Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. State

158 A. 45, 162 Md. 49, 1932 Md. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 20, 1932
Docket[No. 46, October Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 158 A. 45 (Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. State) 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
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. State, 158 A. 45, 162 Md. 49, 1932 Md. LEXIS 94 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit brought by the State, for the use of Pauline Hendrichs, against the Aetna Casualty & Surety Company, surety on the bond of the administrators of the estate of her husband, John E. Hendrichs, deceased, to recover her distributive share of his estate. The declaration charges that Henry E. Hendrichs and Harry O. Ralben filed in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City their first and final account as administrators of the estate of John E. Hendrichs, deceased, wherein they charged themselves with the distribution to Pauline Hendrichs of her “spouse statutory allowance, $J5.00,” and a distribution “to Pauline Hendrichs, widow, one-third cash, the sum of $6,041.30,” and that the distributions or any part thereof have not been paid.

The defendant, appellant, pleaded the general issue, pleas of never promised, never indebted, payment, release, and limitations. The plaintiff joined issue on the first and second pleas, and traversed the third and fourth, saying1 to the fourth plea “that the alleged deed of release was procured by the deceit, misrepresentation and fraud of Henry E. Hendrichs and Harry C. Kalben, Administrators,” etc. There was a demurrer to the plea of limitations, which was sustained. On the trial, the judgment being in favor of the *51 plaintiff for the amount claimed, with, interest, the defendant appealed.

John E. Hendrichs died intestate August 16th, 1926, leaving surviving his widow, Pauline Hendrichs, the equitable plaintiff, and a son, Henry E. Hendrichs. Letters of administration were granted to' the son, Henry E. Hendrichs¡, and Harry C. Kalben, a member of the Baltimore bar, on August 20th, 1926. By renunciation dated August 19th, 1926, Mrs. Hendrichs renounced her right to administer her husband’s estate and requested the appointment of her son and Mr. Kalben. They qualified and filed their bond with the appellant as surety. An inventory filed September 20th, 1926, showed assets appraised at $20,376.72. The amount accounted for was $20,454.97. The distributions, according to the first administration account filed March 19th, 1926, after deducting orphans’ court costs, spouse’s statutory allowance, $75, income taxes, $496.41, administrators’ commissions, $1,409.83, and state tax, $201.09, in all $2,422.11, left to Pauline Hendrichs, widow, one-third, or $6,041.30, and to Henry E. Hendrichs $12,082.56. Included in the distribution to Henry E. Hendrichs were all the shares of stock at the appraisal of $1,986, and a Dodge sedan ap>praised at $400. The consent of the mother to- the distribution in kind to her son, signed by Mrs. Hendrichs, was filed with the account. In the record are two releases, signed, sealed, and acknowledged by the distributees, both dated November 24th, 1926, Henry E. Hendrichs’ acknowledgment bearing the same date. Mrs. Hendrichs’ acknowledgment is dated November 26th, 1926. The signatures were witnessed by Meyer Steinberg, the notary by whom the acknowledgments appear to have been taken. The checks for both distributees are dated November 24th, 1926. The checks, signed by Henry E. Hendrichs and Harry E. Kalben, to Mrs. Hendrichs, are indorsed “Pauline Hendrichs” in her handwriting, and below her indorsement on each check is stamped “for deposit only to the credit of Henry E. Hendrichs.” The check for the spouse’s allowance, $75, was cashed or deposited at the American Trust 'Company on December 10th, *52 1926, and paid by the Liberty Street branch of the Merchants’ National Bank December 12th, 1926. The check for Mrs. Hendrichs’ distributive share of the estate, $6,-041.30, was deposited in the Merchants’ National Bank to the credit of Henry E. Hendrichs’ personal account December 10th, 1926. One of the checks to Henry lE. Hendrichs was deposited November 27th, 1926, and the other on November 29th, 1926.

While the replication to the fourth plea charges Henry E. Hendrichs and Harry C. Kalben with procuring the release from Pauline Hendrichs by deceit, misrepresentation, and fraud, none of the testimony reflects on Mr. Kalben in any particular.

Asked what discussion she had with her son about the administration, Mrs. Pauline Hendrichs said: “Well, he came to me at that time and said, Mother, who should be administrator for you, and I said, Son, you have done all in your power all your life to be a good boy and I think I will let you take it, and he taken it. Q. Now what was said about Mr. Kalben at that time? A. He did not say anything at that time, but in a couple of 'days afterward he said, Mother, I have a very good lawyer for you and you don’t have to> worry because the lawyer and the bonding company will be right with you.” She said that up to that time she did not know Mr. Kalben, had never seen him. Then asked, “What papers were submitted to you to sign?” she said, “Well he used to bring home — -the first paper he brought home he said, Mother, you will have to sign this because it is for the Orphans’ 00111!:, it is a whole lot of red tape about it, but it does not concern you much but sign it here, and I signed it, but what it was I don’t know.” She was then shown what was the first paper in the administration, the renunciation in favor of her son and Harry C. Kalben, and, asked to identify her signature, said, “It looks very much like it, yes, sir.” Then asked what occurred between her and her son relative to the estate, she said: “Nothing. I never knew anything; never knew anything at all about it; he never took me to the lawyer’s office or .anything.” She *53 said she had never been in the office of Mr. Kalben at anytime. “JNo^ sir; I never put my foot in there.” Next, shown the paper consenting to- the distribution in kind toller son of the stocks and aiito-mob-ile, she- said: “He just told me to- sign it, he never told me anything.” Said nothing about tbe distribution, would not take her to the lawyer’s office; “I could not worry him because he is too- busy.” Asked if she did “not say to him that it would be all right if he wanted the stock and automobile for bim to bave it that way” ? she said, “I told him to- p-ut it all together and leave it all go- at one time.” Said she had no objection to- him having the stock, and then denied that she knew there- was some stock. It does not appear that there was any advantage gained by Henry E. Hendricbs in taking over the stock and the automobile at the ap-praisal. Presented the release for the spouse’s allowance of $15 and the distribution of $6,-041.30, and asked if the- signature to it was her’s, she said, “It looks like it, yes, sir.” When told that it recited that-she had acknowledged receipt of the sums of money named, she said, “I never got a cent at all.”

“Q. Ho you recall what was said to you, if anything, at the time this release was signed? A. No, sir. Q. Do yo-u recall what was said to you by yo-ur son ? A. I did not even know it was signed. He never- told me- anything.”

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
158 A. 45, 162 Md. 49, 1932 Md. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-casualty-surety-co-v-state-md-1932.