Albert v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

103 A. 130, 132 Md. 104, 1918 Md. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 A. 130 (Albert v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) 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
Albert v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 103 A. 130, 132 Md. 104, 1918 Md. LEXIS 15 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

*105 Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Stephen IX Spence died in New York City,on October 28th, 1Í) 1(5, at 92 years of age, unmarried, without leaving children or descendants or parent surviving- him. Subsequent to his death, George li. Howard of Washington, 1), O., found among some papers which the deceased had entrusted to him, the following will;

“This, my last will and testament, made by me, Stephen D. Spence, this 31st day of May, in the City of Baltimore, in the year of our Lord 1849, in which I bequeath all that I am worth, amounting to four thousand three hundred dollars or thereabout, which is now in the possession of Carroll Spence as trustee, to be equally divided between my two sisters, Mary Clare Macgill, wife of Oliver P. Macgill, and Roberta T. Brooke, wife of Chas. Brooke, Jr., after paying all claims against me. This revokes all other wills or papers of any kind signed by me.
“(Signed) Stephen D. Spence.”

it was witnessed by three persons and duly probated in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City. The only next of kin in this State entitled to administer having renounced her right to do so, and having requested the Court to appoint the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore administrator with the will annexed, that was accordingly done. That company filed a petition in the Orphans’ Court asking ii to designate a day for a meeting of the legatees and next of kin of the dec-eased, in order that their rights in the estate might be ascertained and determined by the Court, An order was passed by the Court and the notices required by section 14-3 of Article 93 of Code were duly given. A number of the next of kin of the testator appeared and filed answers. The inventory of the personal estate included jewelry appraised at $25.75, cash in the hotel where the deceased died amounting to $318.20; deposits in five banks in New York and two items of each held by the Safe Deposit *106 & Trust Company (one of which it held as trustee under the will of Roberta T. Brooke and the other as trustee under the will of Charles C. Shippen), the to ml amount of the inventory being $7,404.78. The bank books covering the deposits in the five banks were delivered to the Sale Deposit & Trust Co’, by the proprietor of the Hotel Churchill, to whom they were given for safe keeping by the decedent.

An agreed statement of facts shows that the next of kin were as set forth in the petition of the Safe Deposit & Trust Company. In addition to the two sisters named in the will, the testator had a brother, Carroll Spence, a sister, Anna Josepha Smith, both of whom predeceased him and left issue, and he had another brother, Charles S. Spence, who also predeceased him, but left no issue. Mrs. .Macgill died in 1888, the appellants being her next of kin at the time of the death of the testator, and Mrs. Brooks died in August, 1881, and her next of kin, living at the time of the death of the testator, are the same as those of the testator. The appellants contend that the will was a valid and effectual disposition of the entire estate now being administered, and operated to bequeath the same to the next of kin of said Mary Clare Mac-gill, their mother, and of Robert T. Brooke, the other legatee named in the will, each of the appellants' claiming one-half of the half bequeathed to their mother, and one-half of the third of the half bequeathed to Roberta T. Brooke. Under their contention each of them would be entitled to four-twelfths, or one-third of the entire estate, leaving only a third to be divided per stirpes between the only child of Carroll Spence and the son and children of deceased children of Anna Josepha Smith. The Court below decreed that the will did not operate to pass any portion of the estate in the hands of the Safe Deposit and Trust Company, but that as to all of it, the said Stephen D. Spence died intestate, and the administrator was directed to make distribution as therein set forth, resulting in giving each of the appellants one- *107 sixth instead of one-third of the estate. From that decree this appeal was taken.

The controversy is entirely over the interpretation of the will—no question being raised as to who are the next of kin. In the agreed statement of facts it is admitted that the entire estate which has come into the hands of the administrator is set forth in the inventory filed; and that no information has been obtained with regard to the fund referred to in the will. It is further admitted that some of the relatives of the testator made contributions towards the payment of annuities to him for a number of years before his death—some of them having been in the shape of trusts for the purpose. The names of the contributors and amounts given annually are . given in the agreed statement. It is also agreed: “That the said Stephen Decatur Spence in his later years lived very frugally, and saved some portion of the income from the various trusts and contributions made by bis relatives herein referred to, which savings gradually increased his bank accounts.” An officer of the Safe Deposit and Trust Co. testified that he had ascertained that $5,000 had been deposited to the credit of Stephen Decatur Spence in the Second National Bank of New York on February 27, 1892, which seemed to have come through John P. Pleasants & Sons of Baltimore, but no explanation of what it was for, or who paid it, could be obtained. In that bank there was a balance of $1,000.00 on deposit when the testator died, although it is not shown when any deposit was made excepting the $5,000.00 above mentioned. It was alsoi shown that there was a proceeding in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, instituted April 3, 1891, entitled S. Decatur Spence et al v. Nicholas Carroll Spence et al, in which property charged with an annuity of $400.00 by the will of Roberta T. Brooke for the benefit of Stephen D. Spence was sold, and the.sum of $5,880.63 was audited to the Safe Deposit & Trust Company, trustee, on July 12, 1892. That fund realized about $250.00 net per annum, which was paid to' Mr. Spence until his *108 death. There was no connection between it and the $5,000.00 deposited in the Second Rational Bank of New York. Ror is there any connection between the fund stated in the will to be in the hands of Carroll Spence, trustee, and either of the other funds mentioned, and there is nothing whatever to show where that fund came from, what became of it, or when the trust ended, if it really existed. It would therefore be pure guess-work to attempt to determine any of those questions. The mere fact that the will was made fifty-seven years before the testator’s death would not have prevented it from ■operating upon such property owned by the testator at the time of his death, as it showed was the intention of the testator to bequeath by it, and of course, our paramount duty is to endeavor to ascertain that intention. If the testator had. simply said, “I bequeath all that I am worth, to be equally divided between my two sisters * * * after paying all claims against me,” the interpretation of the will would have been very simple, but that is not all that he said—It was: “all that I am worth, amounting to four thousand three hundred dollars or thereabout, which is now m

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Bluebook (online)
103 A. 130, 132 Md. 104, 1918 Md. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albert-v-safe-deposit-trust-co-md-1918.