Baer v. Kahn

101 A. 596, 131 Md. 17, 1917 Md. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 101 A. 596 (Baer v. Kahn) 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
Baer v. Kahn, 101 A. 596, 131 Md. 17, 1917 Md. LEXIS 3 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from two orders of the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City.

By the-first of these orders the Court assumed jurisdiction of the trust estate of Lena Kahn. The second directed the trastee to pay to her solicitor for his services the sum of one hundred dollars, seventy-five dollars of it to be paid out of the corpus of the estate and twenty-five dollars out of the income.

The facts alleged in the bill filed by the appellees are substantially as follows:

Lewis, Moses and Solomon Baer for a number of years successfully cohducted the hide, fur and wool business in the *19 City of Baltimore under the firm name of Lewis Baor & Company. In 1905 the firm purchased about nine thousand dollars of the capital stock of B. Kahn & Bros. Company, a corporation of which Benjamin Kahn, husband of Lena Kahn, was manager. This corporation was not prosperous, and as a result of said investment Lewis Baer & Company lost about three thousand dollars. This: loss, it is alleged, produced an unfriendly feeling .on the part of Lewis Baer for both his sister and her husband, Benjamin Kahn, in consequence of which, he wrongfully contended that the said nine thousand dollars, although in the nature of an investment, was in fact a loan to his sister and her husband, and he unreasonably demanded and received from them their note for the payment of said sum of three thousand dollars, the amount so lost by the firm.

Solomon Baer died in 1913. In his will he bequeathed certain sums of money in trust to Lewis and Rebecca Baer for the benefit of Lena Kahn and her minor children. A petition was filed by those named as trustees, asking to be relieved of the administration of the trust, but thereafter Lewis Baer consented to serve, and Samuel J. Fisher, the appellees’ solicitor in this case, was appointed to servo with him as co-trustee. Lewis Baer afterward withdrew as trustee and Fisher thereafter1 acted as sole trustee.

In March, 1915, Moses Baer died, and by his will dated May 27th, 1914, he bequeathed two thousand dollars to Arthur Kahn, two thousand dollars to Lewis Kahn and eight thousand dollars to Rosanna Kahn, eliildren of Lena Kahn, and twenty-four thousand dollars to Lewis Baer in trust for Lena Kahn.

The provision creating said trust is found in the fourth item of his will, which is as follows:

“I give and bequeath unto my brother, Lewis Baer, the sum of twenty-four thousand dollars ($24,000.00), in trust and confidence, to hold the same, malte such investments or reinvestments thereof as he,in his discretion, may see fit, defray all necessary expenses *20 thereon, and pay the net income arising therefrom, quarterly, unto my sister, Lena Kahn, for and during the term of her natural life, * * * . Upon the death of my said sister, Lena Kahn, this trust shall cease, and said property and estate held in trust at the time of her death under this paragraph of my last will and testament, shall then vest absolutely, free and clear of all trusts, in her children then living, and the then living descendants of any deceased child of my said sister, Lena Kahn, per stirpes but not per capita, share and share alike, absolutely.”

In the further disposition of his property one-third of his estate wasi devised to his wife, Mamye Baer, and after making smaller bequests to another sister and several nieces and a nephew, he gave the residue of his éstate to his brother Lewis absolutely.

In the seventh clause of his will is found the following provisions:

“I empower my said trustee * * * to invest alt moneys or funds held in trust under this, my last will and testament, in such securities as he * * * may see fit, and to change the investment thereof, when, as often and in such manner as my said trustee * * * may deem advisable. I also authorize and empower my said trustee * * * at any time, during the existence of the trust set forth in this, my last will and testament, to sell, assign and convey any of the trust property, original or substituted held under this, my last will and testament, for the purpose of investment, reinvestment, distribution, division, or any other purpose whatsoever, and to execute, acknowledge and deliver any deeds or instruments of writing that may be necessary to carry these powers into effect, and no one dealing with my said trustee or any successor, appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction, shall be required to see to the application of any purchase money.”

*21 Several days after the death of Moses Baer his will was read, and immediately thereafter, as the bill alleges, Lewis Baer “burst into tears,” and told his sister, Lena Kahn, “that the sndden death of his two brothers within so- short a time necessitated the withdrawal of an unusually large amount of cash from the firm, of Lewis Baer & Company, which he feared would cause financial disaster to him,” and “that if he had the amount which he had lost in the B. Kahn Bros. Company that it would to some extent help him out of his difficulty.” It was then that Lewis Baer informed his sister that in addition to the bequest made to her in his will, Moses Baer had a policy of insurance on his life for the sum of five thousand dollars, which upon his death was payable to her and her daughter Rosanna in equal shares, “and begged her to assign that to him in part payment of the alleged indebtedness.” She finally agreed, over the protest of her husband, to pay fifteen hundred dollars out of the proceeds of the policy upon the note previously given by her and her husband.

It was then charged that, notwithstanding the alleged need of money to save the firm .from financial difficulties, Lewis Baer shortly thereafter purchased an automobile for his own pleasure, for which he paid about fourteen hundred dollars.

The further charge was made against Lewis Baer that in order to increase the residue of the estate that was devised to him he delayed stating his final account as executor, which resulted in financial loss and injury to Lena Kahn.

The bill then alleges- that on April 18, 1916, she requested her attorney, Mr. Eisber, to write Judge Riles, attorney for the defendant, for information regarding the manner in which the corpus of her trust estate would he invested, suggesting that as much as possible of it be- invested in ground rents-, yielding a net income of from five to six per cent., and that the estate.be administered under the supervision, direction and control of a Court of Equity.

*22 Mr. Fisher wrote Judge Riles, as requested, and received in response thereto two letters. In the first Judge Riles stated “that his letter had been referred to Mr. Baer,” and in the second, “that he did not represent Mr. Baer in the matter- of the trust estate of Lena Kahn, and suggested that Mr. Fisher write Mr. Baer direct,” which he did.

“Several days thereafter, Mr. Baer called to see Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A. 596, 131 Md. 17, 1917 Md. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baer-v-kahn-md-1917.