Decker v. Fahrenholtz

68 A. 1048, 107 Md. 515, 1908 Md. LEXIS 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 68 A. 1048 (Decker v. Fahrenholtz) 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
Decker v. Fahrenholtz, 68 A. 1048, 107 Md. 515, 1908 Md. LEXIS 32 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There were two appeals in this record, but the first appeal (No. 29 office docket) was dismissed by counsel for the appellant when the case was called for argument. The second appeal (No. 30 office docket) was taken from an order of the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City passed on the 4th day of October, 1907, rescinding a previous order of that Court passed on March 12th, 1906, by which Adolph F. Decker, executor of Charles Struth, deceased, was authorized and directed to pay to Rhodes and Rhodes, attorneys, the sum of two thousand dollars as a fee for services rendered as set forth in a petition of said attorney for allowance of said fee. The order of October 4th, 1907, was in these words:

“The order of Court of date March 12th, 1906, allowing Messrs. Rhodes and Rhodes a fee of $2,000 for professional services having be,en improvidently passed, it is ordered by the Court this 4th day of October, 1907, that the said order be and the same is hereby rescinded.”

The appellees have filed a motion to dismiss this appeal, 1st, because the order appealed from is not a final order; 2nd, because the order appealed from was passed in the discretion of the Court.

It appears from the petition of the Messrs. Rhodes asking for the allowance of this fee that before the grant of letters testamentary to Adolph F. Decker upon the estate of Charles Struth, a caveat was filed by Emma Struth and others to the will of Charles Struth, and that thereupon the said Decker, *517 who was named as executor in said will, retained the petitioners as counsel to defend said will. Issues were framed and sent to the Court of Common Pleas, and a verdict was rendered for the caveatees, and on appeal to this Court, the rulings of the trial Court were affirmed January r8th, 1905, as reported in 100 Md. 368; and on February 7th, 1905, judgment was entered in the Orphans’ Court in accordance with the rulings on that appeal.

On February 16th, 1905, the appellees in that case filed a petition in the Orphans’ Court for new issues to be sent to a Court of law for trial, which petition was answered by the executor through the same counsel, and the issues were refused by the Orphans’ Court. From that order, an appeal was taken to this Court, which held the issues prayed were substantially the same as those decided in the former appeal', and the order refusing the said issues was affirmed, as reported in 102 Md. 496, on January 9th, 1906.

The petition sets forth that much time and labor was devoted to the preparation and trial of these cases, and that they were entitled to reasonable compensation for their services, to be paid out of the estate of Charles Struth. The executor named in the will assented to any proper order, and three lawyers of standing at the Baltimore bar certified that they had examined into the character of the services rendered and that in their opinion $2,000 was a reasonable and proper fee therefor.

Thereupon, the Orphans’ Court, on the same day, and without any hearing or notice to the parties interested, passed an order, March 12th, 1906, allowing and directing the payment of said fee by said executor, which was accordingly paid, letters testamentary having been granted to him on February 20th, 1906. On April nth, 1906, the appellees in this case learning of the said order moved for its rescission, and on October 4th, 1907, the order of March 12th, 1906, was rescinded as improvidently passed.

It is quite clear that the order appealed from is not a final order. It does not refuse to allow compensation for the serv *518 ices rendered. It does not determine any matter of right. The subject matter of the petition upon which the rescinded order was passed, remains in the breast of the Court, and the petitioners are left perfectly free to go on with their case and assert their right to recovery, the appellees being merely restored by the rescinding order to their right to a hearing, of which they were improvidently deprived by the order of March 12th, 1906. An order of the character of that here appealed from is precisely analogous to an order striking out a judgment. In such cases the defendant may always appeal from an order refusing to strike out a judgment against him, but the plaintiff has a right of appeal only where the judgment is stricken out at the instance of the defendant, upon motion filed after the lapse of the term at which the judgment was entered. There being no terms in the Orphans’ Court, that restriction is not applicable in this case, but there was no laches on the part of the appellees as their motion to rescind the order was filed with promptness after its passage.

The motion to dismiss must therefore prevail.

The appellant in his brief and in his argument does’not áttempt to dispute the numerous cases in which the rule has been established that where a caveat to a will is filed before probate of the will, the Orphans’ Court has no jurisdiction to allow compensation to the executor named in the will for counsel fees paid in resisting the caveat, but he did contend that this case differs materially from any of the cases sustaining the rule above stated, and that this difference warrants its exemption from the application of that rule. His argument was that the effect of the decision in the first appeal in 100 Md., was to declare the will to be a proper will, and the executor therein named to be a proper executor, and that in so declaring, the Court put upon him the duty of defending the_ will. This, however, is too broad a proposition to be maintained. In Warford v. Colvin, 14 Md. 532, the Court said: “Probate means proof of the will by the proper tribunal * * * and the granting of issues is to enable the Orphans’ Court to advertise itself of the real facts in the case. When ascer *519 tained they are the basis of the Courts final action in admitting or rejecting the will. The finding of a jury on issues can amount to nothing until acted on by the Court which has authority to admit or reject the paper. It has no greater force than the evidence of witnesses rendered in the Orphans’ Court in a plenary proceeding, in the absence of. a final effective act of the Court itself upon the whole case before it.” The only Court which can grant or refuse probate of a will in this State is the Orphans’ Court, and unless this will has been admitted to probate the rule above stated must be applied. “The issues at law are merely in aid of the jurisdiction of the Orphans’ Court, and the affirmance by the Court of Appeals adds nothing to the force of the proceeding as a judicial act. It is all the while a proceeding within the probate powers of the Orphans’ Court * * * to whose order at last we must look to ascertain what has been done on propounding the will.” Warford v. Colvin, supra. “The functions of the Orphans’ Court are suspended until the finding of the jury be certified, but when that is done, it has no discretion in regard to it, and is imperatively required to enter up judgment in conformity thereto.” Pegg v. Warford, 4 Md. 394.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 1048, 107 Md. 515, 1908 Md. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decker-v-fahrenholtz-md-1908.