Constable v. Camp

39 A. 807, 87 Md. 173, 1898 Md. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 39 A. 807 (Constable v. Camp) 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
Constable v. Camp, 39 A. 807, 87 Md. 173, 1898 Md. LEXIS 126 (Md. 1898).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In May, eighteen hundred and ninety-six, the appellees filed in the Circuit Court for Kent County a bill of complaint against the appellants. The appellees are the next of kin of one James Hurtt, who died intestate in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-six, and the appellants are devisees of the real estate and also some of the legatees of part of the personal estate of Amanda M. Hurtt, who was the widow of James Hurtt and who, herself, died in eighteen hundred 'and ninety-four. The bulk of the personal estate which Amanda M. Hurtt possessed at the time of her death was bequeathed in the form of pecuniary'legacies to other persons than the parties to this suit. The bequest to Mrs. Constable consisted of personal property .appraised at two thousand and sixty-seven dollars; whilst the bequests to her daughters Blanch and Harriet were specific—a diamond ring and breastpin. and a piano respectively. The testatrix’s real estate was devised to Mrs. Constable for life and then in remainder to her children; and she and her children are the appellants against whom the decree ap[175]*175pealed from was passed. Upon the death of James Hurtt administration of his personal estate was duly committed by the Orphans’ Court of Kent County to his widow, Amanda M. Hurtt. She gave bond, and in August, eighteen hundred and seventy-eight, stated and settled a first and final account, making a distribution of the small balance remaining in her hands as administratrix, after the payment of debts and expenses. After the death of Amanda M. Hurtt in eighteen hundred and ninety-four her will was admitted to probate and letters testamentary were granted to the executors therein named, and in September, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, these executors stated and settled their final account showing an overpayment to the estate. This overpayment was refunded to them by one of the devisees. The pecuniary and specific legacies bequeathed by her aggregated seven thousand five hundred and twenty-eight dollars and seventy cents. The overpayment was two thousand one hundred and seventy-eight dollars and twenty-nine cents, and there remained five thousand three hundred and fifty dollars and forty-one cents actually received by the legatees, of which sum five thousand and sixty-one dollars and seventy cents were paid to legatees who are not parties to this proceeding. It is alleged in the bill that after the final settlement and distribution had been made of James Hurtt’s estate by Amanda M. Hurtt, administratrix, large sums of money were received by her which rightfully belonged to the estate of her deceased husband and which ought to have been distributed by her to his next of kin; and it is insisted that her estate in the hands of the appellants is accountable to the appellees, her husband’s next of kin, for these sums thus collected by her. And so, in effect, the prayer of the bill is that the devisees and some of the legatees of Amanda M. Hurtt may account to the next of kin of James Hurtt for all the money which she as his administratrix collected and failed to make distribution of, and that a distribution thereof may now be directed under the authority of the Circuit Court for Kent County sitting as a [176]*176Court oí Equity. The defendants, who are the appellants, answered the bill denying the material averments and relying in addition on laches and limitations as further defences against the demand made upon them. Evidence was adduced on both sides and the Court below, after a hearing,, signed a decree in July, eighteen hundred and ninety-seven,, holding the appellants as devisees and legatees of Amanda M. Hurtt liable to account to the appellees as next of kin of James Hurtt, for the sums of money specified in the decree. From that decree this appeal was taken.

The sums of money for which the appellants are held accountable are two: First, the sum of eighteen hundred dollars, alleged to have been collected by Amanda M. Hurtt as administratrix of her husband’s estate, on September the twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, from James W. Hurtt; and secondly, the sum of. three thousand dollars, alleged to have been collected by her in the same capacity, on .September the second, eighteen hundred and eighty, from the same James W. Hurtt. It is claimed that both of these-sums were due to the estate of James Hurtt by James W. Hurtt on judgments originally recovered, the one in April, eighteen hundred and seventy-four, in the name of the State-of Maryland to the use of Charles Woodland against James W. Hurtt, William Welch and James Willis, for sixteen hundred and eighteen dollars and nine oents and subsequently entered to the use of James Hurtt;- and the other-in October, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, in the name of the State to the use of A. E. Woodland against James W. Hurtt and James Willis, for nineteen hundred and forty dollars and thirty-three cents, and subsequently entered to-the use of James Hurtt for eighteen hundred and eighty-five dollars and twelve cents. That James W. Hurtt paid to Amanda M. Hurtt on September the twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, the sum of eighteen hundred dollars, and on September the second, eighteen hundred and eighty, the further sum of three thousand dollars,, is clearly and conclusively established by the evidence ; but. [177]*177whether these payments were made in settlement of the two judgments just alluded to, and whether those judgments, both belonged to the estate of James Hurtt are matters by no means free from dispute. The testimony of the debtor himself is to the effect that these judgments were satisfied' and discharged by those payments, but there are other circumstances in the record which raise considerable doubt as to the accuracy of his statement. That James W. Hurtt was heavily indebted to Amanda M. Hurtt—that he owed her individually about ten thousand dollars on judgments— is specifically admitted by him in his testimony. Now the aggregate of the two payments exceed by several hundred dollars the gross amount due on the two judgments at the time the payments were made, and yet the receipts taken by James W. Hurtt both recite that the money was merely a part payment on the judgments of Mrs. A. M. Hurtt. Both receipts describe the judgments upon which these payments were to be partial satisfaction, to be judgments of Mrs. Hurtt, though both of these judgments stood on the records entered to the use of James Hurtt. Besides all this-there is evidence in the record tending to show, and in our opinion actually showing that the judgment of October, eighteen hundred and seventy-five was improvidently entered to the use of James Hurtt, and that it should have been entered to the use of Amanda M. Hurtt as her money and .not his was paid to A. E. Woodland, the owner of the judgment, as a consideration for its assignment.

However the truth may be as to the applicability of these payments to the satisfaction of these particular judgments we do not intend to rest the decision of this case upon that mere issue of fact; or, indeed, to discuss that feature of the contest at all. We have adverted to an outline of these conflicting circumstances merely because .they will become important, or at least incidentally relevant, in considering the questions of law that are the controlling, questions in the-case. We regard it, however, as sufficiently established that the judgment of October the eighteenth, eighteen hun[178]*178dred and seventy-five, in reality belonged to Amanda M. Hurtt though improvidently entered to the use of her husband.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 A. 807, 87 Md. 173, 1898 Md. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/constable-v-camp-md-1898.