Basford v. Cranford

93 A. 295, 125 Md. 15, 1915 Md. LEXIS 183
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 13, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 A. 295 (Basford v. Cranford) 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
Basford v. Cranford, 93 A. 295, 125 Md. 15, 1915 Md. LEXIS 183 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court for Calvert County, overruling the exceptions of the appellants and ratifying the return of commissioners appointed by that Court to make partition of and divide the land of Franklin Cranford, deceased, between his heirs at law.

The deceased left a widow, two sons and three grandchildren, children of a deceased daughter, two of whom were minors under the age of twenty-one years, and the grounds *17 of the exceptions filed by the three grandchildren are as follows:

“1st. Because the commissioners were not sworn as required by law and the commission issued in said cause, before entering upon their duties in the premises.
“2nd. Because the return of the said commissioners filed as aforesaid does not show that notice was given to the parties interested as required by law.
“3rd. Because one of the commissioners, to wit, Evered B. Mead, owned property adjoining the property to be partitioned, which fact was unknown to your exceptants at the time of the appointment of the commission.
“4th. Because the value placed upon the property by the majority of the commissioners is absurdly and ridiculously low and far below its real or market value.
“5th. Because the commissioners who placed the valuation upon the property and who signed the return, did not consider the views of valuation of the two commissioners who refused to sign the returns and completely ignored them in making up their returns.
“6th. Because the property could have been divided into three equal parts without loss or injury to the parties interested.”

The exceptions were set down for hearing, with leave to the parties to take testimony, and the case was finally heard upon the exceptions and the evidence produced by the parties in pursuance of said order. The appellants rely, in this Court, upon the first, second, third and fourth exceptions, and the others are not pressed.

It appears from the evidence that the five commissioners went upon the property and began the survey of the land on the 22nd of December, 1913; that they did not take the oath attached to their return that day because they were unable to secure a Justice of the Peace; that they did not complete *18 'tlie survey of the land on the 22nd, and that they met again on the property for that purpose on the 27th of December, on which day each of the commissioners took the oath before the completion of the survey; that they met again on two other days, and after ascertaining' the l'esult of the survey, the number of acres in the property, etc., endeavored to determine the value of the property; that they were unable to reach an agreement as to the value of the property, with the result that three of the commissioners made and filed their return, in which they state: “That all the commissioners appointed by the said Court met upon the said property according to the notice given and qualified by taking the oath annexed to the commission and proceeded to have the said lands surveyed and laid out and agreed that the said property could not be divided in more than two parts without loss and injury to the parties entitled, but that the commissioners Joseph E. Ogden and John E. Wilburn were unable to agree with the subscribing commissioners as' to the value of. the said property, whereupon, the subscribing commissioners, being a majority of the commissioners appointed as aforesaid, valued the said property according to our skill and judgment as set forth in this their return,” etc.

It therefore appears that no determination, decision or conclusion was made or reached by the commissioners, and no part of the duties imposed upon them was completed until after each of the commissioners had taken the required oath, and that the parties interested had all the protection the oath was intended to secure. While the commission, and the approved .practice, required the commissioners to take the oath before undertaking to discharge their duties, their failure to strictly comply with the requirement is not sufficient, under the circumstances, to vitiate their return. Jordon v. McNulty, 1 4 Col. 280.

In regard to the second ground of the exceptions to the return, it is important to note that it is not alleged that the required notice was not given, and there is no question here as to whether a notice was » fact' given. The single inquiry *19 is, does the return, iu the absence of any suggestion or averment to the contrary, sufficiently show a compliance with the statutory requirement ?

The bill was filed under the provisions of Article 46- of the Code of 1912, and section 34 of that article provides that, “In the execution of this article, and before any proceeding is had by the commissioners, they, or a majority of them, shall cause notice to be given to all the parties concerned by advertisement set up at the door of the court-house of the county or counties or city where the lands may lie, and in such other public places in the county or counties or city as they may direct, at least thirty days previous to their proceeding to execute the said commission.” Section 37 provides that “In all eases where, by this article, any notice or publication is required, a statement made in the proceedings that due notice, according to law, has been given, or to that effect, shall be prima, facie evidence that notice was given according to law.” Section 42 requires the commissioners to make a return of their proceedings to the Court, which may reject or ratify it, and authorizes an appeal from the judgment of the Court, and section 70 declares that, “No proceedings of any commissioners under this article shall be set aside for matter of form.” The manifest object and purpose of these provisions is to provide for a fair arid equitable partition and division of property between heirs at law entitled to it, and while safeguarding their interests, and affording them ample protection from the evil consequences of a substantial departure from the procedure pointed out, there is an express inhibition against setting aside the proceedings of the commissioners for unsubstantial and formal irregularities.

The return of the commissioners in this ease states that after taking the oath, etc., “and having given due notice to the parties of the time and place of our meeting, we did,” etc., and the contention of the appellants is that it does not show that they gave the notice required by section 37. In the case of Brownell v. Town of Greenwich, 22 N. E. 24, the *20 proceedings involved were statutory, and the case was submitted upon an agreement containing, among other things, the stipulation that the judge of Washington County “duly adjudged, determined, and ordered,” etc. In construing the agreement the Court of Appeals of New York said: “The statute authorized the county judge to so 'adjudge and determine’ only in case it had been in all things complied with. Laws 1869, Ch. 907, sec. 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 295, 125 Md. 15, 1915 Md. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basford-v-cranford-md-1915.