77 A. 1114 | Md. | 1910
This appeal is from an order of the Orphans' Court for Baltimore City overruling exceptions filed by the purchaser to the ratification of a sale of certain real estate, made by an executor under a power contained in the will of his testatrix, and finally ratifying said sale.
Mary A.P. Cosgrove died January 4th, 1910, leaving a will executed February 28th, 1907, which was admitted to probate by the Orphans' Court for Baltimore City, in common form, on January 7th, 1910. Three small legacies were given thereby to the children of three deceased cousins of testatrix, and ten legacies to different persons or institutions for religious or charitable purposes, amounting to $22,000; and the residue of the estate, which is not disclosed by the record, is given to the Reverend Archbishop of Baltimore. The Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore was named as executor of said will, and said executor was authorized "to sell or otherwise dispose of all or any portion of said estate necessary in its discretion to settle the same," and letters testamentary were granted to the executor named in the will, on the same day the will was admitted to probate.
On February 16th, 1910, the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, reported to said Orphans' Court "that in the settlement of the estate of said deceased it will be necessary to sell the property hereinafter mentioned, and in the exercise of the power conferred upon it by said will, it did after due advertisement, etc., sell at public auction on the premises, on February 15th, 1910, a lot of land with the improvements thereon, being No. 1102 South Charles street, for $12,300 upon the terms mentioned in the copy of the advertisement filed with the report," and prayed the ratification of said sale. This was fee simple property and was advertised and sold as such. On the same day, February 16th, 1910, the usual order nisi was passed by the Orphans' Court, and on April 1st, 1910, the certificate of the publication of the order nisi for the prescribed time was filed in the Court. *317
On February 16th, 1910, the date of the report of sale, certain persons alleging themselves to be the nearest of kin of Mary A.P. Cosgrove filed a caveat against said executor in said Court alleging that the paper admitted to probate was not the testatrix's will; that it was not signed by her, or by anyone in her presence and by her direction; that she did not know or understand its contents, and that she was not of sound mind at the time of its alleged execution. This was answered by the executor, setting up the previous filing by the same caveators in the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City of a bill in equity against the said executor and the legatees in said will, praying for the construction of said will and for a decree declaring some of said legacies to be invalid; and the executor claimed that this was an election by the caveators to treat said will as a valid will, and was a bar to their right thereafter to contest its validity.
On March 8th, 1910, James Gormley and Martha Columbus, filed a petition in said Court alleging that he was a first cousin and she a second cousin of Mary A.P. Cosgrove and as such entitled to share in her estate; alleging the various proceedings in reference to the will in question, and that these were without any notice to the next relatives of the decedent as required by Code, Art. 93, § 336, and without any effort to discover whether such relations existed, and they prayed that the executor be required to answer, and that the letters testamentary issued to it be revoked.
On the following day the original petitioners and caveators filed another petition alleging that the facts stated in the petition of James Gormley and Martha Columbus were true, and that they therefore joined in it, and prayed the revocation of the letters testamentary of the executor.
On March 16th, 1910, both these petitions were answered by the executor who denied the right of the petitioners to take such proceedings on the ground that it appeared from their own admissions that most of them were not next of kin, and that the requirements of section 336 of Article 93 *318 of the Code had been fully complied with, and that the Orphans' Court had so decided.
On March 29th, 1910, the purchaser excepted to the ratification of the sale, on the ground that the title was not good and marketable (1) because of the pendency of said caveat, and (2) because of the pendency of the petition to revoke the executor's letters testamentary, neither of which have been heard and determined. The record contains an agreement of counsel that the exceptant had been notified that none of the petitioners are willing to abide by or consent to the ratification of the sale which was ratified by the Court on April 1st, 1910.
We have recited all the proceedings in their order, merely as the brief history of the whole case, but the only question for our decision, is whether, if the order ratifying the sale be affirmed, the appellant will take such a title to the property in question as would enable the appellee to enforce in equity the specific performance of his contract of purchase.
The appellee contends that he will, because he alleges that both under the statutes of this State and the express decisions of this Court, the validity of the sale does not depend on the action of the Orphans' Court, either on the caveat or the subsequent petitions above mentioned, and that the sale would stand even though the letters testamentary of the executor be revoked, or the will should be declared invalid. Section 36 of Article 93 of the Code declares that, "all acts done by any executor or administrator according to law, before any actual or implied revocation of his letters, shall be valid and effectual," and it further provides in detail that any executor or administrator obtaining letters after a revocation, shall succeed to all the rights, and be subject to all the liabilities, of the executor or administrator whose letters shall be revoked, depending upon any act done according to law by such executor or administrator before such revocation. *319
Section 341 of Article 93 provides: "If the probate of any will or codicil be taken as aforesaid without contest, any person,before letters testamentary or of administration with a copy of the will shall be actually granted, may file a petition to the Court praying that the case be again examined and heard; and thereupon the Orphans' Court shall delay the granting of letters until a decision shall be had on the petition; and in case the letters shall have been granted, and any person shall file such petition, and the Court on hearing both sides, that is to say, the petitioner and the grantee of such letters, shall decide against the probate, the letters aforesaid shall be revoked, and the power of the party under the letters shall cease; and the said will shall not be proved in any other county, unless the decision be reversed on appeal." It will be noticed that the only condition upon which the powers of the party under letters testamentary, or of administration c.t.a. here stated is that the Orphans' Court, upon the hearing shall decide against the probate; until such decision is made, the letters continue in full force.
Section 35 provides that where administration shall be granted, and afterwards a will is proved, and letters testamentary are granted, this shall be deemed an implied revocation of the letters of administration though no express order of revocation is made.
Sections 341 and 36 of Article 93 have received a settled construction under decisions of this Court. In Munnikhuysen v.Magraw,
In Stanley v. Safe Deposit Co.,
"1. That the authority or duty of an executor, who is also the donee of a power, to exercise that power is entirely separate and distinct from his authority or duty as executor of the estate; 2. That the validity of an attempted exercise by the executor as donee of the power must depend upon the validity of the instrument creating that power."
Notwithstanding the statutory provisions to which we have referred, and which are very broad, these propositions of the appellant would require serious consideration at our hands but for the fact that we regard them as in conflict with the decision of this Court in Seldner v. McCreary,
Pausing here a moment, it must be observed that that the"Occurence" of which the Court here speaks is not the filing
of a caveat, as the argument of the appellant apparently assumes, but the determination of a caveat filed, by a judgment annulling the probate and logically requiring the express revocation of the letters testamentary. That this is the meaning of the Court appears from the language which immediately followed that which we have quoted above, and which we now give: "The administration of estates of deceased persons must not be delayed by the suggestion of future contingencies of this kind. Thepowers committed to executors in this solemn form would be of noavail, if they are required to forbear the exercise of them for the reason that in some possible future event they may be withdrawn. The business of the Orphans' Court could not be conducted on such a basis. The statute has provided differently* * * Sales duly made by an executor under a power given by awill would be good. And no one would be damnified by such sales; they would merely effect a change in the form of the property; the proceeds of the sales would go into the hands of the executor in the shape of money. In case of a revocation *323
of his letters, they would be turned over to his successor in the trust of administration to be distributed in the manner which should be decided by law." The attention of the Court was drawn to the case of Emmert v. Stouffer,
Notwithstanding that a caveat has in this case been actually filed before ratification of the sale there is no presumption it will be sustained. On the contrary the presumption of the validity of the will is not removed or weakened in legal contemplation by the filing of the caveat. The exercise by the executor of the power of sale of real estate under a will, is as distinctly, "an act done according to law," as any other act which the executor is authorized by law to perform, and it was that specific act which the Court in Seldner v. McCreary,supra, held to come within the true construction of section 36 of Article 93 of the Code.
We are constrained to regard that case as conclusive of the present case and the order of the Orphans' Court will therefore be affirmed, but we shall direct the costs to be allowed out of the proceeds of sale.
Order affirmed, costs to be allowed out of the proceeds ofsale in the hands of the executors. *324