Conner v. Ogle

4 Md. Ch. 425
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 4 Md. Ch. 425 (Conner v. Ogle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conner v. Ogle, 4 Md. Ch. 425 (Md. Ct. App. 1848).

Opinion

This case was referred to me, as an Associate Judge of the third Judicial District, by the certificate of his Honor, the Chancellor, on the first of February last, and being ready for hearing, was fully argued on both sides.

Mrs. Henry M. Ogle, on the 7th day of April, 1814, executed her last will, and died on the 14th day of August, 1815. By her will she “devised all her estate, real, personal, and mixed, to her son, Benjamin Ogle, and three other trustees, to them, the survivors of them, and the heirs of the survivors, in trust, to pay all her just debts and funeral expenses, as soon as practicable after her decease, and in the manner most advantageous to her estate; and secondly, in trust, to apply the said estate and the rents and profits thereof, to the support and maintenance of her daughter, Mary Bevans, during her life, and the support and maintenance and education of her children, free from the power and control of her husband, and from and after her death, in trust for her children, to be equally divided amongst them, as tenants in common, and to their respective heirs, and in case at any time thereafter it should, in the judgment of her trustees, or the survivor or survivors of them, best promote the objects of the trust thereby created, to sell all or any part of her said estate, then she authorized her trustees, or a majority of them, the survivor or survivors of them, and the heirs of such survivors, to sell and convey all or any part of her said estate, and to vest the proceeds in lands, or banks, or other moneyed institutions, and apply from time to time, the rents, profits, interests, or dividends thereof, to her said daughter and her children, in the manner hereinbefore directed, free from the power and control of her said husband, her trustees taking care that the children of her said daughter be well maintained and educated, and after death the whole to be equally divided amongst [440]*440them; if any child die during the mother’s life, leaving children, then the said children to take and stand in the place of their deceased parent.”

The same trustees were appointed her executors. Three of the trustees declined the trust and executorship, two by letters of the 23d of August, addressed to B. M. Ogle, and the third, by signing a written paper, on the 29th or 30th. The will was proved by Samuel Bidout, one of the witnesses, and the executor, B. Ogle, who took out letters testamentary on the 14th September, 1815, he returned an inventory: on the 15th, a petition was filed in the Chancery Court, by the children of Mrs. Bevans, by B. Ogle, as their next friend, setting forth the will and death of Mrs. Ogle, and that the said trustees, appointed as aforesaid, by the said will, had declined acting in pursuance of the authority thereby vested in them, by reason whereof, the provisions of the said will, which were designed for the benefit of your orators, had failed to be effectual, and the benevolent intentions of the testatrix toward the orators, would be frustrated. They, therefore, pray that Benjamin Ogle may be appointed trustee, for the sale of all the above mentioned real estate, agreeably to the spirit and intention of the aforesaid will.

On the same day the petition was filed, a decree passed for “the sale of the real, personal and mixed estate, whereof the said H. M. Ogle died seized, and which by her will was directed or authorized to be soldon the 23d of October, 1815, the trustee reported the sale of a house and lot in Annapolis, which was on the same day ratified by the Chancellor without the usual publication: “the trustee making the sale, being one of the trustees named in the will of H. M. Ogle, and the devisees entitled to the greatest part of the proceeds being minors.”

On the 15th of November, 1815, the trustee reported a sale of the residue of the real estate, which was ratified by the Chancellor on the 22d, also without the usual publication. “The devisees entitled to the greatest part of the proceeds being minors, and the trustee being their nearest relative,-and the only person whose duty it would be to object to the sale if not advantageous.”

[441]*441On the same day that the last sale was ratified, Anne Ogle filed her petition praying that a certain mortgage debt, being a lien on part of the premises sold, should be paid. The original mortgage was exhibited with the petition, as appears from the Chancellor’s order on it, though not referred to in the petition, and appearing to have been filed on the 23d. On the same day (22d November) the Chancellor ordered the trustee to pay to the petitioner tho sum of ¿610,890 16s. 4c?.—$28,988 81— by assignment of bonds or in money, or both,, which was paid, per receipt on the mortgage, on the 23d.

The residue, deducting commissions, was all paid into court in pursuance of the Chancellor’s order of December 1st, 1815.

On the 25th of January, 1816, Mrs. Bevans files her petition in the Chancery Court, stating that tho balance of the proceeds of tho real estate, after the payment of debts, was about $24,562, and prays that so much of the said sum may be vested in the hands of a trustee and appropriated under the Chancellor’s direction, the clear annual profits of which shall suffice for a suitable maintenance to your petitioner. To this B. Ogle annexed an answer, admitting the facts and consenting to the appropriation. On the same day, the Chancellor passed an order appropriating so much as would annually produce the sum of $580—to be invested by the trustee; but the trustee, in writing, without date, declining to act as trustee relative to the appropriation made to Mrs. Bevans, and praying the Chancellor to appoint some other person, he, on the 28th of February, 1816, appointed John Addison, of Prince George’s county, trustee, in the place of tho said Benjamin Ogle, under the said order; and on the 29th, directed a check to he drawn in favor of Addison for the money in hank, he applying so much as may be necessary to the annuity to Mrs. Sevan, now Mrs. Connor, and tho rest as guardian to the infants. The whole amount was paid over accordingly to Addison, and thus was the whole amount of the real estate disposed of.

Nothing further was done in Chancery in reference to the real estate until 1835, except the filing on the 4th of March, 1819, a petition (or memorial, as he calls it,) by B. Ogle as [442]*442brother and next friend of Mrs. Bevans, praying that a part of the money invested for her should be converted into land—■ which, on the 6th, the Chancellor decided could not be done on that petition, B. Ogle having declined the trust.

On the 24th of February, 1816, B. Ogle passed his first and final account as executor in the Orphans Court of Anne Arundel county, leaving a balance of $7425 48. On the 27th, the Orphans Court passed an order directing the executor to pay over and deliver unto John Addison, the guardian of the minor children of George and Mary Bevans, the property in his hands to which said children are entitled under the will of H. M. Ogle, and on the same day the executor paid over property and notes to the amount of $5929 20. Whether the whole has been paid is a matter of dispute.

On the 11th of June, 1828, a paper was left on file in the Orphans Court of Anne Arundel county, by B. Ogle, showing himself as executor of H. M. Ogle, to have received for eighteen slaves the net sum of $8402 00, paid under the treaty of Ghent, upon which the court passed an order the same day, directing him to charge himself for the net amount received for twelve negroes belonging to her estate, and stating that the six negroes that were devised to Mrs. Bevans do not belong to Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Md. Ch. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conner-v-ogle-mdch-1848.