Blum v. Fox

197 A. 117, 173 Md. 527
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 1938
Docket[No. 82, October Term, 1937.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 A. 117 (Blum v. Fox) 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
Blum v. Fox, 197 A. 117, 173 Md. 527 (Md. 1938).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case Jacob Blum was appointed on November 10th, 1936, the administrator of the personal estate of Augusta A. Kanauff. Blum acted with the apparent *530 assent of the two brothers of the intestate, and in ignorance, as he asserts, of the existence of intestate’s illegitimate son, Harrison E. Fox. He qualified and proceeded with the administration of the estate and filed inventories, but on January 8th, 1937, the son appeared in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City and asked that the letters previously granted to Blum be revoked. After a hearing, the Orphans’ Court revoked the letters of administration which had been issued to Blum, and appointed the son and his attorney the administrators. As was his duty, the first administrator stated an account of his administration, and filed it with the Orphans’ Court on June 2nd, 1937. He charged himself with the personal estate which had come into his possession. It consisted of money in bank ($6,212.92), and goods and chattels appraised at $36.60. Against this aggrégate of $6,249.52 the administrator craved an allowance for fees and expenses in connection with his administration and the publication of the notice to creditors and the funeral expenses aggregating in all $372.30. An account ($50) for medical attention to the intestate and the bill of Herveine Hudson in the sum of $3,000 for services to the intestate had been paid by the accountant and were asked to be allowed. After these amounts had been deducted, the residue of $2,827.22 was distributed to Harrison E. Fox and C. Arthur Eby, the superseding administrators, who promptly excepted to the account and particularly to the payment of $3,000 to Herveine Hudson for services. Harrison E. Fox united in these exceptions as the sole next of kin of the intestate. The items for the costs and expenses of administration and the account for the funeral are proper allowances, and no objection is directed against them. Nor is there specific objection made to the doctor’s bill, and it was not disallowed. So, the controversy here arises from the allowance claimed for the payment made to Herveine Hudson.

Since the Orphans’ Court has jurisdiction in the settlement of accounts of administrators and executors, the *531 propriety of the credit claimed is a matter for its decision. Code Pub. Gen. Laws, art. 93, sec. 256.

The exceptants base their objections to the claim on the ground that it is in payment of an unliquidated claim for alleged services to the decedent which was without merit and was not due and owing to the claimant, who, they charge, is a client of the original administrator. They further charge that the payment was made after the Orphans’ Court had declined to approve the claim; and, if the payment was by way of compromise, that the Orphans’ Court did not authorize it, as would have been required by section 270 of article 93 of the Code. In further aspersion of the good faith of the transaction, it is stated that the son neither knew of the payment nor authorized nor approved it.

The verified answer to these exceptions is a denial of the material allegations which reflect upon the respondent and accountant. In addition, he stated that he had been requested, in October, 1936, by the intestate to prepare a will whereby all her property was to be given to Herveine Hudson, who had befriended her for a number of years, nursed her during illness, and provided her with shelter and home, so that her services were of much greater value than the entire estate of the decedent was worth. The intestate died on November 2nd, before the will was prepared. Under the impression that her two brothers were the only next of kin, the respondent saw the older brother, and informed him of his sister’s intention, with the result that he made an assignment of his interest in his sister’s estate to Herveine Hudson. The Orphans’ Court was advised of the older brother’s act, and issued a citation to the other brother, to whom the respondent also wrote. The respondent was appointed administrator, and thereafter Herveine Hudson presented her claim for services. The answer further sets forth that, after discussing with others the value of the services and after advising the Orphans’ Court, the respondent, who had first satisfied himself in regard to the value *532 of the services rendered, paid to Herveine Hudson the sum of $3,0.00 in satisfaction of the account.

Disregarding the non-essential features of the procedure, the substantial questions on the record were raised by the respondent’s petition that there might be framed and transmitted to a court of law for trial by jury an issue in this form: Was the amount of $3,0.00 rightfully due and owing to the said Herveine Hudson as claimed for services rendered to the deceased, Augusta A. Kanauff ? The present administrators and the son objected to the granting of an issue of any form, and the decision of the Orphans’ Court was that there was no occasion for such issues, but that the respondent, Jacob Blum, assume the burden of proof, and that the case be opened by the presentation by him of testimony to establish the correctness of said account, and particularly the justness of said claim of Herveine E. Hudson, and the propriety, legality, and good faith of his payment as administrator. The respondent stood on > his demand for an issue for transmission to a court of law for trial By jury, and the Orphans’ Court, because of this refusal, adjudged him in default and passed an order whereby the payment of the claim of $3,000 to Herveine E. Hudson was disallowed, and the exception to its inclusión in the administration account was sustained, and the said respondent was commanded to pay back to said estate the sum of $3,000, and to state an administration account in conformity with this order within fifteen days, and, after the approval by the Orphans’ Court of such account, to deliver and pay over to the present administrators all assets belonging to the estate of said decedent (less disbursements in said account allowed), which have not been properly disbursed by him as shown by said account and which have not theretofore been delivered or paid by him to said administrators. The appeal of the respondent is from this order.

It will be observed that this order contemplates a new account and is not final except in reference to the rejection of the Hudson claim, and to the order that the pay *533 ment made on its account be paid to the new administrators. The questions thus presented relate entirely to the propriety of the discharge of one claim. For their solution it will be necessary to recall the duties and powers of the original administrator.

All acts done by the executor or administrator in conformity with law, before any actual or implied revocation of his letters, are valid and effectual. Code, art. 93, sec. 37, and section 243, as amended by Laws 1931, ch. 437; Parker v. Leighton, 131 Md. 407, 418, 102 A. 552. So, when letters of administration are revoked, the administrator affected must forthwith render an account, and the Orphans’ Court has jurisdiction to determine what assets shall be chargeable against the administrator and what credits shall be given and 'allowances made. Code, art. 93, secs. 256, 245, and section 243, as amended by Laws 1931, ch. 437; Kealhofer v. Emmert, 79 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
197 A. 117, 173 Md. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blum-v-fox-md-1938.