111 A. 820 | Md. | 1920
After the death of Lydia C. Buemler, letters of administration on her estate were granted to David Crystal.
By the inventory returned, the estate consisted of an undivided one-half interest in a lot of ground on Oliver Street, about forty-five feet square, subject to an annual ground rent of forty-five dollars, which was appraised as of the value of one dollar.
On the 19th of November the Orphans' Court of Baltimore City passed an order authorizing and empowering the said *167 administrator to make sale of this property, "by private sale for the most money which he could obtain for the same, provided that it be not sold for a sum less than the appraisement thereof," and that the terms of said sale should be cash.
On the same day the administrator reported the property as sold for the sum of seventy-five dollars to Fannie Crystal, and this sale was on the same day ratified nisi, and the order of ratification nisi duly advertised. Thereafter, and before the sale was to be finally ratified, James Carey Martien filed exceptions to the sale and assigned grounds, as follows:
"1. That the said James Carey Martien is the owner of an undivided one-half interest of the property purported to be sold by the said David Crystal, administrator, but he has not been advised of the sale so made, nor has he been given an opportunity to bid on said property, and he now shows that no one else has been given an opportunity to bid on the same, nor has there been any effort made on the part of said David Crystal to obtain the best possible price for the same.
"2. That said property has been sold to one Fannie Crystal, who is the wife of the said administrator (which fact has been concealed from the court), and that said sale is in effect a sale by the said David Crystal, in his capacity as administrator, to himself as an individual.
"3. That said property has been sold for a grossly inadequate price and is worth more than double the price obtained for the same by the said administrator."
To these exceptions David Crystal, as administrator, filed an answer in which were contained the following averments:
*168"(1) That the objections filed against the ratification of the sale are not filed by any party in interest in said property, and, therefore, this Honorable Court cannot entertain said objections.
"(2) That this respondent did not sell said property to his wife, but on the contrary this respondent is single and has no wife.
"(3) That the appraised value of the property is one dollar; that this property is unimproved land, subject to a ground rent of forty-five dollars a year, and the value, if any, on said property is very problematic, and that your petitioner sold it for the highest price that he thought he could obtain, and that this price is fair and proper."
And this answer was duly sworn to before a notary.
The matter then came on for hearing before the Orphans' Court for Baltimore City, which upon exceptions and answer dismissed the exceptions on the ground that according to the record the exceptant, James Carey Martien, had no standing in the case, and it is from this order that the present appeal was attempted to be taken.
In support of the exceptions the counsel for the appellant seems to proceed upon three theories: one is that James Carey Martien is acting as amicus curiae; another, is an attempt to produce upon the mind of the court the idea that the reported sale was tainted with fraud, and was in reality a sale by the administrator to himself; and the third is, that by reason of being a tenant in common with the estate of Lydia C. Buemler the expectant has such interest in the matter, as gives him the right to intervene and except to the sale.
It is fundamental law in this State that an individual to be entitled to intervene and except must have an interest in the property. Miller's Equity, Sec. 354. And in this view the author of that work is supported by an unbroken line of decisions in this State.
In Warfield v. Ross,
In Sellman v. Sellman,
In this case Mr. Martien does not claim to be in any manner interested in the property which constituted the estate of Lydia C. Buemler, and therefore, has not shown any such interest as to entitle him to file the present exceptions.
In Cecil v. Cecil,
The same rule is followed and adopted in a case where the subject matters in dispute were the commissions of an administrator, in Hoffar v. Stonestreet,
In Preston v. Poe,
In this case Mr. Martien has shown no interest whatever in the estate of Lydia C. Buemler either as legatee, distributee or creditor, and the only theory upon which he could claim a right would be that of fraud, by reason of the purchase of the property by Fannie Crystal, whom the petition alleges to be the wife of David Crystal, but this allegation of the petition was denied under oath in the answer of David Crystal, and that denial must, in the absence of any direct evidence, be taken to be true.
It follows from what has been said that the appeal in this case must be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed, with costs. *171