59 Md. 441 | Md. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application for an injunction to restrain the appellee from prosecuting an action of ejectment, to recover a tract of land called “ Rhoda,” and also for the appointment of a trustee, to convey said tract to the appellant.
The bill further alleges, that in pursuance of said agreement of purchase, Beall took possession of the property, and that it had ever since remained in his possession, and of those under whom the appellant claims.
The following is a copy of the order of the Orphans’ Court filed as an exhibit with the bill:
“ In the Matter of the petition of Gustavus Beall vs. The Executors of Gerard Clary, deceased.
“The petition of Gustavus Beall, filed in this Court against the executors of Gerard Clary, and the answers of said executors thereto, having been read and considered, and the Court being informed by George A. Pearre, that the said Beall is willing to take the deed as the said executors are willing to grant it,
“It is thereupon, this 14th of Nov’r, 1854, ordered and adjudged by the Orphans’ Court of Allegany County, that the executors of Gerard Clary, deceased, make, execute and deliver to the said Gustavus Beall, at the proper cost and charges of said Beall, a deed in fee simple, conveying to him the tract of land called ‘Rhoda,’ and also the piece or parcel of land described in the agreement of said Clary, bearing date the 4th of March, 1841, and marked on the back ‘No. 2,’ the conveyance of this last piece to
The Act of 1846, chapter 279, in pursuance of which this order was passed, recites, “That whereas, it is represented to this General Assembly, that there are cases occurring in the several counties and cities of this State, wherein persons have made sale of real estate, and have died before receiving the purchase money, or conveying the same to the party purchasing, by deed, and whereas, the costs attending the making of deeds through the agency of our Courts of equity, are heavy and grievous to be borne in many cases,—therefore, Be it enacted, that the deed of the executors or administrators of persons dying, or having died as aforesaid, shall he good and valid in law, &c., * * * provided that the executors or administrators of the persons so dying, shall satisfy the Orphans' Court, * * * that the purchaser has paid the full amount of the purchase money.”
The second section provides, that the money received by the executor, shall be returned by him as a sperate debt.
The order of the Orphans’ Court, it will be observed, does not set forth the fact, that the executors had satisfied the Court of the payment of the purchase money, but merely states that the Court was informed by George A. Pearre, that Beall was willing to take the deed, and that the executors were willing to execute it. The petition of Beall and the answers of the executors, which might have thrown some light on the subject have both been lost.
It also appears, that the executors of Clary never executed a deed in pursuance of this order, although one of them lived until 1862, eight years ’after it was passed. And the question is, whether this order in itself, furnishes any ground for the interposition of a Court of equity by
The appellee insists that the Act of 1846, is applicable only to cases where the testator having sold real estate, dies before the payment of the purchase money, and which is subsequently paid to his executor ; and that it does not embrace a case like the present, where the allegation is that the whole purchase money was paid in the life-time of the vendor, in regard to the payment of which the executor may or may not have any information. The construction of the Act in this respect is not, however, necessary in this case. It is an undisputed fact that no deed was ever executed by the executors of Clary, and if it he conceded that the Act of 1846 embraces cases where the whole purchase money had been paid to the testator, and further that the order of the Orphans’ Court might have furnished ground for a proceeding in equity on the part of Beall, to compel the executors to execute a deed, it is clear that the order in itself, cannot he relied on as a bar to the claim of title by the heirs-at-law of the testator.
Orphans’ Courts in this State exercise a special and limited jurisdiction, expressly conferred by statute, and the Act of 1846, neither in terms nor by implication, confers jurisdiction upon such Courts, to hear and determine controversies in regard to sales of real estates by testators or intestates. It merely authorizes executors and administrators to convey real estate sold by testators, provided they satisfy the Orphans’ Court that the purchase money has been paid. Satisfactory proof of such payment, is a condition precedent to the exercise of the power. The title of the purchaser is derived from the deed of the executor, and not from the order of the Orphans’ Court. If the executor dies before the execution of the deed, his answer, admitting the receipt by him of the purchase money, would no doubt be admissible in evidence, to prove such payment, in a proceeding against the heirs-at-law of
The order of the Orphans’ Court being out of the way, there is no proof whatever to support the allegations in the bill. The testimony of Jacob Loar, the only witness examined by the complainant, is utterly insufficient to prove possession of the property by Beall. He says he cut some timber for Beall in 1848, on “Rhoda,” that Clary objected and he stopped. That afterwards he cut more timber, but not on “Rhoda.” It is evident from his testimony that he knew very little about the matter.
There was some proof offered by the appellee, to show that his ancestor claimed title and exercised acts of ownership over the property up to the time of his death. But, he this as it may, there is no proof in this record, either in regard to the sale and payment of the purchase money, or in regard to the possession of the -property by Beall, and others under whom the appellant claims, to justify us in granting the relief prayed.
Order affirmed.