Davidove v. Duvall

Decision Date16 January 1931
Docket Number90.
Citation153 A. 417,160 Md. 345
PartiesDAVIDOVE v. DUVALL ET AL.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Appeal from Superior Court of Baltimore City; Eugene O'Dunne Judge.

Will contest between Emanuel M. Davidove, executor named in a paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Mary I. Duvall, against Albert Duvall, administrator of William Wallace Duvall, deceased, and others. From the judgment, the former, the caveatee, appeals.

Reversed and new trial awarded.

Argued before BOND, C.J., and PATTISON, URNER, ADKINS, OFFUTT DIGGES, PARKE, and SLOAN, JJ.

Joseph Loeffler, of Baltimore (Albert H. Frankel and Saul L. Joseph, both of Baltimore, on the brief), for appellant.

James W. Chapman, Jr., of Baltimore, for appellees.

DIGGES J.

The questions which we are asked to determine on this appeal are the usual ones presented in will contests, except that here the issue submitted to the jury was that of mental capacity, a finding for the caveatee having been directed on the other issues at the close of the evidence offered on behalf of the caveators. The finding on the third issue, that of mental capacity, was in favor of the caveators, which resulted in the breaking of the will; and the caveatee appealed. There are two exceptions contained in the record, one to a ruling on evidence, the other to the ruling on the prayers. The pertinent testimony disclosing the circumstances and conditions surrounding the testatrix in the making of the will, we will briefly state.

Mary I. Duvall, a maiden lady, was about eighty-five years of age at the time of the execution of her will. For thirty years or more she had lived in her three-story home on South Carey street, Baltimore, Md. She was a woman of great independence, had made her livelihood for many years, and was industrious and thrifty. She was small in stature, and not robust physically. Her nearest relatives, at the time of the making of the will, were a brother and nieces and nephews, children of a deceased brother, and two deceased sisters. Most of the nieces and nephews lived in Baltimore or vicinity, as did the brother; the record disclosing, however, that one or more of the nieces were nonresidents of Maryland. Between July 15 and July 20, 1926, her neighbors, not having seen her about the house, made an investigation of the home, and found Miss Duvall lying on the floor in a helpless, semiconscious condition. She was unable to walk, or support herself; and was put in an automobile and taken to the home of Mrs. Evelyn B. Yeager, on Carrollton avenue, where she remained until the middle of October, 1926. Mrs. Yeager's brother was the husband of one of Miss Duvall's nieces, which niece lived in Washington state. On October 17, 1926, Miss Duvall was moved to the home of a niece who lived on the Annapolis boulevard, where she remained until her death of pneumonia on February 17, 1927. Mrs. Yeager had, prior to 1926, on frequent occasions attended Miss Duvall in sickness, and was a friend of long standing.

At the time she was brought to Mrs. Yeager's house in July, 1926, Miss Duvall was much debilitated physically, and in a semiconscious condition, which apparently resulted from a combination of undernourishment and the fall which she sustained in her home. Mrs. Yeager did not send for a physician, but apparently notified Louis Duvall, a nephew of the testatrix, who came to see her on the 20th of July, and on that day called in Dr. Thomas M. Lumpkin for treatment. The doctor examined Miss Duvall, first administered a sedative, and then prescribed a tonic and treatment. He paid altogether ten visits, beginning July 20th and ending August 14th. He had never attended or known Miss Duvall prior to July 20th. One of his visits was on August 6th, after which he did not see her until August 11th. It was on August 9th that the will in question was executed. We will hereafter refer more particularly to the doctor's testimony, as it is upon his testimony the case must, if at all, be submitted to the jury. The doctor said several times during the course of his testimony that there was a steady improvement in the physical and mental condition of the testatrix, from the time of his first visit until he discontinued his calls on August 14th. He, however, gave it as his opinion that at no time between July 20th and August 14th was she capable of executing a valid deed or contract. The scrivener and executor of the will was an attorney whom the testatrix had never known prior to the time she was taken to the house of Mrs. Yeager, but was the attorney of the latter. The will was witnessed by Mrs. Yeager and a boarder in the house, Tensley A. Ragan.

The provisions of the will are simple and easily understood. It provided for the payment of the testatrix' debts and funeral expenses, bequeathed the sum of $50 to her brother, William Wallace Duvall, and the rest and residue to be divided equally among certain named nephews and nieces, who were all of the nephews and nieces of the testatrix, other than the children of the brother, William Wallace Duvall. It further empowered and directed the executor named, Emanuel M. Davidove, who was the scrivener of the will, to convert, by public or private sale, all of the property into cash. At the time of making the will, the brother, William Wallace Duvall, was in poor health, and died some time in 1927, subsequent to the death of the testatrix. The caveators are all of his children, in their individual capacity, and Albert Duvall, as administrator of his father's estate. The record discloses that the attorney who drew the will was brought in contact with the testatrix by Mrs. Yeager, and that he was requested by the testatrix to draw the will, at the same time giving him the names of those whom she wished to have her property, and in what proportions. She also advised with him about the collection of certain ground rents.

There were two wills drawn, they being identical, with the exception that the first did not include as a beneficiary the niece who lived in Washington state. The first will was taken to Mrs. Yeager's home and read to the testatrix, in the presence of the persons who witnessed the final will, at which time it was suggested, apparently by Mrs. Yeager, possibly by the testatrix, that the name of the niece in Washington state had been omitted. The testatrix suggested that the name be inserted in the will then before them. This was not done, but a new will was drawn, in which the omission was supplied, and taken to the testatrix for execution. This was about two days after the contents of the first will were read or made known to the testatrix. The second will, according to the testimony, was read by the testatrix, read by Mrs. Yeager, and by the attorney in the presence of the testatrix and the witnesses thereto. The testatrix expressed her satisfaction with its provisions, and thereupon signed the will in the presence of the witnesses, who, in her presence and the presence of each other, signed as witnesses. The will was then given to the executor named therein, who retained it until presented to the orphans' court for probate. After the execution of the will, the testatrix continued to advise with the attorney in respect to the collection of ground rents and the investment of funds which she had in a savings bank. Most of these investments were made in second mortgages, which paid 6 per cent. interest, and, in addition, a 5 per cent. bonus. This bonus, together with any interest or ground rents collected by the attorney prior to the death of the testatrix, was turned over to her in cash. It is uncontradicted that, after she went to live with the niece on Annapolis boulevard, the testatrix transacted business with the attorney, and through him, with other parties, including the niece with whom she was living, to whom there was a loan of $350 made and a note therefor taken; also, that in December, 1926, the testatrix went shopping with her niece on several occasions, purchasing various articles, such as clothing, hat, stockings, and a new pocketbook; that she did small things that would be expected of a woman of her age, such as sewing and knitting, and on two occasions went in an automobile to visit another niece, Mrs. Burkman, once in October, and the second time on New Year's Day, 1927, at which time she took dinner with Mrs. Burkman.

It is further uncontradicted that the testatrix died of pneumonia. It seems certain that, although the testatrix was in very bad condition, physically and mentally, when carried from her own home, where she was found, to the home of Mrs. Yeager, this condition, both physical and mental, steadily improved from that time. This is shown by the testimony of all of the witnesses, including the doctor, who says there was a steady improvement from the time he first saw her until August 14th when he discontinued visiting her. All of the witnesses also establish the fact that she was out of bed and sitting in a morris chair between July 20th and August 14th, and that she was up and sitting in the chair at the time the will was executed. This improvement in her condition continued during the whole time covered by the testimony, extending up to January, 1927. There is no reasonable doubt that she knew she had made a will, because she continued to...

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3 cases
  • Mangione v. Snead
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • October 29, 1937
    ... ... 42] observation without first stating the facts and ... circumstances upon which his opinion was based. Davidove ... v. Duvall, 160 Md. 345, 352, 153 A. 417, and cases there ... cited. But even so, if it definitely and clearly appeared ... that there was in ... ...
  • Smith v. Biggs
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • January 21, 1937
    ... ... 677, 682-684, 60 A. 481; Berry v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co. (Berry Will Case), 93 Md. 560, 49 A. 401; Id., ... 96 Md. 45, 53 A. 720; Davidove v. Duvall, 160 Md ... 345, 353, 153 A. 417. There was no sufficient proof of ... permanent incapacity before the signing of the disputed will, ... ...
  • Parker v. State
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • November 14, 1947
    ... ... cross-examination the reasons are shown to be legally ... insufficient, the court must so instruct the jury ... Davidove v. Duvall, 160 Md. 345, 352, 353, 153 A ... 417; Baugher v. Gessell, 103 Md. 450, 63 A. 1078; ... Horner v. Buckingham, 103 Md. 556, 64 A. 41 ... ...

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