American Colonization Society v. Latrobe

104 A. 120, 132 Md. 524, 1918 Md. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 104 A. 120 (American Colonization Society v. Latrobe) 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
American Colonization Society v. Latrobe, 104 A. 120, 132 Md. 524, 1918 Md. LEXIS 65 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case has been so recently before this Court in two previous appeals that any recital of the facts out of which it arises is unnecessary.

*527 All of the essential facts will he found in the very full opinion filed in the case of The American Colonization Society v. Robert Soulsby, et al., 129 Md. 605, and the second of which appeals, decided less than a year ago, will,be found in 131 Maryland, 296.

The present record contains four separate and distinct appeals, all of which raise questions of law rather than questions of fact, so that a brief statement will suffice, as these are successively considered.

The appeals numbered respectively 41 and 43 are appeals by the State of Maryland, the one from an order of Court sustaining a demurrer to a petition filed on behalf of the State, by which it was sought to have the property involved in the case declared escheated to the State, as the result of the decision in this Court in the case in 129 Md., and the second of the appeals now to be considered is from the action of the Circuit Court in overruling the exceptions filed on behalf of the State to' the auditor’s account, by which a, balance of money in the hands of the trustees was audited to he paid to the American Colonization Society. It will tend to simplify the case now before the Court to dispose of these two appeals before considering the others.

As appears from the prior history of this litigation, Caroline Donovan executed a deed to certain named trustees of fee simple property in the City of Baltimore, for purposes' in that deed fully set forth. She also executed a will disposing of the property of which she died seized and possessed.

Long after the execution of the deed, and after her death, proceedings were instituted by ber beirs to have the deed of trust set aside, because by the terms of that deed it was claimed that the instrument violated the rule of perpetuities.

• By the opinion of Judge Pattison, speaking for this Court, in the case of 129 Md., that contention was sustained and the deed set aside, but a recovery of tbe property was refused to tbe heira, because of tbe uninterrupted adverse possession of the trustees for a period in excess of twenty *528 years. The State of Maryland then intervened, and by its petition sought to have the property in question declared escheated to the State. This petition was demurred to, the demurrer sustained and petition dismissed, and this presents the question involved in the appeal in No. 41.

A number of cases have been cited by the Assistant Attorney-General to support the State’s contention, but they are for the most part without any application in the present instance, for the reason that they t are based on statutes adopted in the States where those cases have arisen, and the Courts were called on to deal with a claimed escheat upon the basis of a proper interpretation of the statute. In this State there is practically no statute which is applicable, the section in Article 57 of the Code having to do mainly with a question of limitations; and the provisions contained in Article 93 relating only to personal property. But there have been numerous adjudicated cases in this State dealing with the subject of escheat, wherein the subject has been fully considered. These are to be found as early as Casey v. Inloes, 1 Gill, 506, and Hammond v. Inloes, 4 Md. 138; Matthews v. Ward, 10 G. & J. 443; and as late as the case of the George’s Creek Co. in Liquidation, 125 Md. 595.

The general doctrine, which has become the accepted rule of law in this State, is that laid down in the case of the Rock Hill College v. Jones, 47 Md. 17, and a careful examination of the cases; discloses insurmountable obstacles against any recovery by the State of the property conveyed by Mrs. Donovan to her trustees, for two reasons: in the first place, she did not die without heirs; and in the second place, she did leave a will by which all of the rest and residue of her estate was devised and bequeathed.

The rule of escheat in this £>tate is approximately that of the common law, and is clearly set out in 10 R. C. L. 604, in part as follows: “In a strict sense escheat at common law is applicable only to that which can be the subject of tenure, for the reason that it represents the reversionary interest or *529 right of the lord to take for want of a tenant. * * * In a trust estate the trustee holds the legal title-, and is competent to perform the necessary services; therefore, upon the death of the cestui que trust intestate and without heirs, the trustee takes the absolute title clear of the trust, and this right to take for his own use extends to the heir of the trustee.”

This summary is a deduction from the English cases upon the subject, and in its concluding part is not entirely in harmony with the rule as recognized in this State in Mathews v. Ward, 10 G. & J. 443. If, therefore, follows that under the common law the trastees were competent to receive and hold the property as against the State, because they could render the service required by the feudal principle of tenure; that Caroline Donovan left heirs and did not die intesr tate and, therefore, the essential requirements for a reversion of the property to the State of Maryland by way of escheat are lacking in this ease, and the order appealed from must in this particular bo affirmed.

Having reached the conclusion that the property can not be escheated to the State, it necessarily follows that the State has no present interest therein, and not having a present interest in the property, it has no- standing to objet to- the distribution account disposing of the money now in the hands of the trustees, Wagner v. Freeny, 123 Md. 24, and cases there cited. The appeal in No. 43 must, therefore-, be dismissed.

The appeal Numbered 40 is the one which presents the greatest difficulty. This- is the appeal of the American Colonization Society against the trustees from the action of the Court in sustaining a demurrer of the trustees to- a petition of .the appellant, and dismissing that petition.

The attitude of the Colonization Society at this point is somewhat anomalous. E'o-r a long series of years the- American Colonization Society had made no claim to any interest in the property involved in this litigation, other than that of a beneficial use, as the cestui que trust, under the terms *530 of the deed of Mrs. Donovan. As such it had received quarterly remittances from the trustees named in Mrs. Donovan’s deed, and their successors, without any question of any character, so far as is disclosed by the Record in the several appeals, which have come to this Court.

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Bluebook (online)
104 A. 120, 132 Md. 524, 1918 Md. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-colonization-society-v-latrobe-md-1918.