74 Md. 346 | Md. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from the Orphans’ Court for Baltimore City. The question presented is as to the validity of a sale of a leasehold property, made under an order of the Court, hy administrators cle bonis non of a deceased married woman.
It appears that Mrs. Hester Evans, a married woman, died intestate in September, 1880, leaving her husband, A. J. Evans, and five children surviving her. Among
Andrew J. Evans, the surviving husband, died in July, 1889, and thereupon liis life estate terminated in the property left by his wife. In August, 1889, application was made for, and letters of administration de bonis non were granted to two of the sons of Mrs. Hester Evans; and in July, 1890, they applied to the Court *by petition for power to sell the leasehold estate left by their mother, as part of her estate remaining unadministered. The order of Court authorizing and directing the sale to be made was passed on the 10th of July, 1890, and the sale was made to the appellant and duly reported to the Court. There was no objection taken by any one to either the granting of letters of administration de bonis non, or to .the order of sale by the Court; but after the sale was reported, the appellant, the purchaser of the prop
The exceptions were heard, and the Orphans’ Court, regarding the distribution made by the surviving hus-. hand as being defective or incomplete, overruled the exceptions and ratified the sale. It is from that order that this appeal is taken.
The only evidence of any attempted distribution furnished by the record, is the credit taken by the surviving husband in his account, for the balance of the estate, retained by himself for life, “ with remainder to his children.” Neither the names nor the number of the children are given; nor is there anything to show, as matter of fact, that his children are the same as the children of the deceased wife, or that she had no other children than those by her surviving husband. There is no presumption the one way or the other. Consequently, this entry or credit in the account is declaratory of no right of the true distributees of the wife’s estate, upon the death of the husband; nor does it indicate to those who might desire to deal in respect to the property who were the real owners of it. It was therefore entirely without legal effect, so far as the children of the deceased wife were concerned, and the Orphans’ Court would seem to have been well justified in treating the distribution as incomplete. And until there was a complete distribution to those entitled, the Orphans’ Court had jurisdiction to order a sale of the property for purposes of final distribution among them. Code, Art. 93, sec. 137; Williams vs. Holmes, 9 Md., 281, 288.
The settlement of the account by the surviving husband occurred before the passage of the Act of 1884, ch. 49, now section 139 of Article 93 of the Code, and is not therefore affected by that statute. But as indicative of the reason and policy of the law in requiring some definite record evidence of the transmission of titles to chattels real, that statute furnishes strong evidence. It 'provides that whenever an account is passed by an executor or administrator, whereby distribution of chattels real is made to legatees, or to parties entitled in course of distribution, the Orphans’ Court shall pass an order directing the executor Or administrator to convey such chattels real to the distributees or legatees; and the executor or administrator shall convey the same accordingly, by proper deed, to be executed, acknowledged and recorded, according to law.
We think the Orphans’ Court committed no error in overruling the exceptions of the appellant and ratifying the sale; and we shall therefore affirm the order appealed from.
Order affirmed, with costs to appellees.