Hayman, Adm'r v. Messick

249 A.2d 695, 252 Md. 384, 1969 Md. LEXIS 1097
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 1969
Docket[No. 90, September Term, 1968.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 249 A.2d 695 (Hayman, Adm'r v. Messick) 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
Hayman, Adm'r v. Messick, 249 A.2d 695, 252 Md. 384, 1969 Md. LEXIS 1097 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

SinglEy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On 29 July 1967, Caroline Huffington Slocumb, 87 years of age, died domiciled in Caroline County, Maryland. Mrs. Slocumb had executed a holographic will on 1 March 1962, which she apparently had prepared without assistance, since it neither appointed an executor nor disposed of her residuary estate. The will did, however, contain a devise of property in Florida to “my cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Gale Messick” and bequests of *386 $1,000 each to Maude Hayman Robinson and Morris Hayman of Salisbury, who were not otherwise identified.

On 31 July, the will was filed with the Register of Wills for Caroline County by Mrs. Messick, who proved custody. Subsequently, the witnesses proved their signatures, and on 26 September Morris W. Hayman filed a petition for a grant of letters cum testamento annexo (c.t.a.). A week later, a similar petition was filed by L. Gale Messick. The Hayman petition identified Mr. Hayman and Maude Hayman Robinson as first cousins and next of kin of the decedent. The Messick petition identified 12 of the decedent’s cousins as her next of kin, including Mr. Messick, Mr. Hayman, and Mrs. Robinson. On 3 October 1967, the will was admitted to probate by the Orphans’ Court for Caroline County, and letters of administration c.t.a. were granted to Messick, who then gave bond and entered upon his duties.

Hayman appealed to the Circuit Court for Caroline County from the orphans’ court’s order granting letters to Messick and its refusal to grant letters to him. The appeal was dismissed by a stipulation which recognized that Hayman, as a first cousin and next of kin of the decedent, was properly entitled to the grant of letters. On 27 December 1967, the orphans’ court revoked the letters granted to Messick and granted letters de bonis non (d.b.n.) c.t.a. to Hayman.

By this time, however, Messick had given notice to creditors; had filed an inventory of his decedent’s personal property, which aggregated some $74,000, and had paid certain administration expenses and the decedent’s funeral expenses. On 3 January 1968, on petitions presented by Messick, the orphans’ court authorized the payment of funeral expenses of $1,450.00 and allowed commissions of $1,308.22 to Messick and a fee of $750.00 to his counsel for services in connection with the administration. On the same day Messick filed an administration account, distributing the net assets of the estate to Hayman, as administrator d.b.n.c.t.a.

Sometime thereafter, Hayman determined to mount an attack on Messick’s administration. For reasons not clear to us, Hayman elected not to file exceptions to Messick’s administration account. 2 Sykes, Probate Lem and Practice (1956) §§ *387 869-871 at 14-21. Instead, he filed a petition in the orphans’ court on 25 January which recited that since the grant of letters to Messick was erroneous, the appointment was void ab initio; that all of Messick’s acts should be deemed a nullity; and that Messick should be required to file a “statement and account” of the decedent’s property and of “transactions made and carried on.” Another thrusy was directed at Hayman’s own appointment as administrator d.b.n., the theory being that this was not what he had sought, and that an appointment d.b.n. could not properly follow an appointment which was wholly void. When the court failed to enter any order, Iiayman filed a second petition on 19 February, asking that an order be passed. When no action was taken on this, and Messick failed to answer, Hayman filed a third petition on 26 February, seeking an order requiring Messick to answer. No order was entered on the third petition, but a hearing was held on 28 March. The transcript shows that at the conclusion of the hearing, Chief Judge Brackett said, “This Court feels that we are going to let the d.b.n. stand and we are not going to alter anything that we have done up to this time.”

On 22 April 1968, Hayman filed a notice of appeal:

“Please enter an appeal to the Court of Appeals of Maryland from all adverse rulings of the Court on March 28, 1968, on the Petitions of Morris W. Hay-man, Administrator C.T.A. of Caroline Buffington Slocumb, deceased, filed herein on January 25, 1968, February 16,1968, and February 23, 1968.”

Maryland Code (1957, 1968 Repl. Vol.) Art. 5, § 9 provides : “Any party may appeal to the Court of Appeals from any decree, order, decision or judgment of an orphans’ court.” Code (1957, 1964 Repl. Vol.) Art. 93, § 281 provides:

“In all cases of plenary proceedings, * * * where any motion or application to the court shall be made in writing, it shall be the duty of the court to reduce to writing, and sign the order or decree that may be made by them on such motion or application; and the said motion or application to the court and the order *388 or decree thereon shall be filed as a part of the proceedings, and, in case of appeal from the final decree of the orphans’ court, be transmitted to the appellate court with the other proceedings, and be subject to the judgment and revision of such appellate court.”
(Emphasis added)

Were it not for the italicized language, which would seem to impose upon the court the duty of entering a written order from which an appeal could be taken, we would be inclined to dismiss Hayman’s appeal from the “adverse rulings” of the orphans’ court. We have repeatedly held that an appeal will lie only from a judgment absolute at law, but not from a judgment nisi, Merlands Club, Inc. v. Messall, 238 Md. 359, 208 A. 2d 687 (1965), and from a written order or decree and not from comments by or the opinion of the court, Ballan v. Ballan, 251 Md. 737, 248 A. 2d 871 (1969) ; Bell v. Shifflett, 249 Md. 104, 238 A. 2d 533 (1968) ; Kennedy v. Foley, 240 Md. 615, 214 A. 2d 815 (1965). The more desirable practice would dictate that orphans’ courts, which are courts of special and limited jurisdiction, confined to the letter of their authority, Code, Art. 93, § 287 ; Crandall v. Crandall, 218 Md. 598, 147 A. 2d 754 (1959), act with the same formality. Nevertheless, we shall assume, for the purposes of this opinion, that the orphans’ court, at the conclusion of the hearing on 28 March, entered a written order or orders, denying the relief sought in Hayman’s petition of 26 February. Compare Watson v. Watson, 58 Md. 442 (1882) where our predecessors accepted a stipulation of counsel as to the signing of an order.

Hayman urges (i) that since Messick’s appointment was procured by a misrepresentation of fact, it was void ab initio, and that all of his acts as administrator c.t.a. are invalid; and (ii) that the orphans’ court erred when it refused to require Mes-sick “to file under oath a statetment other and broader than the first and final account he filed.”

i

Code, Art. 93, § 41 provides:

“All acts done by any executor or administrator ac *389

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Bluebook (online)
249 A.2d 695, 252 Md. 384, 1969 Md. LEXIS 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayman-admr-v-messick-md-1969.