Adams v. Hearn

178 A. 606, 168 Md. 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 5, 1935
Docket[No. 61, January Term, 1935.]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 178 A. 606 (Adams v. Hearn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Hearn, 178 A. 606, 168 Md. 544 (Md. 1935).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Walter A. Hearn was engaged in a window cleaning business for a number of years, which business he individually owned, operated, and exclusively controlled. In 1926 he incorporated this business under the name of the National Window & Office Cleaning Company, with a capitalization of $250,000, comprised of 2,500 shares of the par value of $100 each; taking in his own name 2,457 shares, and issuing the remaining forty-three shares to employees in his business. At the time of the formation of the corporation, by-laws were adopted, lodging the power to elect the president in the stockholders. Said by-laws also provided that the board of directors should have power to fix thecompensation of all officers of the corporation, and might authorize any officer, upon whom the power of appointing subordinate officers may have been conferred, to fix the compensation of such subordinate officers. A resolution was unanimously passed by the board of directors appointing the president a committee of one, with authority, between meetings of the board, to exercise all of its powers in the management of the affairs of the company, and giving the president full control of its management and affairs, with the right to employ and discharge all employees.

Mr. Hearn was duly elected president, and his salary fixed at the sum of $400 per week. Among those regularly paid by the company were William Ellis, a private chauffeur of Mr. Hearn, and Mrs. Harkins, the companion of Mrs. Woodland, who was the mother of Mrs. *546 Hearn. These salaries were at the rate of twenty-eight and fifteen dollars per week, respectively. As the directing head and guiding spirit of the company, Mr. Hearn seems to have successfully conducted the business until December 20th, 1928, the date of his death. He left a will dated April 26th, 1916, by which he devised and bequeathed all property of which he was possessed at the time of his death to his wife, Effie J. Hearn, and his sister, Mary C. Hearn, the complainant in this cause, share and share alike. These two beneficiaries were named as executrices by the testator, and released from the obligation of giving bond. Shortly after his death, the will was lodged with the register of wills of Baltimore City by a Masonic friend of the deceased, in whose custody it appeared to have been since the date of its execution. It was thereupon admitted to probate. On December 28th, 1928, Mary C. Hearn renounced her right as executrix, which renunciation was filed on the following day, and on the same date letters testamentary were granted to Effie J. Hearn, the widow and remaining executrix. Two days later a special meeting of the stockholders of the National Window & Office Cleaning Company was called, which meeting Mrs. Hearn, the executrix, attended, and she voted the 2,457 shares of stock then standing in the name of her husband. All other outstanding shares were either represented in person or by proxy, and by unanimous vote Mrs. Hearn was elected president at the same salary, of $400 per week, which her husband had previously drawn. The salaries to the chauffeur and companion, as above stated, were continued and regularly paid by the company until the death of Mrs. Harkins, when payments as 'to her ceased. In addition to this the chauffeur was donated Christmas presents costing fifty-one dollars paid by the company, in line with the previous custom of Mr. Hearn.

Mrs. Hearn continued to receive the above salary as president until February 18th, 1933, when it was reduced to the sum of $300 per week, and she continued to receive this latter sum until the date of her death, *547 which occurred on August 20th, 1933. She left a will, which was probated in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, and on August 31st, 1933, letters testamentary upon her estate were granted by said court to Richard B. Adams, the executor named in said will. It appears that Richard B. Adams was the attorney for Walter A. Hearn and his company at the time of the latter’s death. At that time he was consulted by Mrs. Hearn and employed by her as her adviser in closing the estate of her husband. The interval which elapsed between the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Hearn was four years and eight months. During that time no administration account was filed or passed by the executrix in her husband’s estate, and the certificate of stock in the company pertaining thereto remained in the name of her husband at the time of her death.

Acting in his capacity as executor of Mrs. Hearn, Richard B. Adams attended a special meeting of the National Window & Office Cleaning Company on October 4th, 1933, and assumed to vote, on behalf of the estate of his testatrix, the 2,457 shares of stock in the company belonging to the estate of Mr. Hearn. At that meeting the other outstanding shares were represented and voted, resulting in the election of George W. Sparks as president and treasurer of the company, and the said Richard B. Adams as director.. Mr. Sparks was vice-president at the time of the death of Mr. Hearn, and continued in that position until his election as president. At the time of the meeting on October 4th, 1933, no letters of administration. d. b. n. e. t. a. had been granted upon the estate of Walter Hearn.

Under the presidency of Mrs. Hearn a dividend of ten dollars per share on the stock of the company was declared on February 4th, 1929, and a second dividend of two dollars per share was declared on March 2nd, 1931. The former dividend was applied by the executrix towards the payment of an indebtedness of thirty-eight or nine thousand dollars, due by Mr. Hearn to the company at the time of his death; the executrix making up the dif *548 ference between the dividend and the amount due the company by her decedent, and cancelling the entire debt. One half of the second dividend, or $2,457, was paid to Mary C. Hearn and the other half retained by the executrix, the co-beneficiary, under the will of Walter A. Hearn.

According to the testimony of J. Leon Bozman, a public accountant who audited the books of the company, salaries were paid to those mentioned above during the period covering from January 1st, 1929, to August 20th, 1938, as follows:

To Mrs. Hearn, President....................................................$94,000.00

To William Ellis, Chauffeur (including cost of Christmas gifts) ..................................................................... 6,035.00

To Mrs. Harkins, Companion and Nurse............... 3,210.00

Total .....-...................................................................................$103,245.00

As an offset against the above sum, the chancellor has allowed the estate of Mrs. Hearn the sum of $2,089.80, shown to have been paid by her, out of her personal resources, to the Internal Revenue Department as additional income taxes assessed against the company.

It is shown that Mr. Hearn was married many years ago and formerly lived on West North Avenue in Baltimore City, at the home of his mother, where also Mary C. Hearn, his sister, resided. Later the mother died and Mr. Hearn purchased a home at 3615 Forest Park Avenue, to which he moved. He had no children, and the family consisted of himself, his wife, and sister, to whom he was devoted.

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178 A. 606, 168 Md. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-hearn-md-1935.