Brandau v. McCurley

92 A. 540, 124 Md. 243, 1914 Md. LEXIS 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 92 A. 540 (Brandau v. McCurley) 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
Brandau v. McCurley, 92 A. 540, 124 Md. 243, 1914 Md. LEXIS 28 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 14th of September, 1898, Sophia McCurley and her husband, Henry C. McCurley, executed a deed to said Henry O. McCurley, Trustee, by which they undertook to convey certain lots of ground situated in Baltimore City on the following trusts:

“In Trust and confidence- nevertheless to, for and upon the uses and purposes and- subject to the powers hereinafter expressed concerning the same, that is to *245 say, in trust to suffer and permit the said Sophia McCurley, wife of the said Henry C. McCurley, for and during the term of her natural life, to hold and enjoy the above mentioned property and premises and to collect and receive the rents, issues and income thereof, and the same to apply to her sole and separate use without being subject to the power, disposal or control of her present husband and without being bound for Ms debts, contracts or agreements, with power to tlie said Sophia McCurley as if she were a feme sole without the consent of her said trustee or successor to sell, dispose of, and assign absolutely or otherwise the ground and premises above described or to bequeath the same to such person or persons as she may think proper by Last Will and Testament or writing in the nature thereof, and from and immediately after the death of the said Sophia McCurley, in case no sale or other disposition thereof shall have been made by her under the powers hereinbefore expressed, and in so far as no such disposition thereof shall have been made by her, then this trust to cease and the lots of ground and premises hereinbefore described to become the absolute property of the said ILenry C. McCurley, his heirs, personal representatives and assigns absolutely.”

Sophia McCurley died without making any disposition of the two lots of ground involved in this ease which were held by her in fee simple. The appellants tiled a bill in equity which, as amended, is against Henry O. McCurley, trustee, and Henry C. McCurley, individually, and against Sophia S. Hightrnan, a first cousin of Sophia McCurley, and the unknown heirs of other relatives named in the amended bill.

The bill alleges that the property descended to the plaintiffs as the next of kin and heirs at law of Sophia McCurley, subject to the dowable interest therein of her husband, Henry O. McCurley, of oneAhird for life as to said fee-simple property.

*246 It further alleges that the deed of trust imposed no duties upon Henry O. McOurley, trustee, and the statute of uses at once executed the trust, and therefore Stophia McOurley took an absolute fee simple estate; that the legal estate and beneficial interest were both vested in her and said property became immediately vested in her upon the execution of the deed; that the trust was a passive trust; there being no active duties for the trustee to perform and therefore the deed is void, as the statute of uses immediately executed the legal estate in her and she took an absolute fee-simple title, and that it cannot be considered a testamentary disposition of property.

The bill prayed (a) That the deed be construed, and (&■) That the plaintiffs be declared the next of kin .and heirs at law of Sophia McOurley, and as such entitled to the fee simple properties described, subject to- the dowable interest of Henry O. McOurley.

The question first to be -considered is whether the deed was void because it was executed by the husband and wife to the husband in trust.

As it was executed before the Act of 1898, Oh. 457, took effect (January 1, 1899) it must be construed with reference to the law as it existed prior to that time.

Mrs. McOurley acquired the properties in controversy after the Code of 1860 was adopted. Article 45, section 2, of that Code, provided that property acquired or owned by a married woman according to section 1, “she shall hold for her separate use, with power of devising the same as fully as if she were a feme sole, or she may convey the same by a joint deed with her husband.” Mrs. McOurley did acquire these properties according to the provisions of section 1. Then section 11 provided that “Any married woman may convey her real or personal property if her husband join in the conveyance, etc.”

It was determined by this Court that a married woman could not convey property so acquired to her husband by a deed made to him by her alone. In Gebb v. Rose, 40 Md. *247 387, it was said, “The property was not conveyed to the separate use of the grantee, but was conveyed to her generally, and consequently the marital rights of her husband attached. Holding the estate by this title, Mrs.'Wollet, while under the disability of coverture, on the 18th of October, 1871, attempted to convey the property directly to her husband, in trust; 'without his joinder in the grant. This, it is clear, she was incompetent to do, by any conveyance executed by her alone.”

In that opinion Judge Auvey made a statement, upon which the appellants rely as conclusive of the question. He said: “The only mode by which a feme covert can convey her estate, not held to her separate use, to her husband, except in the execution of a power, is by means of a conveyance to a third person for his use, he joining with his wife in the deed. That this may be dono has been expressly decided in Thatcher v. Omans, 3 Pickering, 521.”

If it was intended to apply that statement to a deed in which the property was conveyed to the husband as trustee, then what was said in the opinion just prior to that statement was useless. The inference to be drawn from what is said in the quotation first above made is that if the husband had united in the grant the deed would have been sufficient, for after saying that the method prescribed for the conveyance of the property of a feme covert by Article 45, section 11, is by joint deed of herself and husband, Judge Advey went on to say: “And as the statutory mode of conveyance was not observed, the deed is void, and, therefore, without any effect whatever.” That was a deed to the husband in trust, and it was distinctly said it "was void because the husband did not join in the grant. That was the real question before the Court. ■

The statement was not altogether accurate where it said, “The only mode by which a feme covert can convey her estate, not held to her separate use, to her husband, except in the execution of a power, is by means of a conveyance to. a third *248 person for his use, he joining with his wife in the deed.” That is the mode which was adopted in Thatcher v. Omams, 3 Pick. 521, referred to by Judge Alvey, but as that case and some of our decisions have decided, they can convey to a third person for the express purpose of having the third person convey to the husband and wife or to the husband alone, on terms agreed upon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 A. 540, 124 Md. 243, 1914 Md. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandau-v-mccurley-md-1914.