for the aged at the time of her admission to the home or was property acquired by her after she was admitted.

Patience Johnson, having executed an admission contract and, as an integral part thereof, a last will and testament, entered the Aged Women's and Aged Men's Homes, as a resident therein, on June 3, 1954. She remained at the Home until her death on June 8, 1956. She was survived by a nephew, Herbert L. Grymes, as next of kin and only heir-at-law.

By the terms of the contract, and as a part of the consideration for her admission and care at the Home, the resident, besides an admission fee, agreed to pay over and assign to the Home all the property she had at the time of her admission, with the exception of $100. She further agreed that 'in the event of proof of ownership of other property which had not been disclosed at the time of admission * * * such property [should be] the property of the Home.' Under the last will and testament, the Home was named as the sole legatee and devisee of all property she then owned or thereafter acquired.

Patience Johnson was a widow. Her husband, Zachariah A. Johnson, died in January of 1954. He left a last will and testament in which his wife was designated as his sole legatee and devisee and was named as executrix. But the will was not probated until after it was ascertained that a sum of money was payable to his estate. At that time, the executrix renounced and an administrator c. t. a. was appointed to administer the estate.

Ten years before his death, Zachariah Johnson found a tract of land in Anne Arundel County which could be purchased for $1500. Instead of buying the tract himself, he told Howard Pumphrey and his brother Thomas (since deceased) of the bargain, and the three orally agreed that the Pumphreys would buy and pay for the tract, and, on its future sale, the finder of the bargain would be paid one-third of the net profits. No sale was made for more than a decade, but when the State Roads Commission acquired a part of the tract for a right of way, the surviving brother paid to the administrator c. t. a. of the estate of Zachariah Johnson the share of the net profits which was payable to his estate. Thereafter the sum of $2667.94 was distributed to the widow, which, pursuant to the terms of the admission contract, was transferred to the Home. Subsequent to the death of the widow, another part of the tract of land was sold and an additional sum of money was paid into the estate of Zachariah Johnson. In due course, the sum of $7749.40 was distributed to the executrix of the will of Patience Johnson. It is these two sums of money which are in controversy in this case.

The lower court awarded both sums to the nephew as the sole heir-at-law of Patience Johnson on the theory that they were 'after acquired property,' and the executrix of her will (who was also the treasurer of the Home) and the Home appealed. The appellants contend that the money received by the widow and her estate was property she owned at the time of her admission to the Home. On the other hand, the appellee claims that the money was property she acquired after she had been admitted thereto.

It is clear that a provision in an admission contract whereby an applicant assigns to a home for the aged the property he owned at the time of admission is valid. General German Aged People's Home v. Hammerbacker, 64 Md. 595, 3 A. 678 (1886). But it has been held that a contract requiring an assignment of all property acquired after admission would be void on the ground of public policy. Aged Women's & Men's Home v. Pierce, 100 Md. 520, 60 A. 277, 70 L.R.A. 485 (1905). It would seem, however, that the inclusion of such a provision in an admission contract would not affect the validity of the instrument as to property owned at the time of admission where, as here, the insertion of the 'after acquired property' clause was not so interwoven into the terms of the contract as to be inseverable from it. Nicholson v. Ellis, 110 Md. 322, 73 A. 17, 24 L.R.A.,N.S., 942 (1909).

The only question, as the appellee concedes, is whether the money in dispute was 'after acquired property' so as not to have been assigned to the Home under the admission contract. We are not called upon in this case to consider the effect of the resident's will on the devolution of the property.

The circumstances in this case obviously present a far different situation from that presented in the Pierce case on which the appellee primarily relies to support his claim that the money in dispute was after-acquired property. There a son of the inmate of a home died, without leaving a widow or descendants, after his father had entered the home, and the father of the intestate became entitled to the balance that remained for distribution. But, here, the husband of the resident of the Home died before his widow entered the Home, possessed of a...

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8 cases
  • Friedman & Fuller, P.C. v. Funkhouser
    • United States
    • Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
    • 1 Septiembre 1995
    ...contract; it merely governs the procedures to which they must adhere so as to render their contract enforceable. See Baldwin v. Grymes, 232 Md. 470, 475, 194 A.2d 285 (1963) (The Statute affects only the remedy sought and not the validity of the contract at issue.). Finding its origins in a......
  • Hart v. Pac. Rehab of Md., P.A.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — District of Maryland
    • 13 Septiembre 2013
    ...787 (1974) (holding that invalid restraint on alienation could be severed from contract without destroying validity); Baldwin v. Grymes, 232 Md. 470, 194 A.2d 285 (1963) (holding that illegal provision in nursing home contract did not affect the validity of contract, when the provision was ......
  • Eastern Commercial Realty Corp. v. Fusco
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of Delaware
    • 6 Diciembre 1994
    ...agreement and a listing agreement, it is that, generally, a finder's fee is earned by someone other than a broker. Baldwin v. Grymes, 232 Md. 470, 194 A.2d 285, 287 (1963). Here, however, plaintiff, Anthony Bariglio, is and was a licensed Delaware Real Estate Broker at the time of the alleg......
  • Hughes v. Schaefer
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • 23 Noviembre 1982
    ...sale of a business is not invalidated by seller's covenant not to compete, even if the covenant is illegal). See also Baldwin v. Grymes, 232 Md. 470, 194 A.2d 285 (1963) (illegal provision in nursing home contract will not affect the validity of contract, when the provision was not so inter......
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