Duckworth v. Duckworth

56 A. 490, 98 Md. 92, 1903 Md. LEXIS 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 56 A. 490 (Duckworth v. Duckworth) 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
Duckworth v. Duckworth, 56 A. 490, 98 Md. 92, 1903 Md. LEXIS 212 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The principal question in this case is one which has been frequently before the Courts, and as to which the general rule is well established, but it is constantly recurring under varying circumstances claimed to take it out of the general rule. Whether the present case falls within the rule or within the exception is the subject of our inquiry.

This case originated in a bill filed April 21st, 1900, by the appellees against the appellant to obtain a decree for the sale of the real estate of their father, Hiram Duckworth, and the division of the proceeds among them. The appellant answered consenting to the decree, but setting up a claim of $900 against his father’s estate for services rendered in his father’s lifetime, which claim it was agreed, was to be presented to the auditor, and to be passed on by him in the distribution of the proceeds, upon such testimony as should be then produced, all irregularities in the mode of procedure being waived by the parties, and it being also admitted that *94 the father left no personal estate from which said claim could have been realized.

A decree for sale was passed, a portion of the real estate was sold thereunder for a sum sufficient to discharge this claim, and thereupon the appellant filed a petition alleging the facts and praying that the auditor might be directed to take such testimony in reference to the claim as the parties should produce, and it was so ordered.

The Judge of the Circuit Court, in the opinion there delivered, suggested a doubt as to the validity of such order for a want of jurisdiction, but while the mode of procedure is unusual, we think the effect of the agreement of the parties was to convert the proceedings to that extent into a creditor’s bill, and that there was no want of jurisdiction to pass the order. The bill averred there was no other claim against the estate, and if at any time before distribution of all the proceeds of sale, any other creditors should intervene, they could be equalized with the appellant, if his claim were allowed.

The appellant was employed in 1881 at the Lochiel Mills in Garrett County. At that time his bi other, Zephaniah Duckworth, was tilling his father’s farm for one-third of the crops, but in July, 1881, became dissatisfied with his contract, and abandoned it, and the appellant left his employment at the mills, and took his brother’s place on the farm, where he remained until April, 1891. Hiram Duckworth died in 1899.

On April 3rd, 1902, Stephen Duckworth filed with the auditor a claim against Hiram Duckworth, sworn to before a Justice of the Peace, as follows :

“For services rendered from July, 1881, to April, 1891.................$666 21
By Credit.............................................................................. 65 15
601 06
Interest from April, 1891, to Mch. 1, 1902................................. 390 00
$991 06

In support of this claim he produced Philip Klipstein, Truman Warnick, Jonas Weitzell, Wesley Broadwater, and Garrett Coleman.

Philip Klipstein, a brother-in-law of Hiram Duckworth, tes *95 tified that Stephen Duckworth worked on his father’s farm and that in the same year in which the father died, he heard him say to witness’ wife: “Stephen Duckworth need not be uneasy, he shall be paid, if I don’t pay it myself, I will leave enough to pay him.” When asked what debt the father was speaking of, he replied, “I don’t know. It was a debt I suppose he knew he owed him, or thought he did. I don’t know anything about the conditions he worked on.”

Truman Warnick, a brother-in-law of Stephen Duckworth, testified that he knew Stephen worked on his father’s farm for six years, and thought he worked four years longer, and that he did general farm work, but he knew nothing of their agreement; that the services he saw rendered were worth $12.00 a month and board, and that he had on three different occasions heard Hiram Duckworth say Stephen should be well paid for his labor, and that the last time he said so was shortly before his second marriage in 1896.

Jonas Weitzel, who lived on the adjoining farm, testified that he knew Stephen worked on his father’s farm from 1885 to 1891, and that he heard Hiram Duckworth say about two years before he died, that Stephen was the best boy he had raised and he should be paid for his work. On cross-examination he said that he knew one year Stephen was farming the land on shares and got one-third of the crops, which he saw divided, but he could not say what year that was.

Wesley Broadwater, who also lived on the adjoining farm, testified that Stephen worked on the farm a long time, eight or ten years anyhow, between 1880 and 1890, along there, but that he knew nothing of their agreement, or of any division of the crops.

Garrett Coleman, who was frequently at the farm testified that he knew Stephen worked there a number of years, and that Hiram Duckworth frequently told him Steve was the best son he had, and he should be paid for his work.

This was the case made by the appellant who was not offered as a witness in chief. Zephaniah Duckworth for the appellees, testified that he agreed with his father to till the *96 farm in 1881 for one-third of the crops; that he farmed it under that agreement till harvest time in 1881, when he could not get along well with his father, and Stephen was sent for to take the farm off his hands at the same terms he was farming it on, one-third of the crops; that he heard his father and Stephen talking over the matter, and that Stephen was to have one-third of the crops; that Stephen always told him he was farming for the one-third; that he had helped to thresh the crops and grain; that the grain was always divided, Stephen’s one-third being put into one granary, and two-thirds in his father’s separate granary; that he had seen the potatoes dug and measured and they were divided in the same way; that Stephen had no property when he went on the farm in 1881, but had a “good bit of property” when he left there in 1891; that he never heard Stephen say a word about any claim against his father, though they talked together about setting aside conveyances of land made by their father to his second wife; he also testified that his father had often said to him when he wanted him to help with a busy piece of work, “that they would all be well paid, and that there would be plenty to pay us all after he was gone.”

' John Blocker testified that in 1889 or 1890, Stephen Duck-worth employed him to thresh wheat for him.

'Hampton Butler testified that he went to live on the farm in 1889, and that year the crops were divided, one-third to Stephen, and two-thirds to his father, but that the last two years Stephen got two-thirds, and told him there was more in it for him to find the seed and get two-thirds, than for his father to find the seed and get two-thirds. He also said he got his information as to the terms of the farming both from Stephen and his father.

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Bluebook (online)
56 A. 490, 98 Md. 92, 1903 Md. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duckworth-v-duckworth-md-1903.