Chappell v. Clarke

50 A. 527, 94 Md. 178, 1901 Md. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 A. 527 (Chappell v. Clarke) 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
Chappell v. Clarke, 50 A. 527, 94 Md. 178, 1901 Md. LEXIS 97 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are seven appeals in this record—four of which were taken by Thomas C. Chappell, trustee, and the others by Mrs. Clarke. The orders appealed from were passed in the same case that is reported in 92 Md. 98, Chappell v. Clarke. *179 The original bill was filed by Mrs. Clarke and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Stiles and the three infant children of Mr. and Mrs. Clarke by their father as next friend, against Thomas C. Chappell, trustee. They prayed that the Court assume jurisdiction over the trust created by the will of Phillip S. Chappell, which left sixty thousand dollars to Thomas C. Chappell in trust for Fannie Chappell (now Mrs. Clarke) during her life, and after her death “ to divide said trust property and the remaining proceeds thereof equally per stirpes and not per capita, among her children and their descendants, if she shall have left any, and if she shall have left no children or descendants then to the absolute use of the said Thomas C. Chappell,” etc. It further prayed that the trustee be required to file an account, to give security for the faithful administration of the trust reposed in him, and that he be enjoined from receiving or investing any of the funds of said trust estate until the Court had assumed jurisdiction and the defendant had filed a bond. A subpoena was issued for the defendant which was returned summoned. An order was also passed assuming jurisdiction of the trust, requiring the trustee to give bond and enjoining him until he did so from receiving, collecting or in any manner taking into his hands or under his control any more of the trust funds, etc. Calvin T. Davison filed a petition on the i ith day of May, 1900, asking permission to pay the sum of $20,000 which his firm owed to the estate into Court and an order was passed authorizing him to do so. The case was reversed by this Court because copies of the will and of the mortgage were not filed as required by Code Art. 5, section 120, before the orders were passed, and the cause was remanded. 4

The copy of the will was filed on May 14, 1900, and subsequently a copy of the mortgage referred to in the previous opinion of this Court. Two days after the original bill was filed Mrs. Clarke and Mr. and Mrs. Stiles filed an order with the clerk directing the bill to be dismissed as to them and a request to Mr. O’Brien, who had appeared as solicitor for the plaintiffs, to strike out his appearance for them, alleging that *180 the cause had been instituted without their consent or authority. On January 30, 1901, which was after the previous case had been decided by this Court, a petition was filed by the three children, by their father as their next friend, alleging that Chappell was not a resident of Maryland, that he had never given bond as trustee, that he had been disbarred by the United States Court for the District of Maryland, that" while disbarment proceedings were pending against him before the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City he had requested that his name be stricken off the rolls of attorneys, for the reason that he was no longer a resident of Maryland, that he was insolvent and would waste the estate, if he continued in it. It then prayed that he be removed as trustee under this clause of the will of Philip S. Chappell, and that some suitable person be appointed. An order was passed that he be removed unless cause to the contrary be shown within one month after a copy of the petition and order be served upon him. On the 12th of February, 1901, an affidavit of a constable for the District of Columbia was filed stating that he had on the 8th of that month, served, in said District, a copy of the petition and order on said Chappell. On the yth of March Chappell filed what he called “exceptions” to the jurisdiction of the Court and its order—there being thirty of them—and also a motion to quash the order of the Court, dated the 30th of January, 1901, and the service and return thereon, and a motion not to receive the petition of the three children. On the same day he entered an appeal from that order. That is the first appeal in this record and it must be dismissed for the very obvious reason that it was not a final order, or such as an appeal can be taken from.

An order was passed setting down the exceptions and motions for hearing on March 26th, provided the solicitor for the complainants gave Chappell notice by registered letter on or before a day named. That was done and “exceptions” were filed to that order. Another notice was sent to him that the exceptions, etc., would be heard by the Court on April 11, 1901. On that day the Court passed a decree removing him *181 as trustee and appointing William J. O’Brien, Jr., in his place. The latter gave the required bond and entered upon the discharge of his duties. Mr. Davison, on April 12th, filed a petition reciting that he had on the nth of May, 1900, paid the $20,000 to the Clerk of the Court, and asked that the Clerk be authorized to pay it over to Mr. O’Brien and that he be directed to release the mortgage, which was done. Chappell again filed “ exceptions,” and on the same day (17th of May, 1901,) entered an appeal from the decree of the Court,' which is the second one in this record.

We have thus stated the facts fully because, it seems to us, they answer the contention that the Court had nó power to pass this decree. Unless Courts of equity have less power than we had supposed, the circumstances shown by this record present a case that pre-eminently called for such action as was taken. The orders were reversed in the previous appeal on purely technical grounds, and the cause remanded for further action. Before the record was transmitted to this Court, and apparently before the appeal was taken in that case, twenty thousand dollars of trust funds had been actually paid into Court. The trustee left the State, instructed the attorney who had represented him not to admit or accept service, and he had actual knowledge of the proceedings and abundant opportunity to be heard. The question therefore is, whether a trustee who has been a resident of this State can, by absenting himself from it, so place himself beyond the control of a Court of equity, in which proceedings have been commenced against him, as to take from it the power of protecting the trust estate, a part of which, if not all, is in this State. The will of' Philip S. Chappell, which created the trust, was duly probated in Baltimore City, where the testator resided. When the original bill was filed Thomas C. Chappell was in that city. Under section 203 of Art. 15 of the Code, the Court had express power conferred upon it to require a bond to be given and in default thereof to remove the trustee and appoint another, at the instance of any person interested in the trust. There was therefore no question about the authority of the *182 Court to act under the original bill, independent of its general jurisdiction to administer trusts. It had assumed jurisdiction over the trust and the trustee was in Court when the $20,000 was authorized to be paid to the Clerk. The previous case was not reversed because of want of jurisdiction over the subject-matter, or over the pérson of the trustee, but oniy by reason of the irregularity in acting before exhibits had been filed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A. 527, 94 Md. 178, 1901 Md. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chappell-v-clarke-md-1901.