President of Georgetown College v. Browne

34 Md. 450 | Md. | 1871

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mary E. Browne executed her will in 1844, by which she devised and bequeathed all her property, real and personal of every hind and description, to Thomas Lilly, whom she also appointed her sole executor. Lilly died before the testatrix, leaving a will by which he gave all his property in possession, and all to which he might be in any wise entitled, to the president and directors of Georgetown College, a corporation in the District of Columbia, incorporated by Act of Congress in 1844. Subsequently, in 1867, Miss Browne died, leaving her will unchanged. The real question in dispute is, who is entitled to letters of administration on her estate ? or, in what mode, or by what rule shall such letters be granted ? though the particular order appealed from is an order dismissing the petition of the college claiming the right to designate the party to be appointed, of, if no such right exists, then praying that letters may be granted to a sister of the deceased and her husband. The party on the other side, who claims that he is entitled by law to have letters granted to him, is the appellee, the sole surviving brother of the testatrix; she having died, leaving neither husband, father, child nor grandchildren.

*455It is very clear the corporation is not residuary legatee under this will, and can claim no right to administer on that ground. Its right to the property is derived solely from the will of Tilomas Lilly, and his estate is not the egtate to be administered upon. But even if the will of Miss Browne bad devised and bequeathed all her property directly to this corporation, it could not have claimed administration, because we take it to be well-settled, that a corporation cannot become an executor or administrator; nor has the English practice of allowing a corporation, when named executor, to designate a person styled a syndic, to receive administration with the will annexed, ever prevailed in this State, but, on the contrary, all power of delegation over the right has been expressly repudiated and denied by our Courts. All right of the corporation, and all right of its appointees as such to administer, being out of the case, the question recurs, lias the surviving brother of the testatrix, who appears and claims the appointment, any right by law thereto ?

The case is one where a testatrix has left a will, and the party named as executor therein lias died before the will took effect, thus calling for the grant of letters of administration with the will annexed, in the first instance, and where the residuary legatee under the will has also died before the testatrix. Is there any provision of our testamentary law covering such a case, or is it a casus omissus in which the grant of letters must be left to the discretion of the Orphans’ Court, to be guided and controlled by the general policy of the system which requires the right of administration should follow the right to the estate? In our opinion, the case is provided for by the statute. The Code, (Article 93,) in its arrangement of the testamentary law under the sub-division “ administration,” which extends from sections 14 to 40 inclusive, embraces the provisions for administration and the order of preferences between the next of kin. Amongst these, sections 2-1 and 23, which provide that brothers and sisters shall be preferred, if there be no widow, child, grand-child or *456father, and that males shall be preferred to females in equal degree, would, it is conceded, extend to this case if it were one of intestacy. But are all these provisions confined to such cases? We think not. In immediate connection with them is to be found section 34, (which is also placed in the same connection in the original law of 1798,) by which it is declared, that “if letters of administration, with the will annexed, are to be granted, and there bo a residuary legatee or legatees in such will, he or they shall be preferred to all except a widow, and it shall be incumbent on the Court to proceed in the manner directed by law with respect to executors within the State, before administration shall be granted to any other person; and a male residuary legatee shall be preferred to a female.” The purpose, intent, effect and true construction of this section are to be ascertained by reading it in connection with antecedent and subsequent provisions upon the same subject. Its meaning and effect, rvhen thus read and considered, appear to be thus: The law having, in previous sections provided for the grant of letters of administration generally in cases of intestacy, and having defined with great exactness and particularity who should be entitled, and what order of preference should exist and be observed, provides in this section for a class of cases, numerous and of frequent occurrence, where letters of administration, with the will annexed, must be granted in the first instance, as where no executor is named in the will, or where as here the party so named may have died before the testator, and in that event the direction is, that the residuary legatee, if there be one, “shall ho preferred to all except a widow,” that is, to all who are entitled to preference by the prior sections except the widow, and it is made incumbent on the Court, before administration shall, in such cases, “ be granted to any other person,” that is, to any other person who, but for the intervention of the legatee, would be entitled to administer, to have a summons issued for the residuary legatee, as provided in section 44 for the case of an executor within the State. In other *457words, when cases of this kind arise, the Orphans’ Court are directed to grant letters in the first place to the widow, if she chooses to take them — next, to the residuary legatee, if there be one, preferring males to females; and if there be no such legatee, or none capable of acting, or if, on being summoned, he shall fail to appear and give bond, then they are to proceed and grant the letters to the other persons designated in the preceding sections, observing the order of preference there prescribed. This reading is not only in our opinion warranted by the language of the section itself, but makes, and is essential to make, the entire system uniform and complete.

A brief consideration of the piovisions of some of the subsequent sections will, wo think, make it apparent the Legislature intended such should be its construction and eifeet. Thus, in section 43, if an executor, present at the probate of the will, fails to give bond or take out letters in another county, letters of administration, with a copy of the will annexed, may be granted in the county wherein was the probate, “ to such person as they might be granted to in case of intestacy.”. And in section 44, if an executor, not present at the probate, is within the State, and fails to appear to the summons as there provided, “ lettci’S of administration may be granted as aforesaid,” that is, as in cases of intestacy. The same provision is also contained in section 45, and substantially also in section 46. Again, in section 47, it is provided, that if the executor renounces, “ there may be the same proceedings with respect to granting letters testamentary or of administration, as if the party so renouncing had not been named in the will” And in sections 52, 56 and 58, where an executor is disqualified or incapable of acting, or is a married woman, and her husband fails to give bond, the direction in each case is, to grant letters testamentary or of administration “ in the same manner as if such person had not been named in the will.” Is it not apparent from this that the Legislature supposed they had prescribed the mode and manner of granting letters of administration, with the will annexed, in cases *458where no executor or no competent executor was named in the will? And yet no such provision is to be found in the law, unless it is contained in this section 34. We have no doubt that, in each of sections 44, 52, 56 and 58, reference is made to section 34 for the mode and manner of proceeding, and we have as little doubt that the law-makers never imagined any construction could be placed on that section, by . which,, in this large class of cases, the Orphans’ Court could act in their absolute discretion, if there was no widow or .residuary legatee claiming or capable of taking administration. Discretion is very sparingly confided to that tribunal, and whenever conferred, it is given in express terms, and in very restricted cases. Thus, section 31 provides,- that only when there shall be neither husband, nor wife, nor child, nor grand-child, nor father, nor brother, nor sister, nor mother, or if these be incapable or decline or refuse to appear on proper summons or notice, or when other relations, and creditors shall neglect to apply, can administration be granted at the discretion of the Court. By section 68, letters of administration, pendente lite, may be granted to the person named executor, or to the person to whom the largest portion of the personal estate may be bequeathed in the contested will, or to the person who would be entitled to letters by law as in cases of intestacy. And by section 70, if an executor or administrator die before completing his administration, “letters de bonis non, or de bonis non cum testamento annexo, may be granted at the discretion of the Court, giving preference, however, to the person entitled, if he shall actually apply for the same,” that is, to the person entitled to preference by the antecedent sections, from 18 to 30 inclusive, as well as section 34. These provisions, without reference to others, show how cautiously discretion is limited, how carefully the rights of persons entitled are preserved, and the designated order of preference made to apply to cases of testacy as well as intestacy, and in fact made to control the grant of administration even in the most unimportant and temporary cases. In a *459system of law like this, which was undoubtedly designed to cover every case, an important casus omissus ought not to be readily assumed or even allowed, if, by any reasonable construction, it can be avoided, especially not where the result of allowing it would be to enlarge an irreviewable discretion, which, in other and loss important particulars, the Legislature has seen fit to restrain and coniine to the narrowest limits.

We are also of opinion the construction we have placed on this section derives support from the view's of our predecessors. Thus, in Hoffman vs. Gold, 8 G. & J., 84, the Court say: “ The testamentary laws have made provision for every case to insure an administration with promptness. If the party dies, leaving very near relations, they are to be summoned, if within the State, or an effort is to be made to summon them; more remote relations, and creditors next have the preference if they apply. In the absence of such application, the Court can exercise a discretion, and in doing so, should undoubtedly, as a general rule, pursue the policy of the system, and commit administration to the person having the greatest interest in the estate.” And again, in ex parte Young, 8 Gill, 286, it is said : “ The appointment and the rights of administrators are regulated by law. There must be some sufficient reason in designating the particular parties in their order to whom the administration of the estate is committed;” and the first reason why the custodiary is thus distinctly designated, is “ to prevent litigation about the possession.”

Before concluding, it may be observed, that 'in the case before us, if it were one resting in the discretion of the Court, the policy of the system could not be carried out, because, in no event, can administration be committed to the corporation to whom the entire estate belongs, so that letters must bo granted to some one who has no interest whatever in the property. The Court was not bound to regard the mere wishes and preferences of the officers of the college as between the sister and her husband and the brother of the deceased testatrix, and treating the order dismissing their petition as a refu*460sal by the Court to heed those wishes, the appeal should be dismissed, because, in this view of the ease, the order was merely the exercise of a discretion over which this Court has no revisory power.

(Decided 20th June, 1871.)

But we rest our decision upon no such ground. We are entirely satisfied the construction we.have given to the statute is correct, that the appellee has by lato the right to this administration, that no sufficient reason is disclosed in the record for depriving him thereof, «and accordingly, and for that reason, we affirm the order appealed from.

Order affirmed.

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