190 A. 511 | Md. | 1937
Frederick Kerby, Sr., died in Cumberland, Maryland, on May 18th, 1936. On May 22d 1936, letters of administration on his estate were granted to Mary L. Kerby, his widow. On June 2d 1936, the administratrix filed an inventory of the real estate of her decedent, but has filed no inventory of personalty. On September 11th, 1936, the surviving children of the decedent filed in the Orphans' Court of Allegany County a petition, in which they said that the court should appoint a co-administrator of the estate, and suggested the name of George Henderson, Esq., for that office. On September 22d 1936, they filed a written renunciation of their right to administer the estate, and again suggested the name of Mr. Henderson to represent them.
As a basis for those suggestions they alleged in the petition that the appointment of Mary L. Kerby, the widow, was without notice to them, and "that the said Mary L. Kerby, as Administratrix of said estate, has returned an inventory of the personal property of said decedent showing that said decedent at the time of his death was the owner of real estate only and was not the owner of any personal property. That your petitioners are of the belief that said decedent at the time of his death owned certain personal property which the said Administratrix has failed to include in said inventory for the reason that she is making claim to the same as her own." The respondent answered the petition, and, after admitting such matters as were of record, she said, "petitioners have perhaps been misled into believing *4 that respondent is concealing assets belonging to said estate. For the information of this Court and petitioners, a detailed statement of the business affairs of the said Frederick Kerby, Senior, at the time of his death insofar as the same may be of interest to this Court and to said petitioners is filed herewith as a part of these proceedings." Further answering, she denied that she claimed any property other than that which of right belonged to her. In the "statement" there referred to, there is an account of loans and gifts to the decedent's children aggregating $3,674, a reference to certain bank deposits which stood in the joint names of the decedent and his wife, subject to the order of either, balance, if any, payable to the survivor, a deposit with the B. O. Relief Association in their joint names subject to the order of either, balance, if any, payable to the survivor, to certain furniture claimed by the respondent, to a $2,000 mortgage to the decedent, to certain worthless stock, and a possibility that he owned a bond of the R.M. Hollingshead Company. A hearing was had, testimony taken, and at the conclusion of the case the court revoked the letters of administration theretofore granted to Mrs. Kerby, and then appointed her and George Henderson co-administrators of the estate. From that order she took this appeal.
The only witnesses were Mrs. Kerby, called and sworn for the petitioners, and a Mrs. Mildred Clark Palmer, her sister. The only testimony relating to the allegation that the children had no notice of the application of Mrs. Kerby for letters of administration on her husband's estate was that of Mrs. Kerby, who said that she had informed J.B. Kerby and Kathleen Thomas, two of them, of the appointment immediately after it was made.
The principal purpose of the examination of Mrs. Kerby was to discover the nature and worth of the personal property belonging to the decedent which had come into the possession of the administratrix. In substance it showed that she had collected certain checks drawn to his order and deposited them in bank in an account *5 which formerly was in the joint names of herself and her husband, but is now her individual account, that she had collected $60 interest on the mortgage and deposited it in the same account; that she had caused the title to an automobile which was in her husband's name at his death to be put in her name; that she had in her possession bonds having a par value of $5,000, which had at one time been in the possession of the decedent. She at the same time testified that the bonds had been given to her by her husband in his lifetime, that the automobile was her own; that she had paid one half of the purchase price for it; that the title was put in his name at the suggestion of one Jutte at the garage (presumably where it was bought); and that the garage proprietor had it transferred to her name when she "took the papers up to him" after her husband's death; and that she supposed the moneys payable to the decedent, which she had collected, belonged to her, either because they were for expenses advanced from their joint accounts, or were payable in his lifetime, and if paid then would have been so deposited.
The question presented by the appeal is whether the Orphans' Court acted within its statutory powers in passing the order from which this appeal was taken.
It is apparent that the order passed did two inconsistent and irreconcilable things; First, it revoked the letters of administration theretofore granted to the respondent as the sole administrator of the estate; and, second, it then granted to her letters as co-administrator of the estate. The revocation over her protest of letters originally granted to her could only be justified on the ground that she had been guilty of some default or wrongdoing in the administration of the office, which made her further continuance in it detrimental to the estate. If that was so, it was obviously improper to immediately grant letters to her as a co-administrator of the same estate. If she was unfit because of wrongdoing to administer the estate as sole administrator, she must also have been unfit to administer it as co-administrator. *6 It is clear, therefore, that the Orphans' Court attempted to do indirectly what it had not the power to do directly, that is, to appoint a co-administrator of the estate without the consent of the person first entitled. The proceeding was highly irregular, and the confusion manifest in the order was the natural result of combining in the same proceeding two distinct and discordant matters.
The petition upon which all subsequent proceedings were based did not suggest that the administrator had been guilty of fraud, but merely that she claimed as her own personal property which the petitioners believed was the property of the estate, and it did not suggest that her letters be revoked, but that a representative of the petitioners be appointed co-administrator with her. In the actual trial of the case the efforts of the petitioners were directed almost entirely to showing that the administrator had concealed or converted assets of the estate, apparently for the purpose of justifying her removal as administrator.
If the purpose of the petitioners was to have the court decide whether property claimed by the administrator was her property or that of the estate, they must have proceeded under Code, art. 93, sec. 253, and, if they succeeded in persuading the court that she had concealed or had in her possession assets of the estate which she had omitted to return in the inventory or list of debts, the court should have required her to make return thereof, and, upon her failure to make such return, have revoked her letters(Id.), but, in the absence of fraud or bad faith, her letters should not have been revoked until she had failed to comply with an order directing her to make return of property determined by the court to be assets of the estate (Id., Jones v. Harbaugh,
In this case not only did the petition fail to definitely allege that the administrator had concealed assets of the estate, but the court itself failed to determine (1) whether she had concealed assets, or (2) whether the property she claimed was her property or that of the estate, the order failed to require her to account, and was based entirely upon a supposed want of notice of her application for letters of administration.
If the purpose of the appellees was, as it appears to be, to procure the appointment of a co-administrator, the proceeding was premature. Until the respondent's letters had been revoked, the court had no authority to *8
appoint a co-administrator without her consent (Code, art. 93, sec. 15), for, as said in Dorsey v. Dorsey,
In respect to the objection that the original grant of letters to the respondent was without notice to the petitioners, who with her formed a class, the members of which were entitled to priority in the right to administer, it is sufficient to say that, by filing their petition for the appointment of a co-administrator, they waived any right they may have had to object to that grant on the ground that they were not notified of respondent's application for such letters (Dorsey v. Dorsey,
Much of appellees' argument in this court was directed to a consideration of so much of the evidence as related to the removal of the administrator from the office for improper conduct of its business.
The proceeding was plenary rather than summary. Code, art. 93, secs. 263, 264; Pegg v. Warford,
It may be suggested that, since there was no objection to the jurisdiction, the case should be decided upon the proof without consideration of the pleadings. But, assuming that that might be done, which we do not decide, the objection to it is that the pleadings and the proof make out two distinct and different cases and the order is based on neither. But, assuming that it may be so considered, the proof fails to show facts justifying the removal of the administratrix. It does show that she claims as her own property which appellees contend is the property of the estate, but it is neither alleged in the pleadings nor shown by proof that her claim is made in bad faith, and it has been held that the mere fact that an administrator claims as his own property, the title to which may eventually be found to be in him as administrator, is not in itself sufficient ground for his removal (Bates v. Revell,
If the administratrix has in her posession property of the estate which she claims as her own, the title of the estate to it may be established, and she may be compelled to account for it, under Code, art. 93, sec. 253, or, if she has been guilty of misfeasance justifying her removal as administratrix of the estate, that matter can in some appropriate manner be brought to the attention of the court for its action, but, since appellees failed to ask for her removal, and the issue made by the proof is one of title and not of misfeasance, there was also error in removing her as administrator, even if the evidence were to be considered without reference to the pleadings, a question which, as stated above, we do not decide.
It follows that the order appealed from must be reversed and the petition dismissed.
Order reversed, and petition dismissed, with costs to theappellant. *12