Gray v. Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children

64 A.2d 102, 192 Md. 251, 1949 Md. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 1949
Docket[No. 75, October Term, 1948.]
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 64 A.2d 102 (Gray v. Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children) 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
Gray v. Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children, 64 A.2d 102, 192 Md. 251, 1949 Md. LEXIS 232 (Md. 1949).

Opinion

Collins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case involves two appeals from a decree of Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City construing the will of Jennie Beck, who died January 3, 1921.

On April 12, 1947, the Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children of Baltimore City, a Maryland eleemosynary corporation (hereinafter called the Home), filed a bill of complaint in Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City against Jennie Beck Gray, individually and as executrix of the estate of William C. Beck, deceased, the heirs of Jennie Beck, the Safe Deposit & Trust Company of Maryland, as executor and trustee under the will of Jennie Beck, deceased, and the State of Maryland, asking that Court to take jurisdiction under the will of Jennie Beck without assuming jurisdiction of the further administration of the aforesaid trust. It also asked, among other things, that the court grant to the Home relief by its judgment or decree directing absolute distribution of the funds, passing under the will, to the Home and fixing the purposes by which, the places at which, and the method in which said funds may be used and any conditions or limitations attached thereto.

*256 Jennie Beck, by her will dated May 11, 1915, after making certain specific bequests, devised and bequeathed her entire net estate to the Safe Deposit & Trust Company of Baltimore, Trustee. She refers to this entire estate as her “trust estate” or as the corpus of her trust estate. She directed the trustee to. pay, from the net income thereof, certain sums to or for the benefit of her brother, William C. Beck, for his life, and to hold, the surplus income in a separate fund, which she called the “invested income” account of her estate. On the death of her brother which occurred on March 9, 1947, the trustee was directed to transfer and deliver the corpus of the' trust estate to the Home,

“said Corpus to be held by the Board of Managers of said Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children as an endowment fund for the use and benefit of the two wards which have been heretofore built and established, and which are known as ‘The Contagious Units’,—one for the treatment of diptheria and. the other for the treatment of scarlet fever. The said fund is to be held by the Board of Managers of said Corporation, and is to be known as the ‘Jennie Beck Memorial Endowment Fund’, and the income accruing therefrom is to be used by the said Board of Managers of said corporation to pay for the care and treatment of deserving free patients in said contagious units, to the end that two-thirds (2/3) of the number of beds in each of the said two wards of said contagious units shall be used for the reception, care' and treatment of free, patients, said free patients to be received, cared for and treated under the same conditions and in the same manner as those patients in said wards in said contagious' units from whom the Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children shall receive remuneration for care and treatment.”

The trustee was also directed to pay to the Home on the death-of the brother the balance of the invested income account after the payment of the brother’s funeral expenses and several small bequests,

“to be used by said corporation in such manner as the *257 Board of Managers of said corporation shall deem fit and proper, but to the end that the two wards which have been heretofore built and established and are known and designated as ‘The Contagious Units’ one for the treatment of diptheria patients and one for the treatment of scarlet fever patients, shall be open for the reception of patients under the same terms and conditions as are now in force in regard to the other wards of said Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children aforesaid. * * * I hereby request that the Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children shall erect on the walls of each of the said two wards of said contagious units, proper memorial tablets, setting forth the purposes of the fund herein provided, and the donor thereof.”

Jennie Beck executed a codicil to her will on March 11,1919. Except for the fact that this codicil republished the original will, it has no bearing on this case. The total amount involved in this proceeding is approximately $271,000. After hearing before the Chancellor a decree was filed decreeing that the trust under the will of Jennie Beck, deceased, and the trust created by William C. Beck terminated upon the death of William C. Beck on March 9, 1947, and, upon compliance with the terms of ¡the decree, the Safe Deposit & Trust Company should have no further rights, obligations or duties with respect to the trust or with respect to the use of the property constituting the trust. The trustee was directed to pay over and deliver to the Home all securities, cash and other properties included in the so-called “corpus schedule”, the “invested income schedule”, and the “William C. Beck Schedule”, less certain commissions and expenses. The so-called “endowment fund” or “corpus fund” or “Jennie Beck Memorial Fund.” was to be kept intact and not used or expended for any purposes whatsoever. The Chancellor further ordered that the sum of $10,257.61, which the Home had used to pay a social worker, should be paid out of the invested income into the hands of the Home and credited to the corpus of the “invested income fund”. ,|t was also ordered that the trustee’s termina *258 tion fee and the counsel fee for the attorney representing the Trustee be paid out of the “Corpus Fund”. Although not confining the use of the income from the “endowment fund”, the corpus of the “invested income account”, and the income therefrom, literally to immediate purposes set out in the will of Jennie Beck, the Chancellor made certain limitations upon the use of those funds.

From that decree Jennie Beck Gray, the niece of the testatrix and the daughter of William C. Beck, individually and as executrix of the estate of William C. Beck, deceased, appeals to this Court. A cross appeal is also taken by the Home.

Jennie Beck Gray contends here that the two wards specified in the will must be kept open with two-thirds of the beds free; that appropriate provisions should be included in the decree to make certain that the testatrix’s directions will be followed and her purposes accomplished; and that the Court costs and other expenses should be charged against the “invested income” account. The Home in its cross appeal contends, among other things, that although if the Court so decrees it will carry out the provisions of the will of Jennie Beck as specifically stated therein, it is not restricted in the use of the income to the purposes mentioned because its use for such purposes would involve waste and impair the fulfillment of the testatrix’s general intention. It also contends that independent of the construction of the will, any restrictions on the use of the bequests were removed by an agreement signed by William C. Beck on January 22, 1921. It contends also that the payment made by the Home for the social worker was correct and that the court costs and'counsel fee were properly directed to be paid out of the corpus of the endowment fund. It also contends that the heirs have no sufficient interest to be affected by the decision as to entitle them to an appeal and that their appeal should therefore be dismissed.

The facts of the case for the purposes of this opinion are substantially as follows.

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Bluebook (online)
64 A.2d 102, 192 Md. 251, 1949 Md. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-harriet-lane-home-for-invalid-children-md-1949.