Bartlett v. Ligon

109 A. 473, 135 Md. 620, 1920 Md. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 109 A. 473 (Bartlett v. Ligon) 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
Bartlett v. Ligon, 109 A. 473, 135 Md. 620, 1920 Md. LEXIS 24 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

*622 Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, directing the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, Admr. c. t. a. of the estate of Mary W. Jordan, to make distribution of the personal estate and property of the said Mary W. Jordan remaining in its hands, by dividing the same equally share and share alike, among the persons therein named as her next of kin. That decree was the result of a petition filed by the Admr. c. t. a. under the provisions of Sec. 143 of Art. 93 of the Code.

Mrs. Jordan made a will on the 2nd day of April, 1904, by which she willed and bequeathed all of her estate to her son by a former marriage, Dr. Charles E. Nolen. He died on June 30, 1916, and Mrs. Jordan died on June 23, 1918, without leaving a husband or issue surviving her, and without having changed her will. On a petition filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County by Dr. Nolen, a writ de lunático inquirendo was issued a few days before his death, and by an inquisition taken July 5, 1916, the jurors found that Mrs. Jordan was “of unsound mind and a lunatic without lucid intervals, so that she is not capable of the government of herself or the management of her estate, and that she has been in such state of mind for more than a year past.” The next day the Circuit Court confirmed the inquisition, and appointed the Safe Deposit and Trust Company committee of her person and of her estate, which consists entirely of personality. The main controversy is whether the bequest to Dr. Nolen lapsed, and hence the estate passed to the next •of kin of Mrs. Jordan, or whether it was saved from lapsing and, therefore, went to the next of kin of Dr. Nolen. That depends upon the construction and effect of the Act of 1910, Oh. 37, which amended Sec. 313 of Art. 93 of the Code of 1888 (now Sec. 326 of Art 93 of Ann. Code). In 1810 a statute was passed to prevent the lapsing of a devise, legacy or bequest by reason of the death of the devisee or legatee in the lifetime of the testator, which continued in force in this *623 State without any modification or change, which would affect this case, until 1910. The language used in the Codes of 1860 and 1888 is the same'as that in the Act of 1910, with the exception of a-proviso added by that Act, and tbe words “except as hereinafter provided,” inserted by reason of the proviso being added. But for tbe change made by tbe Act of 1910 there could have been no question about the right of Dr. Nolen’s next of kin to take the estate, and hence we will only quote the new part of the Act, which is:

“provided, however, that this section shall not apply to the last will, testament or codicil of any person dying after the passage of this Act (March 31, 1910), where the maker of said last will, testament or codicil, after the execution thereof and before the death of such devisee or legatee, shall become insane or otherwise incompetent to cancel, revoke, annul, obliterate or alter said last will, testament or codicil.”

Under our construction of the statute in Hemsley v. Hollingsworth, 119 Md. 431, it “must be construed to mean, shall become insane or otherwise incompetent, and so continue to be 1,liat tbe testator is unable to change his will.” Therefore, if a testator recovered or had such lucid intervals as would enable him. to cancel, revoke, annul, obliterate or alter bis will the proviso' would not apply. But the important question now to be determined is whether it was intended that the Act should apply to wills made before the Act was passed, if the testator became insane or incompetent after it passed, but before tbe devisee or legatee died, and then survived such devisee or legatee.

As a devise or bequest did lapse a,t common law, if tbe devisee or legatee predeceased tbe testator, unless there was something in the will to save it, it was only by reason of the Act of 1810 that such lapses were avoided in this State during the hundred years that Act was. in force^ before the Act of 1910. The Legislature could have entirely repealed the Act of 1810, instead of repealing and re-enacting it with *624 an amendment, as it did in 1910, and if it had done so, all wills made prior to the passage of such an Act, if the testators died afterwards, would have been affected by the repeal, so that the devises and bequests to devisees and legatees who predeceased the testators would have lapsed. We do not, of course, refer to will in which there' were provisions which would have prevented them from lapsing. It will be well to recall some of the decisions which this Court has rendered which may aid us in determining this case. In Glenn v. Belt, 7 G. & J. 362, 367, the Court held in reference to the Act of 1810 that “The time of the transfer is the death of the testator; and as the legatee died before the testator, he would not be the person meant as the object of the statutory transfer. But the law refers to such persons then in esse, entitled by law to the distribution of the legatee’s estate in case of intestacy, that is, his representatives.”

The Court referred to the unreported case of Spence v. Gillis, decided by the Court of Appeals on the Eastern Shore, June term, 1824, as decisive of’the one then before it. In that ease Mary Spence made her will October 28, 1809, and died September 1, 1821. She made Sally Spence; who died in 1812, her residuary legatee. Ara Spence administered on the estate of Mary, and there was a residue for which Joseph Gillis, exeuctor of Sally Spence, sued Ara Spence; the County Court gave judgment for the plaintiff but upon appeal it was reversed, and the residue was distributed to the representatives of Sally Spence. It will thus be seen that although the will of Mary Spence was made in 1809 and she died in 1821, the Act of 1810 was held to be applicable to her will, and the residue went to the representatives of Sally Spence who had died in 1812. If that had not been so, then a devise or legacy in any will made before the Act of 1810 would have lapsed, if the devisee or legatee had predeceased the testator. Such a,construction might have affected many wills made before the Act of 1810, and there is. no case in this State holding that a devise or bequest in a will made *625 before the Act of 1810, by a testator who died after the passage of tbe Act, lapsed because the will was made before 1810. As the Act of 1810 was held to be applicable to wills made before its passage, it is difficult to see why the Act of 1910 should not be.

In Magruder v. Carroll, 4 Md. 335, our predecessors beld that the Act of 1849, Ch. 229, relating to wills passing real estate afterwards acquired, of which the testator died possessed, included wills executed prior to the passage of the Act, although Chief Justice Taney had in the U. S. Circuit Court held to: the contrary. The Supreme Court of the United States also held contrary to the Court of Appeals in a case before it, but our predecessors in Alexander v. Worthington, 5 Md. 471, followed the ruling in Magruder v. Carroll,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 A. 473, 135 Md. 620, 1920 Md. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-v-ligon-md-1920.