Brown v. Tydings

130 A. 337, 149 Md. 22, 1925 Md. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 130 A. 337 (Brown v. Tydings) 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. Tydings, 130 A. 337, 149 Md. 22, 1925 Md. LEXIS 162 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Boxn, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

P. Leslie Hopper was appointed administrator of Sarah Elizabeth Wareham on March 30th, 1916, shortly after her death. On April 17th, 1916, a paper purporting to be a will of tins decedent was offered for probate, a caveat was filed and issues were sent to the circuit court for trial. On *24 June 20th, 1916, P. Leslie Hopper, as administrator, filed an inventory showing assets of the estate in his hands to the total value of $6,112.75, consisting of certain goods and chattels, and certain railroad stocks and bonds.

On September 5th, 1916, the letters of administration previously issued to P. Leslie Hopper were revoked, and he and Millard F. Tydings were appointed administrators pendente lite. P. Leslie Hopper died on February 13th, 1917. The administrators pendente lite filed no further inventory, but an account was filed on their behalf after the appointment of the permanent administrators, showing receipts of income from the 13th of September, 1916, which was shortly after their appointment. Millard F. Tydings filed a final account on his own behalf as surviving administrator pendente lite, in which he charged himself with assets of the decedent coming into his hands at the death of P. Leslie Hopper, the co-administrator pendente lite. Exceptions to this latter account were filed by the permanent administrators.

The first exception objects to the failure of the accountant to-.charge himself with assets received at the time of his original 'appointment as co-administrator with P. Leslie Hopper, rather than “with the estate coming to his hands at the death of P. Leslie Hopper.” This- exception we think not well taken, in view of the fact that there were two accounts, one of both administrators and one of the surviving administrator alone, and both together gave an accounting for the full period of the appellee’s incumbency.

The second and third exceptions object to the allowance of commissions at six per cent.; first, because the appellee failed to file any inventory of the assets which he received from his predecessor in the office, and, second, generally, that the appellee is not entitled to six per cent, commissions. It is argued on behalf of the appellee, as we understand it, that the inventory filed by the first administrator might be taken as sufficient for all the subsequent administrators; but we do not agree in this. Section 211 of article 93 of the *25 Code is broad in terms, requiring, as it does, merely that when letters of administration are issued an inventory shall be filed in order that all persons interested in the personal estate may have an opportunity of knowing the amount of it; and it may be argued logically that the requirement is met by one inventory of all the assets, when there are no subsequent changes of which the persons interested might be informed. But the requirement has not been so construed in practice, so far as we are informed; careful administration would seem to require such a statement by each officer of the assets received from his predecessor, and the special provision in section 224 of article 93, that an administrator who succeeds a collector duly appointed shall either return a new inventory in the place of the collector’s inventory or an acknowledgment in writing that he has received from the collector the article contained in the first inventory or consent to be answerable for the same, seems to contemplate a general practice of filing successive inventories for successive administrators. But, in our opinion, the failure of an administrator to file an inventory “for himself, while it renders him delinquent under the law, subject to revocation of his letters under section 225 of article 93, and not in a position to demand commissions, does not necessarily prevent the allowance of commissions after the estate has been otherwise administered upon fully, and to the approval of the orphans’ court. The allowance or refusal without an inventory would not be an appealable order, in the absence, at- least, of some injury which does not appear to have resulted here. The allowance of commissions is objected to on the further ground of wrongful conduct of the administration by the appellee, and on the ground that there was little work of administration to be done after his appointment. But objections on such grounds as these are referred to the discretion of the orphans’ court, and its decision in the exercise of that discretion is not reviewable by this Court. Article 93, section 5. In re Watts, 108 Md. 698; St. Mary’s Orphan Asylum v. Hankey, 137 Md. 569, 572.

*26 The last and chief ground of exception to the account we find well taken. The appellee drew a total of nineteen hundred dollars-from the funds deposited to the account of the administrators, by four checks to his own personal order, for his own use. One withdrawal, of one hundred dollars, was made after the permanent administrators, now appellants, had been appointed to succeed the appellee, and the other amounts were withdrawn at intervals during the five years preceding. The principal amounts were paid back to the estate, in part before the appointment of the permanent administrators, and in still greater part afterwards. And to those amounts the appellee added interest at the rates of three, three and one-half and four per cent., the rates which, as he testified, would have been allowed by the bank if the funds had remained on deposit. The appellants contend that the appellee should pay the estate at least six per cent., and that he should be required to pay, in addition, any profits which may have been made by the use of the trust funds.

The appellee was summoned to produce at the hearing on the exceptions the checks by which he drew the amounts in question, but testified that he could not find them, and did not keep them with the checks or vouchers that had to do with the estate, that the sums so withdrawn had been deposited in his personal account with either the First National Bank of Havre de Grace or Lanahan’s Bank at Baltimore, or. kept in his safe at his residence. He said also that he did not malee anything out of the withdrawals. After an adjournment of the hearing the appellee testified, that he was still unable 'to find any of the cheeks he was directed to look for, and did not know what had become of them. The appellants requested a further postponement in order that they might produce other witnesses to prove what use the appellee had made of the money he had checked out of the administrators’ bank. account, but this was refused, and the account was finally ratified without change except for the reduction of one per cent, in the rate of commissions.

*27 The refusal of the orphans’ court to grant the appellants time for procuring other witnesses, after the appellee had failed to find the checks sought for, is not appealable. It is an order within the discretion of the trial court. Hill v. Reifsnider, 39 Md. 429.

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Bluebook (online)
130 A. 337, 149 Md. 22, 1925 Md. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-tydings-md-1925.