Brown v. Trustees of M.E. Church

28 A.2d 582, 181 Md. 80, 1942 Md. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 29, 1942
Docket[No. 15, October Term, 1942.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 28 A.2d 582 (Brown v. Trustees of M.E. Church) 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
Brown v. Trustees of M.E. Church, 28 A.2d 582, 181 Md. 80, 1942 Md. LEXIS 211 (Md. 1942).

Opinion

Johnson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a declaratory decree of the Circuit Court for Kent County, construing the codicil and will of Ruth Anna Cahall, the former executed December 1, 1927, and the latter executed March 11, 1931. Ruth Anna Cahall died February 14, 1933. The portions of the instruments sought to be construed are as follows:

Home (1)
“To Jacob F. Thompson and his wife Nettie I bequeath the property where I now live to be held by them during their natural lives.
Dbl. Dw. (1)
Dbl. Dw. (2)
“I will that my executor take charge of the double dwelling next door to my home, pay insurance, taxes, make all necessary repairs, and improvements and pay the remainder of the income annually to my brother Quinton Moody. He shall take from my estate, five hundred dollars, for improvements, or other expenses. At the death of my brother Quinton Moody, the proceeds of the double dwelling shall be paid to the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Chestertown to be held as a rebuilding fund, for no other purpose. * * *
*83 Home (2)
“At the death of Jacob F. Thompson and his wife Nettie, I will that the proceeds of the home where I now live be used for the following purposes, To Bond and Mowbray Chapel, each five hundred dollars, two thousand to the Emergency Hospital at Easton, Md. Two thousand dollars to the Red Cross, and the remainder to be held in trust to assist in establishing a Home for the aged in Chester-town, Maryland.”
“Codicil
Dbl. Dw. (1C)
Dbl. Dw. (2C)
“As my brother T. Q. Moody has passed away all of his claim in my estate becomes paid and I bequeath to Jacob F. Thompson and his wife Nettie the double dwelling next door to my home, while they live, at their death, I will it to be divided in the following manner, to the Volunteer Fire Company of Chestertown eight hundred dollars, to a home for the aged, and a hospital for Chestertown each five hundred dollars.
Home (C)
“The remainder of the proceeds I bequeath to the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church, in Chestertown to assist in paying for the remodeling the church but my home to he held in trust to be used for a rebuilding fund for the said church to be used for no other purpose whatever.”

(1) is used to indicate life tenancies; (2) is used to indicate remainders; (C) indicates codicil provisions. The shorthand terms used in the left margin facilitate discussion of the provisions.

The trustees of the M. E. Church in Chestertown, Jacob Thompson as surviving executor of the will and testament, and Jacob Thompson and Nettie Thompson, *84 individually, joined in a bill of complaint praying construction of the will and codicil as respects three questions :

(a) Whether Home (C) revokes Home (2) ;

(b) Whether Home (C) revokes Home (2) and Home

(1) ;

(c) Whether Dbl. Dw. (2C) revokes Dbl. Dw. (2).

Joined as respondents were the trustees of Bond Chapel, trustees of Mowbray Chapel, Kent and Queen Anne’s County Hospital, Emergency Hospital of Easton, Maryland, the American Red Cross, and the Volunteer Fire Company of Chestertown, Maryland; these respondents filed various answers and demurrers. On January 22, 1942, the petition was amended to show a deed dated November 5, 1941, by which Jacob Thompson and his wife Nettie purported to quitclaim to the trustees of M. E. Church of Chestertown all their interest in certain property which was evidently the “home” property of the testatrix. The propriety of the plaintiffs as parties having been raised by pleadings of respondents, the chancellor decreed that the life tenants and executor were proper parties, and further decreed that the final clause of the codicil Home (C) revoked not only Home (2) but also Home (1). The plaintiffs’ third question was evidently also answered in the affirmative.

The appellants raise seven questions in their brief:

(1) Do the facts alleged constitute a proper case for declaratory relief ?

(2) Is the suit prematurely brought?

(3) Since the suit is premature, are the Thompsons proper parties?

(4) Does the Orphans’ Court jurisdiction prevail over that of equity?

(5) Do the executors have authority, under the will and codicil, to sell the home or double dwelling?

(6) Does Home (C) revoke Home (2) ?

(7) Does Home (C) revoke Home (2) and Home (1) ?

It seems thus not to be seriously contended that Dbl. Dw. (2C) does not revoke Dbl. Dw. (2) ; the codicil *85 distribution of the proceeds of the double dwelling seems complete and thus revokes by repugnancy the will distribution of those proceeds. The only substantive question remaining is thus the effect of the clause designated Home (C), “but my home to be held in trust to be used for a rebuilding fund for the said church. * * It is obvious that there are three possible interpretations of the effect of this provision:

1. It revokes nothing, but the final bequest of Home (2), because it merely refers to the “remainder of the proceeds” of the home, the quoted phrase being implied from the preceding clause. (The appellants take this position.)

2. It revokes Home (2) entirely but has no effect on Home (1), because it refers to “proceeds” of the home, by implication, has no reference or repugnancy to Home (1), and is thus to be effective at the termination of the Thompsons’ life tenancy.

3. It revokes Home (2) and it revokes Home (1), because, no future time being mentioned, and the words being clear in the present tense, the home is “to be held in trust” from the effective date of the will and this is inconsistent with Home (2) and Home (1). (The chancellor took this position.)

Propriety of the suit, jurisdiction, and propriety of the plaintiffs as parties, may now be briefly considered. Article 31A of the Maryland Code, 1939, ought to be construed as intended to have been an enactment of the Law of Declaratory Judgments as the Uniform Act was generally construed at the time of its adoption by our Legislature; the words of the Act itself urge uniform construction of its provisions. It is true, however, that equitable construction of wills is ancient law and practice, when “special circumstances” appear, and the decisions of our court before the adoption of the Uniform Act are by no means lacking now in authority. The principles of declaratory relief will be found substantially the same under the Act of 1939, Chap. 294, as under the Act of 1888, Chap. 478, Code, 1939, Art. 16, Sec. 29.

*86

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Bluebook (online)
28 A.2d 582, 181 Md. 80, 1942 Md. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-trustees-of-me-church-md-1942.