Campbell v. State ex rel. Dittman

62 Md. 1, 1884 Md. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 26, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Md. 1 (Campbell v. State ex rel. Dittman) 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
Campbell v. State ex rel. Dittman, 62 Md. 1, 1884 Md. LEXIS 57 (Md. 1884).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The essential facts of this case will be found in the report of the case on the former appeal, in. 57 Md., 486. After the remand the declaration was amended by adding the averment, that the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore County had ordered the administrator de bonis non to sue the bond of the executor whose letters were revoked. To this amended declaration the defendants pleaded, first, performance, and secondly, that the sale of the Hollins street property, which was reported, was never in fact made to Mrs. Mitchell, who was one of the distributees of the estate and one of the parties in remainder, hut was only colorable; that no money was paid, and the whole thing was prepared and arranged to hold the executor’s bond of Susan Gregory liable. Issue was joined and trial proceeded to judgment. Under the first exception the ground of appeal is the rejection of evidence intended to support the second plea, which was in substance an allegation of false and fraudulent sale and accounting. The defendants (appellants) offered to prove by Mrs. Mitchell, the person to whom the report states the property was sold, and to whom the same was conveyed, that she did not buy it; and that so far as she knows no consideration was paid the executors. This was the whole offer, and it does not appear it was to he accompanied with or followed by any other proof. To see that the Court was right in its rejection, it is necessary to recur to some of the facts it was intended to answer, and from the effects of which it was expected thereby to escape. The defendants had offered the executors’ bond, on which defendants were sureties; the appraisement, including Hollins street property as part of the estate, the sale thereof by order of the Orphans’ Court, the report whereof stated that the same was sold for thirty-six hundred dollars, being twenty-three dollars over the appraisement; [4]*4the assent in writing of the executors and Mrs. Mitchell, the purchaser, to its immediate ratification; the order of the Orphans’ Court ratifying the sale, which order recited that the same was passed in pursuance of the written consent of the executors and purchaser. In addition to all this the plaintiff had offered the account of Susan Gregory, surviving executrix, (the other executor having died,) wherein she charges herself with the proceeds of sale of this Hollins street property at thirty-six hundred dollars, claimed and secured allowances for disbursements and stated the balance for distribution. This was under oath and was passed by the Court. To this was also added the deed of the executors for the property to Mrs. Mitchell, the offered witness. From all this it is clear, that the Hollins street property was a part of the estate, duly appraised ; that by order of the proper Court it was sold; and that the sale was ratified, and the property conveyed away so that it no longer existed as part of the estate, and could not he reached as such unless the sale could he and was set aside by a competent tribunal, and the property restored to the estate. ■ The proceeds of the sale were not forthcoming on the order of the Court, because the surviving executrix said the co-executor who managed the business was dead and she could not respond. Here was an undeniable devastavit, although the testimony offered be all true. It was a wasting of the estate, in violation of duty, for the discharge of which faithfully the defendants were sureties. The administrator d. h. n. c. t. a. representing distributees and remainder-men sues therefor, and the contention in defence is that because the money was not received from Mrs. Mitchell, the purchaser, and she will so say, hut without the payment thereof they conveyed the property to her, and by that means enabled her to convey to innocent purchasers, therefore the securities are not liable in this suit. In other words the very impropriety of conduct, against which they stipulated in the bond, is urged as a reason why they should not he made [5]*5answerable in this suit at law. This cannot be the law and ought not to be. If that contention were sustained, the bond would be no protection against misconduct, but would be a mere delusion and a snare. It has long been the law of this State, by uniform decision, that accounts of executors and administrators are only prima facie, and mistakes and errors may be corrected in a Court of law or equity; but a mistake or error must be conclusively shown in a legitimate way. Admissions of executors and administrators may also be explained, and some may be proved to be collusive; but the offered proof does not establish such a collusion as was intended to be saved by the Court’s language in the case of Ruby and Longnecker vs. The State, use of Vernay, 55 Md., 484. If there were no such property as that which appears to have been sold, and the whole thing was a fabrication of assets having no existence ; or if the offer was to show that the property was reported to be sold for a sum in excess of its actual value, and which excess was not paid, the case would present a different attitude; and there can be little doubt that to the extent of the excess of - consideration, beyond the appraised value, the defendants would be entitled to abatement, if it appeared that there was a pretended sale only, for such excessive sum. The proof offered, however, was not tendered for the purpose of showing a pretended sale beyond actual value ; nor does it tend to prove any thing on the subject of value. It is offered to show there was no sale at all; that it was all fraudulent and the appellants are not bound by it. The sale was authorized by a competent tribunal; it has been adjudged to have been effected by the same tribunal, which has ratified and confirmed it. This proof attacks it collaterally, and even if the jury in this case should think the contention well founded, their verdict would not set the deed aside. If there be ground for equitable interference, the appellants must seek it. They are not entitled to defeat this action [6]*6by such proof and drive the appellee into a Court of equity, to assert a claim which is uncertain, and may or may not be held good. Having been ordered to sell and having reported a sale to the Court, which it has approved, it was the duty of the surviving executrix to have the money in Court subject to the Court's order; and if she did not obey the order, the former decision of the cause establishes her liability and that of her securities. They must be liable for her frauds as well as defaults, if either results in prejudice to parties entitled to complain. It is proper to add, that the witness by whom the offer of proof was made, appears by the record to have signed an agreement in the presence of an attesting witness, assenting to the ratification of the very sale which she is offered to impeach, by saying she did not buy and did not pay the purchase money. It does not appear that she was expected to say her signature was a forgery; and it may be the Court supposed that under the doctrine of Ringgold vs. Tyson, 3 H. & J., 112, she could not be heard as a witness to allege her own turpitude in impeachment of a sale which she had endorsed, by her signature, in assent to its ratification as bona fide and fair. But even if a denial of such signature and assent on her part to the ratification of the sale is reasonably involved in the offer made, yet what she does offer to say, does not prove there was no consideration moving to the deed. She was expected to say, that only so far as she knew there was no consideration paid. Her husband was acting with her.

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Related

Ruby v. State ex rel. Vernay
55 Md. 484 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1881)
State v. Robinson
57 Md. 486 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 Md. 1, 1884 Md. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-state-ex-rel-dittman-md-1884.