Forney v. Shriner

60 Md. 419, 1883 Md. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 60 Md. 419 (Forney v. Shriner) 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
Forney v. Shriner, 60 Md. 419, 1883 Md. LEXIS 48 (Md. 1883).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the .opinion of the Court.

Jacob S. Forney, of Baltimore County, died, leaving a will by which he appointed William A. Russell his execu[420]*420tor. The executor died in December, 1882, and in the same month the Orphans’ Court granted letters of administration d. b. n. c. t. a. to Richard Cromwell, Daniel Forney, and John P. Shriner, who represented the three families amongst whom the estate was by fhe will distributed. Of these the two former were non-residents, living in Missouri, while the latter was a resident of Maryland. Afterwards, on the 21st of March, 1883, complaint was made to the Orphans’ Court by Shriner, the resident administrator, to the effect that he has been embarrassed in the discharge of his duties by the non-residence of his co-administrators, and by their unwillingness or inability to unite with him in doing what is necessary to the best administration of the estate ; that without consulting him, and without his assent, they have collected several thousand dollars from sales of personal property belonging to the estate, and have removed it out of the State, and have, as he is advised, distributed the same to parties to him unknown ; that .they have been continuously absent from this State, where all the property of the deceased is situated, almost the whole time since the grant of letters to them; that they have made misrepresentations to the Court, and he finds himself unable to act in harmony with them in the administration; that he apprehends he is likely to suffer by their negligence and misconduct, and by the improper use and misapplication of the assets of .the estate, and he prays that their letters may be revoked.

The Court thereupon, on the 27th of March, passed an order which, after reciting that the petition and complaint of Shriner had been considered, “ and it appearing to this Court that he is likely to suffer by the negligence and misconduct of his said co-administrators, and by their improper use and misapplication of assets belonging to the estate, and the Court being satisfied that his complaint is well founded, and that said administration should no longer be confided to them,” proceeds to revoke their let[421]*421ters, and directs them to surrender and deliver to Shriner any assets in their hands belonging to the estate. From this order Forney and Cromwell have taken an appeal, and now a motion is made to dismiss the same upon the ground that from such an order no appeal lies.

The order was passed under section 241, Art. 93, of the Code, which provides that “Whenever any joint administrator or executor shall apprehend that he is likely to suffer by the negligence or misconduct in the administration, improper use, or misapplication of the assets of the estate by any executor or administrator, he shall make complaint to the Orphans’ Court, and if the same shall be adjudged well founded, the Court shall have authority, in their discretion, to revoke the powers and authority of the executor or administrator so complained of.” This particular section of the testamentary law has never before been directly presented to the Appellate Court for construction, but in Jones, Adm’x vs. Jones, 41 Md., 354, it was expressly decided that an appeal will lie by a single administrator from an order revoking his letters, and it was there said that Ex parte Shipley and Wife, Adm’rs of Wood, 4 Md., 493, and Porter, Ex’x, &c. vs. Timanus, et al., 12 Md., 283, in which the appeals were dismissed, were cases coming under section 231, which gives authority to the Orphans’ Court to revoke his letters if the administrator refuses to comply with an order to bring into Court, or place in bank, or invest money received by him as such administrator. Again, in Slattery, &c. vs. Smiley, 25 Md., 389, it was held that an appeal from an order removing a guardian, passed under section 232, which provides that the Orphans’ Court “may, on the application of an infant, or any person in his behalf, suggesting improper conduct in any guardian whatever, either in relation to the care and management of the property or person of the infant, inquire into the same, and, at their discretion, remove such guardian and make choice of another who shall [422]*422receive the property and custody of the ward," and that allegations against the guardian which this section contemplates must he sustained by proof. The discretionary power here given is couched in very similar, and in fact substantially the same, language as that contained in the section under consideration. In the former the Court is required to “inquire into" the complaint, and in the other to “ adjudge " whether it be “well founded.” If the language of the one section, coupled with the broad terms in which the right of appeal is given to any party who may deem himself aggrieved by a decree, order, or judgment of the Orphans’ Court, (Code, Art. 5, sec. 39,) admits of an appeal, the same construction must be placed upon that of the other. If the discretion vested in the Court is not absolute and irreviewable in the one case, it cannot be so in the other. The motion to dismiss must therefore be overruled, and we must determine whether the order shall be affirmed or reversed.

If this depended on the state of case presented by the original record there would be no difficulty in reversing the order. In that record the Register certifies that there was “no evidence on summary proceedings before the Court” when the order appealed from was passed, “other than is contained in this record,” and clearly there is in this record no evidence whatever to justify the order. But in a supplemental record, brought up by the appellee under a writ of diminution, the Judges of the Orphans’ Court deny this statement of the Register, and order it to be amended so as to correspond with the facts recited in the diminution record. From these it appears the Court had before it, when the application for the order was heard, a letter of Cromwell, written for himself and Forney, from Missouri, dated the 27th of January, 1883, addressed to the Court, in which it is admitted they may have acted indiscreetly in leaving Maryland without making settlement on account of sales, but they thought Shriner could [423]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 Md. 419, 1883 Md. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forney-v-shriner-md-1883.