52 Md. 686 | Md. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In the autumn of 1873, Mrs. Ann M. Bantz, of Frederick County, died leaving a will, in which her son, Grideon Bantz, was appointed executor. He accepted the trust, and proceeded to administer the estate. He passed three administration accounts, dated respectively on the 15th of December, 1874, the 29th of November, 1876, and the 27th of April, 1878.
At the time of passing the third account, he made distribution of the balance, which his accounts showed to be in his hands, among the devisees under the will; but this distribution was not made under the order of the Orphans’ Court, and was not made after notice to persons interested as required by the Code. On the 10th day of May, 1878, the devisees under the will of Mrs. Bantz, filed a petition in the Orphans’ Court, wherein said accounts had been passed, alleging the existence of sundry errors in the executor’s accounts, and charging that sundry claims and allowances had been made to the executor, which were not proper charges against the estate, and ought to be stricken from his accounts; and praying for the several accounts to be set aside, and a new account to be stated, in which the items objected to should be disallowed. After answer and proof, tbe Orphans’ Court set aside all the accounts of the executor, and ordered a new account to be stated, wherein some of the items
The simple passage of a claim against the estate, or the passage and approval of an account retaining for it, does not establish the correctness of either. The most that it accomplishes is to protect the administrator or executor, if he actually pays it without knowledge of its incorrectness. Passage of a claim by the Orphans’ Court,, does not hind the executor to pay it; he may still resist it, and the claimant is put to his proof. Here, the claim for services is preferred by the executor against the testatrix, with no one to object hut the petitioners. He is his own paymaster, and because he has chosen to put it into his accounts, and gotten the ex parte approval of the Orphans’ Court to it, it is clear that he ought not, until the estate is wholly closed, to he regarded in the same light, as if, on the faith of the Court’s approval, he had paid a. stranger his claim against the estate; hut the persons interested in the estate and its distribution ought to he permitted, in a proper way, and within proper time, to make their objections to the propriety of his claim. We think this application was within proper time. The claim alluded to was only passed by the Court three days before the passage and approval of the first administration account.
The inclusion of that claim in the account created the appearance of an over-payment of the estate; hut it was only apparent. That over-payment was brought forward in each of the other accounts, as a matter for allowance successively. After the third, a distribution was struck, and then came the application for revision. The third account was passed on the 27th day of April, 1878, and the application for revision and to strike out, was made within ten days thereafter. This was certainly a reason
We must first dispose of some questions of evidence. It was objected on the part of the executor, that the petitioners were incompetent witnesses to impeach his claim. The Orphans’ Court overruled this objection, and we think that decision right.
The petitioners are clearly not excluded as witnesses by the Act of 1864 and supplements, unless they fall within some of the exceptions of the said Act or its supplements, and are thereby excluded. Those exceptions relate to the case of the death of an original' party to a contract or cause of action, or to his insanity, or to cases where an executor is a party to the suit, in either of which cases the other party is excluded. The petitioners were certainly in no sense parties to the contract. This proceeding is not for the purpose of enforcing a charge against the executor, as executor, of the estate. It is a proceeding by which an executor is sought to be prevented from retaining for his own claim against the estate; which claim is alleged to be unjust, and not due and owing, by the testatrix. If it were a claim of another person against the executor, these parties would undeniably be competent to testify adversely to the claim.
There is, therefore, no reason why in this case they should not be competent. The executor, as such, and the
These witnesses appear against him not as executor, hut as creditor of the estate seeking payment, and as if seeking payment from one other than himself, clothed with power to pay. The fact, that the executor and the claimant are one and the same person, cannot work an exclusion which would not otherwise exist. The statute never contemplated any such result. The statute contemplated suits or proceedings against an executor for the purpose of enforcing a claim against the estate, hot of resisting a claim of the executor, as this case is. There is no ground for applying the rule as one of mutuality, which this Court has so often said was the object of the statute.
Certain declarations and admissions of the appellant, Grideon Bantz, touching his services to his mother, made to Albert Grallion, were given in evidence by the petitioners. Grideon Bantz, on his own offer, was produced as a witness to contradict Grallion as to those statements. Objection being made, the Court held, that being a party to the alleged contract, and the other party being dead, he was incompetent. To this ruling exception was taken. We intimate no opinion on this question. It is unnecessary to the decision of this case, and being an important question, it may properly be reserved for further consideration and future decision, if the question should arise again where it is important. Here, according to the view we take of the other proof in the cause, it is immaterial whether he would contradict Grallion in that particular or not; assuming that he would unqualifiedly do so, there is enough proof in the cause to control the decision of it, exclusive of Grallion's statement in that regard. The other exceptions to testimony on both sides are also immaterial, and therefore we do not consider them.
Respecting the claim on the part of the executor for the renovation of the tombstones of the grand-parents of
In Guild vs. Guild, 15 Pickering, 129, the jury were instructed, “ that if under all the circumstances of the case the services were of such a character as to lead to a reasonable belief, that it was the understanding of the parties that pecuniary compensation should be made for them, then they might find an implied promise and quantum meruit.” The case of Lee vs. Lee and Welch, 6 G. & J., 316, and Stockett vs. Jones and Wife, 10 G. & J., 276, proceed upon the same principle. In order to justify a claim for services being allowed against a decedent, there must have been a design, at the time of the rendition, to charge, and an expectation on the part of the recipient to pay for the services. The services must have been of such character, and rendered under such circumstances, as to fairly imply an understanding of payment, and a promise to pay. There must have been an express, or implied understanding between the parties that a charge for the services was to he made, and to he met by payment. This Court has
If it had been his purpose to charge her, as for similar services to other people, he would not have allowed so long a period to elapse without an agreement fixing his right to be paid and the amount he was to receive. He would not have left it to be wholly settled after her death.
He would not have risked the danger of resistance to such claim from those who might become entitled to the estate at her death, and whose interest it would be to
The decision of the Orphans’ Court, therefore, so far as the appeal of Grideon Bantz is concerned, will not be disturbed.
In the cross-appeal of the petitioners, complaint is made, in their prayer of appeal, of the action of the Orphans’ Court, 1st, in allowing the claim of $112.50 for fertilizers furnished while the.farm was in the hands of the executor and being managed by him. 2nd, of the $100 for the fertilizer in the executor’s individual account against the deceased.- 3rd, of the $1200 allowed for a monument for the deceased, purchased by the executor. And 4th, for the imposition of the costs of the investigation upon the estate instead of the said Grideon Bantz personally. So far as the question of costs is concerned, the whole matter was in the discretion of the Orphans’ Court under section 250 of Article 93 of the Code, and is not reviewable in this Court.
With reference to the fertilizer included in the executor’s account against the decedent, we see no sufficient reason to disapprove that allowance. Independent of his own affidavit, there was proof of his furnishing the fertilizer, and the value of it was, we think, sufficiently vouched. We think the Court was right in allowing the other fertilizer bill. The land was under the will, in the hands
The only remaining question presented by the prayer of appeal, relates to the allowance claimed by and allowed to the executor, by the Court for a monument over the deceased. Notwithstanding this was included in the prayer of appeal, it is not considered or alluded to in the brief of the cross-appellants, and in the recapitulation of the amounts wherein they claim to he damnified by the ruling of the Orphans’ Court, and the arithmetical summary by which they exhibit the amount of loss occasioned by the erroneous charges of the executor, the allowance for a monument is wholly excluded. We assume therefore, that they concluded to acquiesce in that allowance, and abandon that objection. The questions presented thereby, therefore, we do not consider.
The decision of the Orphans’ Court respecting the matters covered by both appeals will he affirmed, and each party will he required to pay his own costs.
Order affirmed, each party
to pay his own costs.