Brinsfield v. Mather

171 A. 357, 166 Md. 473
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1934
Docket[No. 26, January Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 171 A. 357 (Brinsfield v. Mather) 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
Brinsfield v. Mather, 171 A. 357, 166 Md. 473 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The will of Zero' H. Brinsfield was admitted to' probate July 1st, 1932, in the Orphans’ Court of Dorchester County. Dnder it William D’Arcy Brinsfield, his son, and Viola Brinsfield, his adopted daughter, were appointed executors, and excused from giving bond, and by it the testator undertook tO' dispose of an estate valued at approximately $160,-000. The principal beneficiaries under the will were William D’Arcy Brinsfield, to whom he bequeathed $75,000, Viola Brinsfield, to whom he bequeathed $40,000, the Eastern Shore Trust Company, to which he bequeathed $20,000 in trust for the use of his brother William Winfield Brinsfield for his life, and for the use of the wife of William Winfield Brinsfield should she survive him, and at the death of both for the grandchildren of the brother then living, and $5,000 for the use of William Winfield' Brinsfield for his life and *475 then over to- certain remaindermen, and Florence Vincent, Lis niece, to whom he bequeathed $5,000. There were other legacies aggregating in amount $2,000.

The penalty of the testamentary bond was fixed at $5,000, and in due course William D’Arcy Brinsfield and Viola Brinsfield filed an approved bond in that amount, qualified as executors, and proceeded with the administration of the estate.

Under the will, there were to be allowed no commissions, but on October 18tb, 1932, the executors filed a petition setting out in some detail the service's which they had rendered in the course of their administration, and alleging that, as a result of great changes in economic and financial conditions which had occurred since the date of the will, the administration of the estate was attended by burdens and difficulties which required of them “time, effort and expense” not foreseen by the testator, and that, as their services benefited the whole estate-, they should be compensated for such unforeseen time-, effort, and expense. Upon that petition an order was passed allowing the executors a sum not to exceed $3,000 for “traveling, contingent and incidental expense” in connection with, and occasioned by, the performance of their duties. Later, upon the petition of Florence Vincent Mather, born Vincent, that order was rescinded.

On June 1st, 1932, Mrs. Mather filed another petition alleging that William D’Arcy Brinsfield was absent- from the state from November, 1932, to May 19th, 1933, residing in the “distant state- of Florida,” and that Miss Brinsfield was absent from Dorchester County for about the same length of time, and that, because of their absence “and other acts and omissions,” which are not otherwise described, the assets of the estate were “in danger of being lost, wasted, or misappropriated,” and that the bond of $5,000 was inadequate. The bond was accordingly increased to $30,000.

On or prior to August loth, 1933, having theretofore filed a first administration account, the executors filed a full detailed “Report and Analysis” of the estate which was also- *476 in effect an account. On the same day they filed a petition praying leave to distribute in cash or in kind fifty per cent, of the estate, and to distribute to- Mrs. Mather fifty per cent, of her legacy in cash, less the taxes thereon. On the same day Mrs. Mather filed another petition in the estate in which she prayed that the executors be required to file a second administration account, and on the same day the same court which had already, according to the docket entries, approved and accepted the “Report and Analysis,” and authorized a fifty per eent. distribution of the estate, ordered a second administration account.

In the several petitions filed by Mrs. Mather she was ■represented by Thomas W. Simmons, Esq., a member of the bar of Dorchester County, and on September 13th, 1933, Simmons filed a petition asking to be allowed out of the funds of the estate a counsel fee, and upon that petition, on September 15th, 1933, an order was passed “as of September 13th, 1933,” allowing him $800. From that order, on October 11th, 1933, this appeal was taken, and on ETovember 18th, 1933, the record was filed in this court, alid in this court appellee has moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the record was not transmitted within thirty days from the appeal.

In support of the motion, appellee filed the affidavits of the register of wills and two deputies in his office, which were to the effect that, notwithstanding repeated urging by the register of wills and his deputies, counsel for appellants did not finally inform them of what papers he wanted included in the transcript’until ETovember 16th, 1933, and that, after receiving that information, notwithstanding that the “office force” of the register exercised all reasonable diligence, they were unable to complete and transmit the transcript until Hovember 17th, 1933.

Those three affidavits are flatly contradicted by an affidavit of LeRoy L. Wallace, Esq., attorney for the appellants, in which he states that on September 6th, 1933, he submitted to the register of wills a complete list of the papers he wanted *477 included in the record, and that on Hovember 7th, 1933, he left with the register of wills exact copies of those papers, which copies the register agreed to. use, that he had no knowledge that any other papers were to be included in the record, but thought that it had been transmitted within the time prescribed by the statute, that he had never been shown the completed transcript, but that an examination of it disclosed that it contained papers not ordered by him, and that if also contained the office copies furnished by him to the register. '

Code, art, 5, sec. 66, and Bule 15, Court of Appeals of Maryland, provide that, in appeals, from orphans’ courts, a transcript of the record of the proceedings shall be made up and transmitted to. this court under the hand and seal of the register of wills within thirty days after the appeal prayed. That requirement is imperative, and may not be waived (Powell v. Curtis, 78 Md. 500, 28 A. 390; Marx, Excr., v. Reinecke, 142 Md. 344, 120 A. 876), but, since the purpose of the rule is to- avoid delay in the prosecution of appeals, and not to unjustly burden or restrict the right of appeal, an appeal will not be dismissed because the record was not. transmitted within the time limited by the statute, where it affirmatively appears that the delay was due to the fault of the clerk or the register (Balto. & O. R. Co. v. State, use of Allison, 62 Md. 479; Lewin v. Simpson, 38 Md. 468; O’Hern v. Browning, 33 Md. 471; Andrews v. Poe, 30 Md 485; Hooper v. Baltimore & Yorktown Turnpike Road, 34 Md. 521; Bowie v. Neale, 41 Md. 124; Biddison v. Mosely, 57 Md. 89; Hardt v. Birely, 72 Md. 134, 19 A. 606; Bixler v. Sellman, 77 Md. 494, 27 A. 137; Baldwin v. Mitchell, 86 Md. 379, 38 A. 775; Brown v. Ravenscraft, 88 Md. 216, 44 A. 170; Horpel v. Hawkins, 115 Md. 160, 80 A. 842; Koenig v. Ward, 104 Md. 564, 65 A. 345; Whittington v. Crisfield, 121 Md. 395, 88 A. 232), or the appellee (Sample v. Motter, 5 Md. 368; Marx, Excr., v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Caminetti v. Edward Brown & Sons
144 P.2d 570 (California Supreme Court, 1943)
Forsythe v. Baker
23 A.2d 36 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 A. 357, 166 Md. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinsfield-v-mather-md-1934.