Boyce v. Kelso Home

68 A. 550, 107 Md. 190, 1908 Md. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 A. 550 (Boyce v. Kelso Home) 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
Boyce v. Kelso Home, 68 A. 550, 107 Md. 190, 1908 Md. LEXIS 12 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Worthington, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

James Boyce, of Baltimore County, died on the 16th day of August, in the year 1891, leaving a last will and testament, which was, after the death of the said decedent, admitted to probate by the Orphans’ Court of said Baltimore County.

By the provisions of this will the testator, after directing the payment of his just debts and funeral charges, gave and bequeathed the sum of $5,000 to each of four charitable institutions, as follows:

To the Kelso Home for Orphans of the Methodist Episco *192 pal Church, $5,000, to the Home of the Aged of the Methodist Episcopal Church, $5,000, to the Union Protestant Infirmary of the City of Baltimore, $5,000, and to the Home of the Friendless, $5,000. After some other bequests which do not concern this controversy, he bequeathed the sum of $2,000 to his son, William Wheeler Boyce, in trust for the use under certain conditions, of his grandson, Samuel Wheeler Boyce Hiss.

He directed that all these bequests be paid free of collateral inheritance or other tax, which taxes he requested should be paid from his estate. He then directed that all the rest, residue and remainder of his estate, real and personal, situate in the State 'of Maryland and in other States, should be divided by his executors into six parts. * * * “When said division shall have been made by my executors, I give, devise and bequeath one of such shares, to be designated by my executors, to my son, James Boyce, and another to my son, John A. Boyce, and another to my son, William Wheeler Boyce, all in their own right absolutely, respectively;” and he then gave, devised and bequeathed the other three shares to his three sons aforesaid, and to the survivor of them, in trust for the benefit of his three daughters: Amelia Stopford, Mary Elizabeth Post and Catharine Harrison, for and during their natural lives, respectively, etc.” The last clause of the will was as follows: “Lastly: I constitute and appoint said three sons and my counsel, William A. Fisher, of Baltimore City, to be the executors of this my last will and testament, and I confer on my executors power to complete any contract into which I may have entered, and to make sale without application to any Orphans’ or other Court, of my real estate, or to lease the same for terms of ninety-nine years, renewable forever, or for shorter terms, and to sell the reversions and ground rents, and to expend such sums as they may deem expedient in opening roads or other development of my real estate with a view to rendering it more saleable, and to make such sales and leases, not only for the purpose of paying my debts but to enable them to make the division into six parts *193 as hereinbefore provided; it being contemplated by me that they will sell my real estate though not with undue haste.”

Mr. Boyce died leaving a large estate consisting of both real and personal property, and owing mortgage and other debts to a considerable amount. In January, 1892, the executors named in the will, except his son, James Boyce, Jr., who renounced, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, through ex-Judge William A. Fisher, as their solicitor, asking the Court to pass a decree construing the meaning and effect of all the provisions of said last will and testament, and empowering and directing the executors to administer the entire estate under the supervision and direction of that Court. In the twelfth paragraph of the bill the executors suggested-to the Court what they were advised was the true construction of the provisions of the said last will, with reference to the sale of the real estate of said testator; their advice being,as they alleged, that such sale by the executors was mandatory and left them no discretion as to the necessity or propriety of selling said realty but only as to the time of doing so, and that the provisions of said will operated from the time of the death of the testator a conversion of all said realty into personalty and that the intention of the testator was to create a mixed fund composed of his personalty and of his realty, out of which his debts and pecuniary legacies were first to be paid; with the further intention that the residue of said fund should be divided by his executors among his residuary legatees as in said will was directed.

Consent answers were filed to this bill by several of the adult parties in interest including John A. Boyce, William W. Boyce, Amelia Stopford, Mary E. Post and others, some of them acceding to the construction of the will suggested in the bill of complaint and others submitting the proper construction thereof to the judgment of the Court.

Just what decree the Circuit Court passed pursuant to this bill and the answer thereto, does not appear by the record; but whatever it was it seems to have been acquiesced in by all the adult parties until the year 1905. On the 14th day of *194 November, in that year, in pursuance of a previous order .of Court, the auditor made a special report, in which he mentioned sixteen audits as having been already passed in the case, none of which, as by order of Court was directed, were to be reopened- In these audits the proceeds of the sale of both real and personal property had been used together as a blended or mixed fund, without question, so far as appears by the record. ,

.. On February 13th, 1906, a supplemental bill of complaint >was filed by William W. Boyce, the surviving executor and D. K. Este Fisher, who was substituted in place of ex-Judge .Fisher, deceased, setting forth that the estate had already been largely administered under the direction and supervision .of the Court; all the debts having been paid and the only .remaining assets to be disposed of being the sum of $64,577.76 .and about 200 acres of land in Baltimore county; as to the .administration of which the executors asked the further direction of the Court. The supplemental bill further stated that the four legacies to charities and the trust fund of $2,000 for the benefit of the testator’s grandson, Samuel Whitfield Boyce Hiss, had not been paid because it was claimed on the part pf the residuary legatees, that these charitable legacies and the ftrust fund, were payable only out of the proceeds of the sale <of the personal estate of the decedent which as alleged was already exhausted, and that consequently these legacies had failed; and that on the other hand it was claimed on the part of the charitable legatees and the said Samuel W. B. Hiss, -that their legacies were chargeable to the whole blended fund arising from the sale of both real and personal property, and .that therefore their legacies were payable out of the fund in •the hands of the executors, before any distribution could be made to the residuary legatees.

The answers to the supplemental bill are printed in the record but no testimdny, if any was taken, appears therein.

The Court below by its decree construed the provisions of the will substantially in accordance with the views expressed in the twelfth paragraph of the original bill of complaint, above *195 referred to. That is the proceeds of the sale of both real and personal property were considered a blended fund for the payments of debts and legacies.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 550, 107 Md. 190, 1908 Md. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyce-v-kelso-home-md-1908.