Clark v. Callahan

66 A. 618, 105 Md. 600, 1907 Md. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 26, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 66 A. 618 (Clark v. Callahan) 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
Clark v. Callahan, 66 A. 618, 105 Md. 600, 1907 Md. LEXIS 53 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

*607 Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed by the appellant' against the appellees to procure an accounting from one of the appellees, Edith B. Callahan, for one-half the proceeds of certain benefit certificates received by her, and for an injunction against the said Edith B. Callahan, and the other appellee, Edward J. Callahan, her husband, restraining them from conveying away or disposing -of a certain house and lot in Baltimore alleged to have been purchased by the said Edith B. Callahan partly *608 with a portion of the proceeds of said certificates, and to be the only tangible property owned by her. It appears in the evidence that the plaintiff, when about twelve years of age, was taken into the family of Col. Charles W. Raphun of Baltimore, a relative on her mother’s side, and that she resided there until his death in February, 1903, when she was about nineteen years of age, being maintained and cared for by him as if she were his child, and that he always expressed and evinced a strong affection for her. Col. Raphun was at the time of his death an official in the office of the Collector of the Port of Baltimore, and was a man of small means, but held a benefit certificate for two thousand dollars in the Ancient Order of United Workmen, and another for three thousand dollars in the Improved Order of Heptasophs, both payable at his death. These certificates were originally payable to his second wife, Estelle V. Raphun, from whom he was separated about six months before his death, she having filed a bill for divorce, which was pending when he died. After this separation, on June 5th, 1902, he surrendered the original, certificates, and new certificates were issued in which Mrs. .Callahan was by his direction named as the beneficiary. Col. Raphun had three children, one daughter, Mrs. Callahan, by his first wife, who was married in 1899, and thereafter did not live with her father, and two sons one of whom resided in Chicago, and the other was under twenty-one and lived at home. The bill alleged that about the time of the separation, Col. Raphun declared his intention to have his said daughter and the plaintiff substituted as joint beneficiaries under said benefit certificates, so that the proceeds thereof upon his death should be paid to them in equal shares, but found that this could be done because under the rules of said associations, only blood relatives of members could be made beneficiaries; and that thereupon, after consulting his daughter, and obtaining from her a solemn promise that the proceeds of said certificates, should be equally divided between herself and the plaintiff when paid, he caused his said daughter to be made the beneficiary of said certificates in the place of his wife, upon the *609 express trust and condition that said daughter should share said proceeds equally with the plaintiff, and that said trust was accepted by his daughter upon such condition. Soon after Col. Raphun’s death, his wife brought a suit in replevin against' Mrs. Callahan, and also an action of slander, and claimed to be entitled to the proceeds of said benefit certificates. In May, 1904, while these litigated matters were pending, including interpleader proceedings between Mrs. Raphun and Mrs. Callahan as to their respective rights in the proceeds of said benefit certificates, Mrs. Callahan, as' the bill alleges, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, compromised all the pending litigations between her stepmother and herself by payment to her out of the proceeds of said benefit certificates, of the sum-of $1,500, and the payment of certain costs and expenses attending said litigations, amounting to $774.91, and leaving a net amount coming to her from said certificates of $2,725.09.

The defendants answered the plaintiff's bill denying all the material allegations, and specifically denying that any promise was ever made by Mrs. Callahan to pay any part of the proceeds of said certificates to the plaintiff, or that the name of Mrs. Callahan was substituted as beneficiary therein upon any trust or condition whatever; denying that she accepted any trust whatever, and alleging (under oath) that she could not have done so, because she was not aware until after her father’s death that she was named as beneficiary in said certificates. The answer admitted the compromise above mentioned, but alleged that it was made with plaintiff’s knowledge, and alleged that the plaintiff was largely the cause of the slander suit mentioned. Testimony was taken by both parties, and after hearing and argument, the Court, being of opinion that no valid trust was created by Col. Raphun in the said benefit certificates, the plaintiff’s bill was dismissed, and this appeal is taken from that decree.

Before considering the principal question in the case we will advert to the exclusion of certain testimony which was offered by the plaintiff. The depositions of Mr. and Mrs. Stiles, res *610 idents of West Virginia, and of Mrs. Dooley, the mother of the plaintiff, a resident of Virginia, were taken before-a notary of those respective States in the manner provided by section 17 of Article 35 of the Maryland Code, after five days notice to the opposite party. When it was proposed to read these depositions, the defendants objected, and on their motion the depositions were excluded or suppressed. The principal objection made was that this method of taking the testimony of non-resident witnesses, not parties to the cause, is only available in Courts of law, and that the only method of taking the testimony of such non-resident witnesses in Courts of equity, is under a commission issued from the Court under its own rules, but it was also contended that as section 241 of Article 16 requires evidence taken and returned to be opened by the clerk, and to remain in Court ten days subject to exception, before the cause shall be taken up for hearing, unless, by agreement of the parties, such time shall be waived, and as in this case the testimony had only laid in Court five days, and there was no waiver of time when the cause was taken up for hearing, the depositions were properly excluded.

Sections sixteen and seventeen of Article 35 should be read together, and so read (unqualified by any other provision of law in pari materia), section 17 must be regarded as applying only to the Courts mentioned in section 16, that is Courts of law, notwitstanding the broader language of section 17. In Goodman v. Wineland, 61 Md. 456, it was held that the provisions of section 16, were not applicable to non-resident parties, except in the discretion of the Court upon satisfactory proof of permanent inability to attend the Court in person. But section 18 of Article 35 (chapter 399 of 1898), provides that “the testimony of non-resident parties to a cause, may be taken, whether in their own behalf or by the opposite party, in the same manner as the testimony of other non-resident witnesses; this to apply to Courts of law and equity, and to proceedings before magistrates.” The defendants contend that as these witnesses are not parties, that section cannot affect the question; but we cannot agree to this. If that were the case, *611 non-resident parties

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 618, 105 Md. 600, 1907 Md. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-callahan-md-1907.