Haslett's Adm'r. v. Glenn

7 H. & J. 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1825
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 7 H. & J. 17 (Haslett's Adm'r. v. Glenn) 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
Haslett's Adm'r. v. Glenn, 7 H. & J. 17 (Md. 1825).

Opinion

At this term the opinion of the court was delivered by

Earle, J.

The following is a full statement of the facts of this case. On the 25tb of April 1814, Doctor William W. Haslett, late of Baltimore, made his will, and died a few days after. A little previous thereto, he had purchased a plantation of John, Heslip, and obtained a conveyance of it from him to John Miller, and his heirs, in trust for the use of himself and his wife, Ann Haslett, for and during their joint natural lives, and the life of the survivor of them, and after the death of the survivor of them, to the use of the heirs of his said wife, forever; and by his will he ratified and confirmed the title to said property to his said wife, her heirs and assigns, forever. The crops growing on the land at the testator’s death, were sowed or planted by Heslip. After manumitting his slaves, and giving some small legacies, he bequeathed also to his wife a third of his personal estate, and gave the remaining two thirds to his sisters, Elizabeth Ramsay and Mary Hood, forever, and directed the division to be made after the payment of all his debts. He appointed his wife-executrix of his will, which trust She accepted, and under the direction of Elias Glenn, esquire, the appellee in this cause, who appears to have- acted a hind and [20]*20friendly part towards the doctor and his family, she applied herself to the settlement of his estate. The will was proved on the 14th day of May 1814, and the 4th day of June following, she returned an inventory of his effects, amounting to $1970 67. On the 14th of the same month the executrix passed her first account with the orphans court, in which she charges herself with the amount of the inventory, with a debt received of Elias Glenn, of $237 34, and. with a personal chattel, not included in the inventory, to the amount of $6, making an aggregate sum of $2214 01, and obtained an allowance for payments, disbursements and commissions, amounting to $1615 27, leaving a balance against her of $598 74. She does not appear to have done any thing more towards her administration, unless holding possession of all her husband’s effects may be so considered, until her death, which took place the 12th of September following. She left a will, and by it devised all her property, real, personal and mixed, to her two nieces Willmina and Julian Stewart, their heirs and assigns, forever, subject to and charged with the payment of her funeral expenses, debts and legacies, and appointed her friend Elias Glenn, her executor. He proved her will in the same month of September, and returned an inventory of her estate, including all the articles of her husband’s personal estate appraised by her. It is admitted that the same goods and chattels were sold by him at auction soon after, and by his account of sales, returned to the orphans court, it appeal’s they brought the sum of $3554 66, overrunning the inventory she returned, with the chattels she accounted for, the sum of $1578 93i§. In December he passed his first account as executor of her estate, and charged himself with the amount of the inventory returned by him, $2796 05, with the difference between the sales and appraisement $768 614, and with cash in his hands $98 62§, making the amount of debits $3653 294- He paid funeral expenses, debts, legacies, &c. to the amount of $2139 13, and having obtained in his account an allowance for them, there was left in his hands $1514 16. This sum he charged himself with in his last account, passed at the 1st of December 1819, and reduced it by further payments and disbursements to $468 58, which he admitted to be in his hands undisposed of. At the same time he passed a furthér [21]*21account of the estate of Doctor Haslett, calling it the second account of Ann Haslett, executrix of William W. Haslett, rendered by him as her executor. In this settlement he charges himself with $598 74, the balance due on her first account, and is allowed for a payment to the register of $1 50, and her third part of her residuum of her husband’s estate to the amount of $199 03, making together $200 58, and leaving no more to be accounted for than $398 16. No part of the legacies of the two sisters of the first testator is alleged to be paid, and why they have stood off, and not asserted their rights, does not appear. The appellant, however, who will be accountable to them for their proportion of what he receives, after having paid the debts, if any remain to be paid, obtained letters de bonis non. on the estate of William W. Haslett on the 21st July 1821, and brought an action of trover in less than a year thereafter. The appellee, the defendant below, pleaded to it the general issue plea, and that the causes ot action did not accrue at any time within three years next before the day of the institution of the suit, to which last plea there is a general replication.

There hall» grown out of these facts several questions of law, which have been discussed in this court with ability, and now await its decision.

The most important among them respects the situation, in a legal view, of the goods and chattels of William W. Iiaslett, taken by the executor of his wife into the administration of her estate — Whether at the time of her decease in September 1814, she was possessed of them in auter droit, or had acquired such a right to them, as made them transmissible to her executor? If she had not acquired such a right to them, it is manifest the legatees of the first testator have been injured by the mode of settlement adopted, in the proportion the legatees under the wife’s will have been profited by it — the $1578 03J, the gains of the second appraisement, and sales on the first appraisement, having been taken from one set of legatees, and given to the other. The appellee, we are certain, stood indifferent to them both, and if an error has been made in his settlement, we aré perfectly sensible it has proceeded wholly from a mistaken apprehension of his duty. To establish the position that the wife made the property of her husband her own in her lifetime, it [22]*22was contended by the appellee, that she paid the debts of her testator, out of her own funds, to nearly the amount of the appraisement of his estate; that she settled an account of her administration with the orphans court, and was charged by that court with the appraised value of the estate only; and that she had fully administered his effects, and thereby they became her right.

. We are of opinion, that neither of the grounds are tenable in. this case, and that the position taken is not sustained.

The first is directly opposed to the decision of this court, in the case of Hall vs. Griffith, 2 Harr. & Johns. 483, where it is decided in so many words, that the appellant, the administrator de bonis non in that case, had no rightto retain the personal estate at the appraisement on his paying the debts of the deceased to the amount of the inventory. He had been for many years in the administration of the estate, had overpaid the creditors the amount of the inventory, and considered the property his own, and yet he was compelled, by a decree of the orphans court, sanctioned by the opinion of this court, to sell the negroes, and their increase, with the other property, ánd account to the representatives for the amount of sales. Jinn Haslett

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 H. & J. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasletts-admr-v-glenn-md-1825.