Daniels v. Daniels , 217 Md. App. 406 ( 2014 )


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  •              REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 415
    September Term, 2012
    LANA DANIELS
    v.
    BRENDA DANIELS
    Meredith,
    Nazarian,
    Sharer, J. Frederick
    (Retired, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Sharer, J.
    Filed: June 24, 2014
    It is established that, in order to effectively convey title to real property, the title
    documents – ordinarily a deed – must be delivered by the grantor to the grantee. An
    exception to the requirement of actual delivery is found in the doctrine of constructive
    delivery.
    In the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, the court ruled that the conduct of James
    H. Daniels, which we shall detail, infra, did not satisfy the requirements of either actual or
    constructive delivery of a deed by Daniels to his wife, appellant, Lana Daniels. Hence, the
    court, after a bench trial, entered judgment for appellee, Brenda Daniels, Personal
    Representative of the Estate of James H. Daniels.
    In her timely appeal, appellant presents the following question:
    Does constructive delivery of a deed occur where the husband executes a
    tenants by the entireties deed, informs his wife, and places the unrecorded deed
    with the couple’s important papers?
    For the reasons set forth below, we answer this question “no” and affirm the judgment of the
    circuit court.
    FACTUAL and PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    James H. Daniels (“Daniels”) died intestate. Appellee, Brenda Daniels, his daughter
    from a former marriage, qualified as personal representative of his estate. In her capacity,
    Brenda filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County to quiet title, which
    sought to have real property at 1602 Frederick Road, Catonsville, included as an asset of the
    estate. The suit to quiet title asserted that paper title to the property was based on a deed,
    recorded in 1987, to Daniels and his mother, Emily Daniels, as joint tenants. Upon Emily
    Daniels’s death in 2005, Daniels became the surviving owner.
    At the time of his death, Daniels was residing with appellant, Lana Daniels. Appellant
    asserts ownership of 1602 Frederick Road by virtue of a deed that was executed by her
    husband and witnessed and notarized on March 3, 2006, naming himself and appellant as
    tenants by the entireties. The deed was not recorded until May 12, 2011, after Daniels’s
    death.
    Daniels’s execution of the deed on March 3, 2006, occurred during a meeting with his
    stepdaughter, Leslie Robin Cadey, an escrow closer and underwriter, and Ingrid Chichester,
    a notary and title officer. Chichester witnessed Daniels sign the deed and notarized his
    signature. Cadey testified that Daniels retained possession of the deed, despite her advice
    that he have it recorded. Daniels, for some reason, did not follow that advice and, as we shall
    discuss, placed the deed among his and appellant’s personal papers in their home.
    At the time the deed was executed, and thereafter for some time, appellant was in
    Texas receiving medical treatments. She related to the court that when she returned home,
    Daniels informed her that “he had added her name on the deed.”
    Appellant testified that on the day of her husband’s death, her daughter, Cadey, was
    helping her locate a life insurance policy in a bedroom file cabinet that held “all of our
    important papers.” The cabinet contained, inter alia, personal documents, insurance policies,
    and the deed to their marital residence at 2407 Hammonds Ferry Road. During the search,
    2
    Lana and Cadey came upon a file folder containing the executed deed to 1602 Frederick
    Road. Appellant had not placed the deed in the cabinet, so she concluded that her husband
    had done so. Upon finding the deed, Cadey asked appellant why it had not been recorded.
    Their assumption was that, because the property was lien free, recordation had not been
    necessary. Testified Lana: “[W]e assumed, because there was no lien, we didn’t have to file
    it.”
    Cadey testified that she had drawn the deed at Daniels’s request. She testified about
    her meeting with Daniels and Chichester, and the execution of the deed, and recalled her
    advice to Daniels to “go and record the deed in Baltimore County.” Chichester confirmed
    that she witnessed Daniels sign the deed, and notarized his signature. She concluded that
    “[n]othing was unusual.”
    Cadey testified that on the morning of Daniels’s death, while helping her mother get
    papers together in order to complete funeral arrangements, she discovered the executed, but
    unrecorded, deed in a bedroom file cabinet amongst personal papers of both Daniels and
    appellant. A few weeks later Cadey consulted with counsel, who advised her to “guard it
    with [her] life and to get it on record[,]” which Cadey did.
    After recordation of the deed, Brenda Daniels, as personal representative of the
    Daniels estate, filed suit to quiet title, alleging that the unrecorded deed was of no effect and
    that the property was an asset of the estate. Appellee maintained that there had been no
    effective delivery of the deed, which rendered it void and inoperable.
    3
    The quiet title action was tried by the court on March 30, 2012. After hearing the
    evidence that we have recounted and arguments of counsel, the court ruled that “there has
    not been a delivery of the deed dated March, 2006 and recorded May 12, 2011.”
    The court orally explained its ruling:
    [Appellant] says this was in their possessions, which means that ... she did not
    have exclusive dominion over these items where the deed was found. He
    clearly had access to them throughout his lifetime, which means that he
    ... clearly could have revoked it at any point. It would have been a much
    different case had this deed been found, for instance, in her safe deposit box
    to which she had a key.... Recordation is not the essential element in this
    case. It is delivery. And had the deed been delivered either to [appellant]
    or to someone else as a third-party where Mr. Daniels, the decedent did
    not have access to it, ... this deed would survive. But I applaud her for her
    honesty, her candor. She says that it was in our things, in our file cabinet, with
    our important documents. Not hers. Theirs. Which means that he had access
    to it too. He could have – if he wanted, reached in there and tore it up if he
    wanted or just taken it back. That being the case, delivery, being an essential
    element to the legality of the deed, does fail. And I must find in favor of the
    [appellee]. I, I am sorry because I do acknowledge that this was a forty year
    marriage. And it is clear in, in the Court’s mind what the decedent’s intention
    was. There’s been no question in the Court’s mind that he intended to transfer
    the interest to his, his spouse of forty years. But I am without power to change
    that under the law. So I must find in favor of [appellee], the Estate. I’ll ask
    [counsel for appellee] to prepare an order to that effect.
    (Emphasis added).
    The court’s Order, filed on April 13, 2012, provides, in relevant part:
    ORDERED, that Judgment be and is hereby awarded in favor of the
    Plaintiff and against the Defendant; and it is further
    ORDERED, that The Estate of James H. Daniels, Register of Wills for
    Baltimore County Estate No.: 163375, be and is hereby adjudged and decreed
    to be the sole, true and lawful owner of all that real property situated in
    4
    Baltimore County, State of Maryland, known as 1602 Frederick Road,
    Catonsville, Maryland 21228; and it is further
    ORDERED, that the Deed, dated March 3, 2006, by and between James
    H. Daniels, Grantor, and James H. Daniel and Lana L. Daniels, Grantees, and
    recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore County ... , having been
    determined by this Court to be an insufficiently delivered Deed, is hereby
    adjudged and decreed to be invalid and of no force and effect[.]
    (Emphasis added).
    This timely appeal followed.1
    DISCUSSION
    Appellant concedes that there was not actual delivery of the deed, but posits that
    Daniels’s actions were effective to transfer title under the doctrine of constructive delivery.
    Appellant argues that “constructive delivery of a deed occurs when the husband deeds his
    property to himself and his wife, as tenants by the entireties, informs his wife, and places the
    unrecorded deed with the couple’s important papers.” Thus, she concludes, the trial court
    erred as a matter of law.
    “Delivery is the last but an indispensable step by a grantor to give validity and
    operative effect to a deed for conveyance of real estate. Execution and acknowledgment are
    equally indispensable but, without delivery, accomplish nothing.” Fike v. Harshbarger, 
    20 Md. App. 661
    , 661-62 (1974), aff’d, 
    273 Md. 586
    (1975).2 In order for the conveyance to
    1
    Appellee did participate in this appeal.
    2
    Under the common law of Maryland, “when a spouse titles property as tenants by
    (continued...)
    5
    be held legally effective, all necessary elements of a gift must occur, including the intent to
    transfer the property, relinquishment of control, delivery, and acceptance by the donee.
    Dorsey v. Dorsey, 
    302 Md. 312
    , 318 (1985).
    In Fike, which involved a conveyance of real estate from father to daughter, and a
    deed that was not recorded until after the father died, the sole issue was “whether or not there
    was a proper and legal delivery of the deed from [father] to 
    [daughter].” 273 Md. at 589
    .
    The Court of Appeals affirmed the decisions of both this Court and the Circuit Court for
    Garrett County that, because the grantor’s daughter lacked “any evidence whatsoever to
    indicate that Mr. Thomas surrendered control over same during his lifetime, it was not a valid
    delivery of the deed under the laws of the State of Maryland.” 
    Fike, 273 Md. at 589
    . The
    Court wrote:
    One hundred years ago our predecessors, through Judge Robinson,
    stated in Duer v. James, 
    42 Md. 492
    (1875), citing the opinion of the Supreme
    Court of the United States in Younge v. Guilbeau, 70 U.S. (3 Wall.) 636, 18 L.
    Ed. 262 (1866), that to constitute delivery of a deed the grantor must do some
    act putting it beyond his power to revoke, that there can be no valid delivery
    so long as the deed is within his control and subject to his authority, although
    delivery need not be to the grantee, but may be to a third party authorized to
    receive it, or even to a stranger for the use of the grantee.
    
    Id. 2 (...continued)
    the entirety, a presumption of gift to the other spouse arises[.]” Dorsey v. Dorsey, 
    302 Md. 312
    , 317 (1985).
    6
    The concept that effective delivery is essential to the validity of a conveyance has
    been long recognized by Maryland courts. See Clarke v. Ray, 1 Har. & J. 318 (1802)
    (Delivery is essential to the validity of a deed); accord, Hearn v. Purnell, 
    110 Md. 458
    , 465
    (1909) (Delivery is essential to the validity of a deed); Rogers v. Rogers, 
    271 Md. 603
    , 607
    (1974) (Delivery requires transferring the donor’s dominion over the property without power
    of revocation or retention of dominion over the subject of the gift).
    In the case sub judice, the trial court found that, based on direct evidence, Daniels
    intended to make a gift of the property. The court further found, inferentially, that the donee
    – appellant – had accepted the gift. The record supports these evidentiary findings.
    Conversely, the trial court found that the essential elements of delivery and relinquishment
    of control were not proven. The record also supports that conclusion. Delivery requires that
    the grantor be divested of all dominion and control over the deed. 
    Fike, 20 Md. App. at 665
    .
    “The burden is on the donee to establish every element of a gift.” 
    Dorsey, 302 Md. at 318
    .
    Under Maryland law, delivery is consummated only when the instrument has passed
    from the grantor, without any right of recall, to the grantee or to a third party for the use of
    the grantee. Delivery without right of recall is essential to the conveyance of a deed.
    Gianakos v. Magiros, 
    234 Md. 14
    (1964).            “It is recognized that there has been a
    consummated delivery when the instrument has passed from the grantor, without right of
    recall, to the grantee or to some person for his use.” 
    Id. at 27.
    The test of delivery is the relinquishment by the grantor of the custody
    or control of the deed. When he has formally executed and acknowledged it
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    and has delivered it unconditionally to the grantee, or one acting for him, the
    conveyance is completed and the title has passed.
    Krach v. Carson, 
    150 Md. 659
    , 662 (1926).
    The Court of Appeals has been consistent in ruling that actual delivery will be found
    only when there has been a formal execution and delivery of the deed, without right of recall.
    
    Id. To constitute
    a delivery of a deed, the grantor must take some action which puts it
    beyond his power to revoke. There can be no delivery so long as the deed is within the
    grantor’s control and subject to his authority. Duer v. James, 
    42 Md. 492
    , 496 (1875);
    Renehan v. McAvoy, 
    116 Md. 356
    , 359 (1911) (Delivery, essential to the validity of every
    deed, requires unconditional relinquishment by the grantor of the custody or control of the
    instrument); Buchwald v. Buchwald, 
    175 Md. 115
    , 120 (1938) (Where there was no effective
    delivery of the deed, it was invalid).
    Delivery may be to a third party, for the benefit of a grantee, as long as the grantor
    relinquishes all control over the deed. See, e.g., Houlton v. Houlton, 
    119 Md. 180
    , 184
    (1913) (Where deed delivered to third party for the grantee, who accepted it, conveyance held
    complete); Clark v. Creswell, 
    112 Md. 339
    , 342 (1910) (After grantor executed,
    acknowledged and delivered deed to third party, the conveyance is complete and title has
    passed even though grantee unaware of delivery). The ultimate test of a valid delivery is the
    grantor’s relinquishment of all custody and control over the deed, which would give the
    grantor any power to revoke or to “take the deed back and destroy it[.]” Meise v. Tayman,
    
    222 Md. 426
    , 431 (1960).
    8
    The record before us reveals that Daniels retained access and control over the deed
    by placing it in a file folder containing both his and appellant’s personal documents – a file
    to which each had equal access. Had he, for example, given the deed to appellant, with
    instructions for future recordation, or had he placed it in her personal papers to which he had
    no access, the court could have correctly found effective delivery. If Daniels, after executing
    the deed, had given it to either Cadey or Chichester, with instructions as to recordation, the
    court might well have found effective delivery. “There is a consummated delivery when the
    instrument has passed from the grantor, without right of recall, to the grantee or some third
    person for [the grantee’s] use.” 
    Krach, 150 Md. at 662
    .
    Appellant advances the argument that Daniels’s act of placing the deed into the
    couple’s common file, and telling her that he had placed her name on the deed, constituted
    constructive delivery. In support of her position, she relies on two cases involving the
    conveyance of stock certificates, Young v. Cockman, 
    182 Md. 246
    (1943), and Allender v.
    Allender, 
    199 Md. 541
    (1952), both of which, in our view, are distinguishable.
    Allender, a widower and father of four adult children, married a widow who had one
    
    child. 199 Md. at 544
    . Prior to his death, Allender transferred 369 shares of stock on the
    books of a local company to his four children, and placed the newly issued stock certificates
    in a safe deposit box, together with a new certificate for 137 shares in the names of himself
    and his wife, Faye Allender, as tenants by the entireties. None of the donees was aware of
    the transfers until after Allender’s death, intestate. 
    Id. at 545.
    9
    His widow filed suit to set aside the transfers to his children. The Chancellor ruled
    that the gifts failed “because there was no delivery, acceptance, relinquishment of dominion
    or effective transfer of the shares.” 
    Id. at 546.
    The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that
    delivery was complete because “[n]othing more remained to be done to make the conveyance
    of title complete and absolute, and, so far as the bank was concerned, it was irrevocable.” 
    Id. “Every legal
    requirement was observed to divest him of all title to the stock and to place it
    securely in the donee.” 
    Id. at 547.
    Unlike the case before us, Allender retained no authority
    or power to legally rescind the transaction or otherwise transfer the certificates “without the
    consent of the co-owners.” 
    Id. at 548.
    The Court emphasized the importance of the fact that
    “the donor retained no legal control over the devolution of the joint interest at his death and
    no power to revoke or undo what he had done[.]” 
    Id. at 550.
    In Young v. Cockman, Cockman’s widow brought suit against his daughter to produce
    a stock certificate which transferred stock in McCormick & 
    Co. 182 Md. at 248
    . After the
    Cockmans became estranged, she agreed to resume marital relations and care for him in
    exchange for 60 shares of stock, which were owned jointly by Cockman and Young, his
    daughter by a previous marriage. Cockman and daughter Young completed the assignment
    on the certificate, indicating a transfer of the shares to Cockman and wife. However,
    Cockman did not register the shares with the corporation, and retained possession of the
    certificate. 
    Id. Addressing the
    question of whether there had been a valid transfer of title to
    10
    the stock, the Court held that there was a valid delivery, based upon an application of
    contract law. 
    Id. at 250.
    Delivery may be constructive, rather than actual, provided that it is
    accompanied by words showing a donative intent. But, of course, either
    constructive or actual delivery must completely divest the donor of his
    property and completely invest the donee with it.
    
    Id. Considering their
    mutual agreement that Mrs. Cockman would care for her estranged
    husband in exchange for the shares of stock, an agreement to which his daughter, Young, was
    a party, the Court was compelled by equitable principles to order the corporation to transfer
    the 60 shares of stock on its books to Mrs. Cockman. 
    Id. at 252.
    The fulfilment of her
    promise to care for Cockman until his death represented a valuable consideration. 
    Id. The Court
    held “that a contract between husband and wife, made when they are separated for just
    cause, whereby the husband agrees to pay his wife a specified sum if she will resume marital
    relations, rests upon a valuable consideration and is enforceable.” 
    Id. at 253.
    Unlike Young, the intended transfer of property from Daniels to himself and his wife
    was a gift, not a matter of contract. And, unlike Allender, Daniels retained dominion and
    control over the file cabinet where the unrecorded deed remained throughout his lifetime;
    thus, he had not completely relinquished control over the deed.
    11
    We find no error in the circuit court’s findings and rulings that appellant did not
    satisfy her burden of proving constructive delivery, and shall affirm.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY AFFIRMED;
    COSTS ASSESSED TO APPELLANT.
    12