60 Md. 573 | Md. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Proceedings were taken in equity, in the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County, for the division of the real estate of Joseph Catlin who had died intestate, leaving three adult sons, and some grandchildren who were minors, and the children of a deceased son. A commission was issued, in accordance with Article 41 of the Code, to five persons to value and divide the land. The commissioners reported the estate as existing in three parcels, viz., two farms and a house and lot. They laid off the widow’s dower, and valued the several parcels separately, and in the aggregate, subject to certain incumbrances resting upon them respectively, and then reported that the property was indivisible between the parties entitled, without loss or injury to them, and would not admit of any other division than the actual parcels in which the property was found and was accordingly valued. The report of the commissioners having been confirmed by the Court, Robert J. Catlin, oldest son of the deceased, and entitled to elect, by written election duly filed, elected to take all the estate at the valuation of the commissioners. To this election the appellant, the next oldest son, filed exceptions, alleging as ground of objection that Robert J. Catlin’s right of election was confined to one of the parcels and that he could not take by election the whole estate. This caveat the Circuit Court overruled, and passed an order declaring the election rightful, and directing the execution of a bond with security in sufficient penalty conditioned for the payment to the several heirs of their proportions of the valuation in money. From this order the appeal was taken. The sole question for consideration and determination may be thus stated: is the right of election, of the person entitled to it, restricted to one of the several parts into
The whole subject-matter underwent revision and amendment in 1820, and by chapter 191 of the Acts of that year all the preceding legislation was repealed, and a new Act adopted, which in large degree simplified the matter and made the object of the law more intelligible. The Code, Article 47, substantially, if not verbatim,, reproduces this Act of 1820 with such additions as was, thereafter, and before the adoption of the Code, made by the Legislature. The Act of 1820 being literally brought forward in the Code we shall refer to the sections as they are designated therein.
Affirmed, and cause remanded.