Carey v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

178 A. 242, 168 Md. 501, 1935 Md. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 12, 1935
Docket[Nos. 57-60, January Term, 1935.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 178 A. 242 (Carey v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) 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
Carey v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 178 A. 242, 168 Md. 501, 1935 Md. LEXIS 176 (Md. 1935).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This ease embraces three appeals in one record from decrees entered in the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, and one appeal from a decree entered in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, involving four separate trust estates, in which the late George G. Carey was sole trustee, and in which the Safe Deposit & Trust Company of Baltimore is now substituted trustee. For a more convenient reference in this opinion.to each of the above appeals, we deem it expedient to set forth at the outset the titling of each trust, with a brief statement of the origin and nature thereof, and their status at the time of the death of Mr. Carey, and to designate them by consecutive numbers, 1, 2, 3, and 4, in the respective order in which they are hereinafter stated.

Case No. 1: Rena Trust et al. v. Rena S. Beacham. Appeal from Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City. The funds of this case represent reinvestments of portions of the estate of Edwin H. Trust, given to his wife for life, and after her death to his children for life. On the death of his children the trust estate becomes the absolute property of his grandchildren. The fourth clause of his will reads as follows: “I authorize and empower my wife to sell, lease, assign or otherwise dispose of by deed or lease or other instrument of writing any part or all of that half of my estate which is given to her for life, in case she may deem it desirable or necessary to do so, and to reinvest the proceeds thereof in such safe securities as she may deem proper, upon and for the same uses as are hereinbefore mentioned with reference to the said half of my estate, and so that the purchasers or lessees shall not be bound to see to the reinvestment of the said proceeds.” The twenty-sixth rule report filed in the year 1932 by Mr. Glenn shows a deposit of $2,058.63 in the Title Guarantee & Trust Company in the name of Carey *504 & Glenn. The ledger of Carey & Glenn shows uninvested corpus as follows:

November 29, 1929 ................................. $1,500.00

May 29, 1930 ................................................ 1,650.00

July 29,1930.................................................. 1,120.00

March 24, 1931 .......................................... 2,050.00

July 21, 1932 ............................................ 3,025.00

George G. Carey was appointed trustee on August 2nd, 1930, and duly qualified. At the time of his death, the value of the principal of the trust estate was approximately $15,000. During the course of the administration of the- trust estate, the trustee deposited funds belonging to this estate in the savings department of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, in an account standing in the name of Carey & Glenn. On March 24th, 1931, there was in this account, representing funds of this trust estate, the sum of $2,050, and on July 21st, 1932, this amount was increased, by a deposit of funds pertaining to this estate, to the sum of $3,025; the amount due by the trustee to the trust estate at the time of his death being the sum of $3,014.63. In addition to the trust funds above mentioned, there were deposited from time to time in the account in the savings department of the trust company in the name of Carey & Glenn other trust funds and certain funds held by Carey & Glenn, or George G. Carey, as agents, and also some of the individual funds of Carey & Glenn. There never was a time when the amount of the funds in the account did not exceed the sum total of the trust funds and the agency funds. Following the death of George G. Carey, George G. Carey, Jr., was appointed administrator of the estate of his father, and .duly qualified. On the 9th day of February, 1933, George G. Carey, Jr., as administrator, deposited in the savings department of the trust company $3,014.63 to the credit of Trust v. Beacham; the said amount representing the amount of the funds belonging to said trust estate which had been deposited as above mentioned in the account in the savings department of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, in the name of Carey & Glenn. This sum of $3,014.63 was drawn from *505 the Carey & Glenn savings account, deposited in the checking account of Carey & Glenn, in the Baltimore Trust Company, and redeposited the same day in the savings department of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company to the credit of the trust estate of Trust v. Beacham. The affairs of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company were placed in the hands of the state bank examiner as receiver on February 17th, 1933.

Case No. 2: Mary Elizabeth White v. Emault H. Williams. Appeal from Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City. In a deed from Mary Elizabeth White and Stevenson White, her husband, to George Hawkins Williams as trustee, dated April 3rd, 1871, Mary Elizabeth White conveyed her property to the trustee in trust to. pay her the income for life, and at her death reserving a right to dispose of the property by last will and testament, and, on failure to exercise this power of appointment, the trust property to be conveyed to the children of Mary Elizabeth White. On the death of George Hawkins Williams, Stevenson White was appointed trustee for his wife. On the death of Mr. White, George G. Carey was appointed trustee on September 15th, 1923. The property of Mrs. White consisted chiefly of her residence in Howard County, which was sold, and the proceeds of sale were reinvested for her benefit. The account with the Title Guarantee & Trust Company was opened February 9th, 1933. The ledger sheet of Carey & Glenn shows that the estate consisted originally of two mortgages, one of $4,000 and one of $3,500, and was fully invested in 1926. At the time of Mr. Carey’s death, the value of the principal of the trust estate was approximately $8,800. During the course of the administration of this estate, the trustee deposited funds pertaining thereto in the savings department of the trust company in the name of Carey & Glenn; the amount of funds pertaining to this trust estate, as of May 31st, 1930, being the sum of $1,407.94, which sum was in said account at the time of the trustee’s death. The facts with reference to the manner in which the funds in this estate were deposited, the sufficiency at all *506 times of the credit to the account of Carey & Glenn to cover the sum total of all trust and agency funds carried therein, the subsequent withdrawal, by the administrator of the estate of the trustee, of the amount properly due this estate from the said account of Carey & Glenn, its subsequent deposit in the Baltimore Trust Company, and redeposit on the same day in the savings department of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company to the trust estate of White v. Williams, are in every respect similar to those set forth in the trust estate of Rena Trust et al. v. Rena S. Beacham. In February, 1924, the firm of Carey & Glenn received a commission of $100 in connection with an investment in a six per cent mortgage of $4,000; and again, in December, 1926, the same firm received a commission of $87.50 in connection with an investment in a six per cent mortgage of $3,500 in the administration of the trust fund in this' case.

Case No. 3: Ex parte, in the matter of the trust estate under the will of Marita Weems, for Agnes M. Woollen. Appeal from the Circuit Court No.

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Bluebook (online)
178 A. 242, 168 Md. 501, 1935 Md. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-v-safe-deposit-trust-co-md-1935.