Frank v. Wareheim

16 A.2d 851, 179 Md. 59
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 18, 1940
Docket[No. 11, October Term, 1940.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 A.2d 851 (Frank v. Wareheim) 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
Frank v. Wareheim, 16 A.2d 851, 179 Md. 59 (Md. 1940).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In the appeal of Edwin Frank and Lydia Heindel v. Carroll G. Wareheim, executor of Amelia Snyder, which was recently decided by this court and is reported in 177 Md. at page 43, 7 A. 2nd 186, several questions affecting the administration of the estate of the testatrix were decided and the cause was remanded for futher proceedings in conformity with that opinion. On that remand a purported corrected and final administration account was prepared and submitted to the Orphans’ Court of Carroll County by the executor. Shortly thereafter Edwin Frank and Lydia Heindel, legatees under the will of the testatrix, filed in the Orphans’ Court exceptions to the account as presented for these reasons:

“1. That the deduction of the hereinafter described notes from the distributive shares or legacies of these exceptions in the estate of the said Amelia Snyder, deceased, is improper for that the said notes are under seal, and therefore specialties, which under Article 57, section 3 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland are barred by limitations and no longer existing debts, said notes being set forth as follows:
*62 Specialty of Edwin Frank including interest
from March 31, 1924 ...................... §1431.40
Specialties of Lydia Heindel including interest from November 18, 1921 ............. 1516.70
Including interest from March 31, 1922 .... 1503.40
Including interest from June 15, 1922 ..... 282.58
“2. That the allowance to the Executor of commissions on the aforesaid notes is improper for that the said notes, being specialties and barred by limitations, and no longer existing debts, are not assets of the said estate.”

After filing these verified exceptions on December 18th, 1939, no further proceedings were had before the court until, January 9th, 1940, the exceptants filed a petition which recited that, although notice had been given of the filing of the exceptions, the executor had filed no answer. As requested, an order was passed requiring the executor to answer the exceptions on or before January 16th. The executor did not answer but demurred to the petition of January 9th, on the ground that the executor was not bound to answer. The exceptions on the same day moved "that the demurrer be not received on the ground that it was not a proper pleading in the Orphans’ Court and that it was not in such form that it could be treated as an answer or as an exception to .the sufficiency of the petition of the objectors. On January 23rd, 1940, the corrected docket entry shows that, counsel for the respective parties being present, the parties were heard on the demurrer and the objection to the demurrer. The next entry is of March 7th, and is: “Corrected administration acct., filed by executor and acct., verbally ordered by court to be held by Register of Wills pending a conference between counsel for respective parties.” On this day the executor swore to the accuracy of the corrected account, and to the allowances made. After this entry the record shows neither testimony taken, nor facts agreed and stated, nor hearing had, nor submission of the matter to the court for determination, but this order was passed:

*63 “The court having examined the aforegoing account and all the vouchers relating thereto, and being satisfied that the said account is just and true, as stated, it is thereupon, this 26th day of March, 1940, ordered and decreed that the said account be and the same is hereby approved and passed; and be it further ordered that the exceptions heretofore filed to said account, and the demurrer to said exceptions, be, and the same are hereby overruled.” From this order the exceptants have appealed.

The procedure has been set out at length because the executor makes the point that the order of the court should be affirmed because it is not proved of record nor admitted that the paper writings in controversy are specialties nor what are their maturities. This is true, but it is also true that, while the exceptants asserted that the documents are specialties and asked the executor to answer this allegation, no denial was made that the exceptants had an opportunity for a hearing to prove the nature of the paper writings, which were in the possession of the executor. See Malkus v. Richardson, 124 Md. 224, 230, 92 A. 474. The only question on which a hearing was accorded was on the demurrer of the executor, which is a pleading not countenanced by orphans’ court procedure. King v. Bork, 166 Md. 17, 19, 170 A. 524; Long v. Long, 115 Md. 130, 134, 80 A. 699, 848; Id., 118 Md. 198, 201, 84 A. 375; Simmons v. Hagner, 140 Md. 248, 251, 117 A. 759; Munnikhuysen v. Magraw, 57 Md. 172, 193, 195. Compare McComas v. Wiley, 132 Md. 406, 409, 104 A. 52.

The ex parte passage, without a hearing had, of an order in denial of the rights asserted by their exceptions to the account, entitles the exceptants to a reversal, if the allegations of the exceptions, if admitted, would establish that the court had acted improvidently. Horton v. Horton, 157 Md. 127, 131, 145 A. 355.

The exceptions on this record are grounded specifically on the definite allegation that one obligation of Edwin Frank, an exceptant, and three of Lydia Heindel, an exceptant, are specialties which are barred by the sta *64 tute of limitations, and therefore, can neither be set off against the respective distributive shares of the exceptants, who are legatees, nor be the basis for a' computation of commissions.

These obligations are described in the record of the former appeal, and likewise appear in the modified account of the executor shown by the record in the appeal at bar as “notes.”- So, as appears by the decision in the previous appeal, the court accepted the obligations now at bar, along with a number of the obligations of other legatees, as evidences of indebtedness not under seal, and decided that such parol contracts should be deducted from the distributive share or portion of the debtor, although the statute of limitations in bar of the remedy on parol obligations could be pleaded in an action against the debtor and legatee or distributee. The record in the instant appeal differs from that of the previous appeal. Here it is affirmatively and specifically alleged by the exceptions filed that the obligations of the exceptants are not parol agreements but specialties. As the instruments in writing do not appear on the record and there is neither testimony nor admission of their nature, the court would have to affirm the order below were it not for the facts that the record shows that a hearing was not had on the exceptions to the account, and that these exceptions do present a justiciable question in the allegation that the obligations of the exceptions, which have been deducted from their shares of the estate by the account, are not parol evidences of debt- < but specialties. Supra.

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16 A.2d 851, 179 Md. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-v-wareheim-md-1940.