7 Gill 66 | Md. | 1848
delivered the opinion of this court.
The bill in this cause, was filed on the equity side of Baltimore county court, by Sindall and, wife, the wife being one of the children and heirs at law of Thomas Conway, deceased, against Dorcas Sparks, the widow, and Thomas and Catharine, the other children of the deceased, for a partition and sale
On the 31st of August 1842, the daughter and her husband, who were married in 1824, filed their bill against the mother and sister, alleging their possession and receipt, through the whole preceding period, of the rents and profits, and claim, that the mother, who it now appears alone received the vents, is liable to account therefore in a court of equity, as trustee for said Sindoll and wife.
Upon the answer, a decree for the sale of the property was passed and executed, but it is not necessary for the purposes of this opinion to particularise more than one of the sales, which was of fee simple property, made in the lifetime of the widow, Dorcas Sparks. An allowance was made her of one-tenth of the nett proceeds of said sale, in lieu of her dower, to which the complainants assert a right of preference under the equities claimed in the bill, against the said Campbell, her administrator.
Upon the case presented, we do not feel- authorised to regard Dorcas Sparks, the appellee, as an* intruder, assuming, as a voluntary trustee, the control over the property, and the rents and profits, for which an account is claimed in the proceeding before us. It is impossible to examine' the account furnished by Jane Si'hdall, the complainant, admitting, from April 1st, through the years 1839, 1840, 1841, the payment of sums of money monthly, coupled with the expressions in her letter, “it was agreed on, in April 1839, I should receive a part of the rent out of my father’s estate,” without concluding, that the subject matter to which the agreement* refers, had not been left to slumber through the long period intervening from the death of her father, or the settlement of the estate before the orphans court. Whatever disposition was made of the previous rents received, by distribution to the parties, or appropriation by the mother,-may fairly be' presumed to have been acquiesced in by her. Not the slightest pretext of any preceding outstanding claim is there intimated. In the account rendered with the letter, she states the sum of $61.25 still due to her upon the account; and adds, “if you are willing to settle, send the tax bill and receipt of expenses, and I will pay my share; if you are not, let it stand to be settled with the other property.” This letter bears date the 3rd of- March 1842, and in the subsequent month of August, the present proceeding for a- sale and distribution of the property was instituted. To this pro-
We may here, in support of our views, invoke the deed of trust executed by the mother in 1816, in contemplation of her second marriage, by which all her property, and her interest in the estate of their father, was secured to these children, to take effect after her death; and to the sale in June 1831, by all the parties, of a part of the father’s estate, which Thomas took in full of his share, and afterwards executed to his two sisters a release of all his interest in the estate. Further we find from the testimony of Catharine, that Jane, the complainant, lived with her mother, from the period of her father’s death, until 1832, although married to Sindall in 1824. The mother educated her. She received a good education. She was taught millinery; her mother paid for it. Her mother educated two of her children; one for about six months, and the other for about two years. Such is the testimony of Catharine Conway; and moreover, in speaking of her own position at the home of her mother, “she thinks $100 little enough per annum for the board, clothing and education she received.”
Does not all this indicate the spirit of concession and amity, in which the widow and' children of Thomas Conway then acted, in the adjustment of their respective interests in the estate of the deceased? From the accounts stated by the auditor, it would appear, that allowing for taxes and deficient collections, the whole annual amount of the estate was not much over $200; and from the testimony before referred to, we are informed they all lived together/even after Jane's marriage, up to the year 1832. That the mother was therefore in the enjoyment of the rents and profits, by mutual consent, for a common advantage, in which all shared, while, under the same roof, is certainly no forced construction of the relations under which they then lived.
And yet this court are required to raise the violent, presumption, that the mother was all this time receiving these rents, against the consent of the parties, and, under such construction of misconduct, hold her liable to account as a stranger and intruder.
We have therefore come to the conclusion, that the letter- and account from Jane Sindall, is the evidence of a settlement at that date between the parties. We have not been unmindful, • that in dealing with this document as a settlement, we must assume the concurrence of the husband. And, for the purpose" of this decision, we have no difficulty in considering her the agent of Sindall in stating the account. It is impossible he should be ignorant of the material facts of his wife’s rights, and her claim to share in the properly, for the sale of which he is
That prior to this agreement, some understanding or arrangement prevailed with regard to these rents, to which Sindall himself was privy, if not a party, is manifest from the statement in the bill, that in 1831, he, Sindall, and his wife, joined with the widow and other children in a sale of a portion of the property, the proceeds of which sale were allotted to Thomas Conway, and that Thomas afterwards, in 1841, (ten years having elapsed,) executed to Jane, the complainant, and Catharine, her sister, a release of all his interest, as one of the heirs and distributees of the father. It is further alleged, that when the mother settled the final administration account in the orphans court, “she passed over the title and right of possession of the leasehold estate to the distributees of said Conway, deceased;” so that Jane, the complainant, had the control of her portion, if she had chosen to assume it. Can it be supposed, that while they were thus parting with the property,
In connection with this letter of Jane Sindall, it will be perceived, that the testimony of Catharine Conway is relied on in support of our views. It is stated upon the return of the commission, that this testimony is excepted to by complainants, and the memorandum to that effect is signed by the commissioner, but not by the solicitor for complainants. We are therefore not called upon to examine her admissibility, or look for the grounds of objection. By the act of 183$, ch. 302, sec. 5, it is provided, that no point relating to the competency of witnesses, or admissibility of evidence, shall be raised in the appellate court, unless it plainly appears by the record, that such point had been raised by exceptions filed in' the cause in the court below. This memorandum is not signed by counsel, and is not such an exception as this court here can notice.
The view of the court, that there was between the parties, shortly before the filing of the bill, an adjustment of the claim for rents, disposes of the objection, that the plea of limitations, here asserted in behalf of the widow, cannot avail her in bar of a trust. In this view, the plea is out of the case; but, from the importance attached to it in the argument, and as a prominent point in the case, is entitled to the consideration of a few remarks from the court:
Viewed as a bill to account, if there could be an action at law for the same purpose, the statute would be a bar to a suit brought in equity. It is a settled principle, that chancery follows the law; and, acting in obedience to the statute, the plea of limitations is as available in equity as at law, in relation to the same subject. 2 Gill & J., 311.
In all cases of concurrent jurisdiction at law and in equity, the statute is equally obligatory in both courts. 3 Gill, 146. 20th Johns. R., 583, Murray vs. Coster. Here was a com
As regards the amount allowed by the auditor’s account to Dorcas Sparks, in lieu of dower, the complainants’ claim of preference has no foundation. No such priority exists under the rights and equities in their bill. This allowance, in lieu of her dower, made to the widow in her lifetime, devolved, when she died, upon her administrator. The case of Warfield vs. Banks, 11 G. & J., 98, is not a parallel case. There one of several joint purchasers paid more than his share, and upon a bill filed for partition, upon sale and distribution of proceeds, he was decreed to be reimbursed his excess. This distribution was between the parties in privity. But here no such equity subsists. The money is part of the estate of Mrs. Sparks; and against the creditors of Mrs. Sparks, who are represented by Mr. Campbell, the administrator, no such lien or priority can be maintained. The complainants, as to what is due to them by the decree of the court below, can receive no more than the share properly arising to them of the assets of the
decree affirmed.