Boyd v. Boyd

361 A.2d 146, 32 Md. App. 411, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 437
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 28, 1976
Docket1105, September Term, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 361 A.2d 146 (Boyd v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd v. Boyd, 361 A.2d 146, 32 Md. App. 411, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 437 (Md. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Moore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a decree, in a partition proceeding, that a 190-acre farm located in St. Mary’s County be sold pursuant to subtitle BR of the Maryland Rules of Procedure, the court having determined that ¡ the property was not “subject to partition in kind.” Appellant contends that the decree was clearly erroneous and that the court should have appointed Commissioners to investigate the matter of division of the property as prayed in her answer. We disagree and affirm.

I

In his bill of complaint, filed in the Circuit Court for St. Mary’s County, Dr. William D. Boyd alleged that the property (hereinafter described) was not “susceptible to partition among those entitled to an interest therein without material loss and injury to them” and prayed that the property be sold and the proceeds divided. Appellant, Bernadine Boyd, alleged in her answer that the property was susceptible of partition in kind without material loss or damage to the parties in interest and requested “that a Commissioner be appointed under the Rules of this court to investigate same and divide same.” Thereafter, counsel for the respective parties stipulated that testimony be taken by deposition, “said depositions to be submitted to the court as evidence for its consideration as to whether or not the property ... is subject to partition in kind.”

Testifying before a Standing Court Examiner in support of the bill were the appellee, Dr. Boyd, and an expert real estate broker and appraiser, J. Spence Howard, Jr., of St. Mary’s City. Appellant offered her own testimony; that of her son who had operated the farm for some 22 years, and of *413 a neighboring farmer who had once owned the property in question but had not seen it for a number of years.

Some three weeks after the taking of the depositions, in Chambers, in the presence of counsel, the Chancellor delivered an oral opinion in which he recited that the parties “have submitted an issue to me to decide on the basis of depositions taken ...” and stated the following conclusion:

“After reading these depositions the Court is of the opinion that the property can not be divided into two equal shares without loss or injury to the parties.”

In support of that determination the court reviewed the testimony of the witnesses, including “the only expert testimony in the case” and characterized as “rather convincing” the reasons of Mr. Howard (the real estate appraiser) for his opinion that this small farm could not be partitioned in kind without loss or injury to the parties interested.

From the evidence before him the court found the property to be described as follows:

“The property is described as a farm property with a Civil War dwelling and several tobacco barns. There are approximately seventy acres of cleared land, farm land. The rest is in woodland, some scrub timber and some with perhaps some marketable timber. It fronts on two roads, two improved roads, hard surface roads. One road is the Baptist Church Road, the road on which the cropland is situated and all of the cropland approximately is contiguous. That road has a frontage of some four thousand feet running along the eastern boundary of the property constitutes the eastern boundary of the property.
“The other road on the back or west boundary of the property has a frontage of some two thousand feet.”

*414 As to the evidence of the property’s best use, the court stated:

“Mr. Howard states that thé highest and best use of this property is as a farm property and that to divide the seventy acres of crop land would be detrimental to the property as a whole.
“In other words to divide it into two small farms would make property, the two halfs, worth less than the whole property as a farm.”

Referring to the testimony of the appellant and her witnesses, the trial court observed:

“The defendant, and her two witnesses, her son and Mr. Hill, who owns the adjoining farm and is a farmer, none of whom are experts in the field, merely give their unsupported opinion that the property is susceptible of division in kind into two equal portions, but none of them suggest how that division could be made.
“The defendant indicates that she would desire a part of the crop land as well as her share of woodland, although she is willing for the plaintiff to have the dwelling. But to attempt to make this type of division the Court feels would cut the property up into two halfs [sic] which would not be worth as much, assessing value of the two halfs, as much as the property is now worth in its entirety, a going farm operation.”

Pronouncing his decision, the Chancellor stated:

“Therefore, it is the decision of this Court that the commissioners — that there is no necessity for the appointment of commissioners in this case because there is no evidence to convince the Court that there is a reasonable probability that the property could be divided into two equal shares and that therefore the plaintiff has met the burden of proving that property is not susceptible to partition *415 in kind and that the Court will sign a decree for the sale of the property.” (Emphasis added.)

Appellant contends that there was a “possibility that the tract could have been partitioned in kind without loss or injury [and] the Chancellor should have appointed Commissioners to ascertain whether the land was susceptible of partition.” This view of the substantive and procedural law relating to partition in Maryland is erroneous.

II

Partition has been defined as “[the] dividing of lands held by joint tenants, coparceners, or tenants in common, into distinct portions, so that they may hold them in severalty.” Black’s Law Dictionary. At common law, the only mode of partition of land was partition in kind. The rigors of this rule have been relieved by statute, Real Property Article, § 14-107 and by subtitle BJ of the Maryland Rules of Procedure. 1 Subsection (a) of the statute, quoted below, invests the Circuit Courts with jurisdiction in partition and provides for a sale in lieu of partition:

“(a) Decree of partition. — A circuit court may decree a partition of any property, either legal or equitable, on the bill or petition of any joint tenant, tenant in common, parcener, or concurrent owner, whether claiming by descent or purchase. If it appears that the property cannot he divided without loss or injury to the parties interested, the court may decree its sale and divide the money resulting from the sale among the parties according to their respective rights. The right to a partition or sale includes the right to a partition or sale of any separate lot or tract of property, and the bill or petition need not pray for a partition of all the lots or tracts.” (Emphasis added.)

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Related

Satchell v. State
458 A.2d 853 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1983)
Balderston v. Balderston
388 A.2d 183 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
361 A.2d 146, 32 Md. App. 411, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-boyd-mdctspecapp-1976.