125 A. 541 | Md. | 1924
On the 18th of October, 1923, the appellant filed in the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County the following order:
"Enter an appeal to the Court of Appeals of Maryland on behalf of Charles Marx, executor, from the orders of the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County dated August 29th, 1923, and September 11th, 1923, and the two orders dated September 27th, 1923; two orders dated October 18th, 1923."
The record shows that on the 29th of August, 1923, the appellee filed in the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County a petition alleging that the result of the trial of the issue sent by said court to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for trial, and removed to the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, had been duly certified by the Circuit Court of Anne Arundel County to the Orphans' Court, and filed on the 23rd of August, 1923; that, as appeared from said certificate, the verdict of the jury in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County was that the appellant, Charles Marx, executor, wrongfully concealed and had failed to account for the sum *313 of $4,500 belonging to the estate of the testator, and that said verdict had been sustained by the Court of Appeals, and praying the Orphans' Court to pass a final order or judgment in the matter. Thereupon the Orphans' Court, on the same day, passed an order that the said Charles Marx, executor, wrongfully concealed and had failed to account for $4,500 belonging to the estate of the testator, and that the costs in the Orphans' Court, in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, and in the Court of Appeals, be paid by the said Charles Marx. On the 27th of September, 1923, the appellant filed an answer to said petition and order of court, in which he alleged that the Orphans' Court had no authority to pass said order, and prayed that the order be rescinded and the petition of the appellee be dismissed, and on the same day, after argument of counsel, the Orphans' Court passed an order affirming and making final its said order of August 29th, 1923.
Prior to the passage of the last mentioned order, on September 11th, 1923, the appellee filed a petition in the Orphans' Court, in which she alleged that the administration of the estate had been pending for more than ten years; that the estate had been subjected by said executor to uncalled for, unsuccessful and expensive litigation; that notwithstanding it had been finally determined that the said Charles Marx, executor, had concealed $4,500 belonging to the estate, he had never accounted for the same to the Orphans' Court, and that the appellee was advised that it was "doubtful" whether he had "that fund intact" for distribution; that at the trial in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County the appellant stated that it had been his desire and wish to pay said sum of $4,500 to himself as executor, but that he had not done so under instructions of his counsel, and that by reason of the attitude of said Charles Marx during the administration of the estate, and his apparent intention not to administer the estate according to law and to resist the efforts of the Orphans' Court to make him do so, she was apprehensive that the estate would never be administered with *314 justice to her and others interested therein, some of whom were infants. The petition prayed that the appellant be required to file an administration account, in which he should include as part of the assets of the estate the said sum of $4,500, with interest thereon from the time of the death of the testator, on or before a day to be named by the court, and if said account was not filed in accordance with the order of said court, that said Charles Marx be removed as the executor of said estate. Upon this petition, and the affidavit thereto, the Orphans' Court, on the 11th of September, 1923, passed an order requiring the appellant to file his final administration account in said court on or before the 27th of September, 1923, and to include therein the said sum of $4,500, with interest thereon from the death of the testator, and any other funds belonging to the estate, unless cause to the contrary be shown on or before the 27th of September, 1923, provided a copy of said order be served on him on or before the 15th of September, 1923; and further ordering that unless such an account be filed on or before said date, or reasons to the contrary be shown, that the said "Charles Marx be and is hereby relieved as executor of said estate," etc. On the 27th of September, 1923, the appellant filed his answer to said petition, in which he alleged that letters testamentary were granted to him by the Orphans' Court on the 7th of August, 1912; that on or about the 15th of April, 1915, the appellee filed a petition in said court in which she alleged that he, the appellant, had received from his brother, John Marx, Jr., certain deposits in the Maryland Savings Bank and the Central Savings Bank of Baltimore City, "aggregating with interest thereon" the sum of $5,000, which deposits were held by the said John Marx, Jr., for the use and benefit of his father, John Marx, Sr.; that at the hearing of said petition the appellant produced the bank books showing said deposits, and that the Orphans' Court held that the deposits in said banks belonged to the appellant, and not to the estate of John Marx, Sr., and on the 3rd of February, 1916, the court dismissed said petition of the appellee; that *315 on the 21st of February, 1916, the appellant filed his first administration account and, on the 26th of December, 1917, filed his second and final administration account, which accounts were duly passed; that the order of court passing his final account had never been rescinded and was therefore final and conclusive; that upon the advice of counsel based on said order of February 3rd, 1916, he had resisted and will resist any effort to require him to account to the estate for property "belonging to him personally"; that the appeal from the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County was dismissed by the Court of Appeals, and that the Orphans' Court had no authority to require him to account for the said sum of $4,500; that the issue referred to in the appellee's petition was not applied for in the Orphans' Court until some time in February, 1921, more than three years after his final administration account had been passed by said court; that he had accounted for every dollar that came into his hands belonging to the estate; that he had never concealed one penny belonging to the estate, and that he could not, therefore, account for the said sum of $4,500. On the 27th of September, 1923, the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County passed the following order:
*316"The petition of Elizabeth Reinecke filed in this estate on September 11th, 1923, and the order of court passed thereon; the answer thereto filed by Charles Marx, executor, in this cause on September 27th, 1923, being read and considered, and the said executor being personally before the court but not offering any additional statement but that expressed in his answer aforesaid, and argument of counsel for respective parties being heard, it is this 27th day of September, 1923, by the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County, ordered that the letters of administration heretofore granted to the said Charles Marx be and they are hereby revoked, and that letters of administration on the estate of said John Marx, Sr., deceased, be and they are hereby granted to Lawrence E. Ensor, he giving bond in the penalty of five thousand dollars as such administrator," etc.
After the passage of said order the appellant, on the 18th of October, 1923, filed two petitions in the Orphans' Court praying that the orders of August 29th, 1923, and September 27th, 1923, be rescinded (1) because the Orphans' Court had no jurisdiction to revoke his letters of administration, and its action in passing said order was "despotic" and "for the sole purpose of depriving and taking from said Charles Marx his own" property "without due process of law" and (2) because the court "had no jurisdiction to frame and transmit the issue mentioned herein," and was "without jurisdiction to receive the docket entries from the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County." On each of these petitions the Orphans' Court passed the following order: "Petition and prayers refused this 18th day of October, 1923."
The record in this case also shows that the appellee, on the 22nd of April, 1915, filed a petition in the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County alleging that she was one of the legatees under the will of John Marx, Sr., deceased, which will had been admitted to probate and letters testamentary granted to Charles Marx; that the said Charles Marx, executor, had returned what he alleged to be a true and complete inventory of the estate of John Marx, Sr.; that the said Charles Marx received from his brother, John Marx, Jr., then deceased, certain deposits in the Maryland Savings Bank and the Central Savings Bank of Baltimore City, "aggregating, with the interest thereon, some five thousand dollars, which said deposits were held by the said John Marx, Jr., for the use and benefit of the said John Marx, Sr., and now belong to the estate of John Marx, Sr."; that the said Charles Marx, executor, had not returned said deposits as part of the estate of John Marx, Sr., but had concealed them and had refused to return and account for them, and that unless he was compelled to return or account for said sums of money as part of the estate there would not be sufficient funds to pay the petitioner and other legatees the full amount due them under the will of John Marx, Sr. The prayer of the petition was that said executor be required to return said *317 sums of money received by him from John Marx, Jr., in an additional inventory as a part of the estate of John Marx, Sr. The record shows that on the 3rd of February, 1916, the Orphans' Court passed an order "that the petition of Elizabeth Reinecke filed in the above estate be and the same is hereby dismissed, the estate to pay the costs." The record also shows that on the 26th of December, 1917, Charles Marx, executor, filed his "second and final administration account," which was on the same day passed by the Orphans' Court.
The contentions of the appellant in this case are (1) that the Orphans' Court by its order of February 3rd, 1916, dismissing the petition of the appellee filed in 1915, determined that the sums deposited in said banks and alleged to have been concealed belonged to him and not to the estate of the testator, and that, therefore, it was not proper for the Orphans' Court to frame an issue in regard to the concealment of said sums of money and to send it to the Circuit Court for trial, and (2) that after the statement of his second and final account the administration of the estate was completed so far as the Orphans' Court was concerned, and that court had no authority to send an issue as to the alleged concealment by the executor to the Circuit Court for trial, or to require him to account for said sum of $4,500. In support of the first proposition the appellant relies upon the cases of Miller v. Gehr,
In regard to the second contention of the appellant it is only necessary to refer to the case of Wilson v. McCarty,
The appellant having refused to comply with the order of the Orphans' Court, passed on the 11th of September, 1923, requiring him to account for the $4,500 determined by the order of that court to have been concealed by him, the court had ample authority to compel obedience to its order, and to revoke the letters testamentary previously granted to him. Wilson v.McCarty, supra; Fowler v. Brady, supra; Wingert v. State,
The appeal from the orders of August 29th and September 11th was not taken within the time allowed by section 62 of article 5 of the Code. Moreover the order of September 11th was not a final order from which an appeal lies. Chappell v. Clark,
The appeal from the orders of August 29th and September 11th, 1923, dismissed, and each of the other orders affirmed,the costs to be paid by Charles Marx. *321