88 Md. 38 | Md. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court. There are two questions presented by this record. One is a question of equity pleading, and the other involves the merits of the controversy. The order appealed from was based exclusively on the technical ground raised by the first inquiry, but the appeal brings both before us for final decision. These two questions arose.in the following manner: Under the will of John D. Bowling an annuity of five thousand dollars was bequeathed to his wife, Elizabeth Bowling. He directed John Bowling, Joseph K. Roberts and Henry W. Clagett, trustees, to set apart and to hold in trust a sufficient portion of his estate to raise this annuity. He further provided by the residuary clause that upon the death of his widow, the corpus of the trust fund yielding this annuity should be divided amongst his children, to be held by or for them subject to the limi
When the next of kin of Mrs. Contee discovered what
The first question with which we have to deal is whether the Court below was right in holding that the relief sought — the annulment of the order of May the fifth, eighteen hundred and ninety-four — :can only be granted or accorded under an original bill for fraud.
It must be remembered that the relief invoked is not founded on an averment that the order of May the fifth was procured by fraud. The averment of fraud has relation, not to the oblention of the order, but to its effect after it had been obtained. Neither is redress sought because of a mere error of law apparent on the face of the proceedings, nor because of new matter discovered
The order of May the fifth was obviously, in so far as the beneficiaries under the Contee trust were concerned, purely ex parte. Not only was no notice given but no possible opportunity to be heard was afforded. The petition was not filed until after the order appended to it had been signed. Not only was it ex parte but its passage was a palpable surprise. Without notice or hearing of any kind its effect, if efficacious at all, is to. divest a right which never would or could have been divested in such a way had the parties directly interested been given a day in Court. That it is fatally erroneous is manifest. It depletes a trust fund of an investment without cause; and in fact releases Mrs. Quinn from the obligation to restore to the Contee trust estate not merely money which she owed to it, but money which she had actually borrowed from that estate. There was not the slightest justification for the passage of the order, and it cannot be doubted that the Judge who signed it never would have sanctioned it if he had been apprised of the fact that Clagett was, at the time, insolvent and a defaulter and that the cestuis que trustent were ignorant of the application made to him. There was, confessedly, no hearing on the merits of the petition on which the order was founded. The fact that it strips a trust fund of an investment without consideration and to
This case is widely distinguishable from The United Lines Tel. Co. v. Stevens, 67 Md. 156, relied on in the opinion of the Court below. In that case it was decided that when an enrolled decree is assailed for fraud in its obtention the only procedure to which resort can be had for its annulment is an original bill for fraud. In the case at bar fraud is not made the basis of the petition— it is merely stated as the consequential result of the act done. In assuming the contrary view the learned Judge below fell into the error which led to the dismissal of the amended petition. The petition was not very artificially drawn, and singularly enough, as a result, the petitioner’s solicitors have treated it as an original bill for fraud, whilst the respondent’s solicitors claim that it is a petition alleging fraud. Looking to the substance rather than to the mere informal averments, we agree with neither contention. If it be an original bill it was’ improperly filed in the old equity case No. 1031 — it should have been the first step in an independent proceeding. But it is a petition and not an original bill. As, when rightly read, it does not seek to vacate the order of May the fifth on the ground of fraud practised in the obtention of that order, it was-properly filed in the original case and regularly brings- before us the propriety of the order which it assails. These observations dispose of the first of the two questions presented by the record.
But little, in addition, need be said with respect to the second. There was no warrant or authority of law for taking from the Contee trust fund fifteen hundred dollars confessedly belonging to it, to pay Mrs. Quinn
Order reversed with costs above and below, and cause remanded.