Baldwin v. Mitchell

38 A. 775, 86 Md. 379, 1897 Md. LEXIS 123
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 17, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 38 A. 775 (Baldwin v. Mitchell) 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
Baldwin v. Mitchell, 38 A. 775, 86 Md. 379, 1897 Md. LEXIS 123 (Md. 1897).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal comes from the Orphans’ Court of Harford County. It appears that pending a controversy as to the validity of the will of William Baldwin, deceased, Noble L. Mitchell was appointed administrator pendente lite. The time at which he was so appointed does not appear in the record. He possessed himself, however, of the assets, and paid certain debts of the deceased. On the 7th day of December, 1896, the Orphans’ Court passed a decree setting aside the will, and ordering the costs of the contest to be paid out of the estate. Silas Baldwin was then appointed administrator to complete the settlement of the estate. On the fourteenth day of December Mitchell, the administrator pendente lite, filed his account. He charged himself with assets to the amount of $2,867.00-100 and claimed allowances for the expenses of his administration including commissions, the costs of the litigation, and for certain payments on account of the debts of the deceased. The appellant objected to the confirmation of the account, and from the action of the Court in overruling his objection, this appeal is taken. The objection extends only to the item of $500.00-100. “To Joseph E. Ashton per agreement.”

It is contended that Mitchell being only an administrator pendente lite had no power virtutc officii, to pay any of the debts of the deceased. In this State letters of administration pendente lite are granted, at the discretion of the Orphans’ Court, where the validity of a will is, or shall be contested. Code, Art. 93, sec. 68. They confer authority only during the contest, and are to be regarded as revoked by the granting of letters testamentary or of administration —sec 69. There are no provisions in our statutes defining the powers of such an administrator, or establishing par[381]*381ticular and exceptional rules for the discharge of his duties, as in the case of an administrator ad colligendum—secs. 61 to 64. The intention of our law, therefore, seems to be clear, that he must be subject to the same general rules as control general administrators. Within twelve months from the date of his letters, he must render his first account, and, if necessary, an additional account every six months thereafter. If his letters be revoked before the twelve months expire, he must then exhibit his account without delay, and hand over to the executor or new administrator all the property of the decedent in his hands. He may sue for the recovery of the assets and be sued for debts due from the decedent; and if such suits are still pending when his letters are revoked, the new administrator may prosecute or defend them—sec. 69. With powers and duties, such as these, no sufficient reason can be assigned why he shall not be required to discharge the decedent’s debts, as other administrators are required. We are of opinion, therefore, that our statutes do not contemplate such an administrator as having been appointed for the special purpose only of taking care of the assets. The contest over the will, creates the necessity for a temporary administrator, but it by no means follows from this that it was intended that the assets of the estate should be locked up for the indefinite period during which the litigation should continue. An administrator pendente lite cannot make distribution of the residue, for the manifest reason that the manner of the distribution and the persons entitled to claim, would depend upon the provisions of the will, in case of the establishment of its validity. But no such reason applies to the discharge of the decedent’s debts. That is in no wise dependent upon the issue of the contest over the will. The existence of the debts, the right of creditors to be paid out of the personal assets, are matters fixed by the law. It could serve no good purpose, but would be grossly unjust to compel creditors to await the determination of a suit, in which they are in no respect interested.

[382]*382The case of Kaminer v. Hope, 18 S. C. 561, was cited at the hearing to support the view, that an administrator pendente lite has power only to collect and preserve assets. That case ought not, we think, be followed in this State, where, as we have said, there is a general intention to be gathered from our statutes, that he shall have the powers of a general administrator, except that of distribution. Woerner in his work on the Law of Administrators, after referring to that case, remarks : “ The powers of an administrator pendente lite are enlarged by the English Probate Act (20 and 21 Viet., ch. 77, § 70; Tichbone v. Tichbone, L. R. 2 P. & D. 41), to include all the rights and powers of a general administrator, except the right of distributing the residue, and the tendency in America is in the same direction.” He cites in support of this statement Benson v. Wolf, 43 N. J. L. 78—81. In re Duncan, 3 Redf. 153; Codman v. Richards, 13 Neb. 383. In Ellmaker’s case, 4 Watts, 36, it was said: “ An administrator pendente lite is an officer of the Court, whose duty is limited to filing an inventory, taking care of the assets, and collecting and paying debts." These views find support in the opinion of this Court in ex parte Worthington, 54 Md. 361. In speaking of the duties of an administrator pendente lite, Robinson, J., said: “ It is the duty of such administrator to collect and preserve the property pending the litigation, and although he may sell the same or part of it to prevent loss or inj ury, or when it is necessary to pay debts, yet the law never contemplated that he should make a final settlement and distribution of the estate.”

There appears in the record a copy of a paper that was filed in the suit at that time pending between the parties to this appeal. In that paper the parties agree “ that the verdict of the jury on the issues shall be entered so that the will be set aside,” and further, “ that out of the estate shall be paid” the several sums therein stated, one of the items being as follows : “To Joseph E. Ashton in full for his and his family’s and servant’s services, nursing and attending to [383]*383William Baldwin—$500.00-100.” There is some dispute whether this paper was offered in evidence at the hearing of the case in the Orphans’ Court. It is conceded, however, that it was in fact read to the Court, and its genuineness is not questioned. The appellee contends the agreement is but a part of the compromise effected between the parties, by which the suit was terminated, and is, in fact, only a memorandum of the amounts which were to be paid. On the same day Mitchell exhibited his account in the Orphans’ Court, both parties filed petitions, in which they respectively set forth their claims. The appellee in his petition, in which he prays the Court to confirm the account, alleges that the parties verbally agreed to terminate the suit, and thereby intended to settle and close all litigation over Mr. Baldwin’s estate in which Ashton was concerned, and that the five hundred dollars he was to receive was allowed to him clear of all deductions, in consideration of his withdrawing all efforts to sustain the validity of the will. The appellant in his petition contends that Ashton is indebted to the estate, and such indebtedness should be accounted for before he is allowed to receive any part of the sum allowed by the agreement contained in the record. Beyond these allegations in the petitions, there is nothing touching the matter in issue in the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A. 775, 86 Md. 379, 1897 Md. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-mitchell-md-1897.