Higgins v. Higgins

4 Md. Ch. 238
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Md. Ch. 238 (Higgins v. Higgins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. Higgins, 4 Md. Ch. 238 (Md. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

The merits of this controversy, as I understand them, are decidedlywith the plaintiffs, and, therefore, unless some insuperable difficulty shall be found in the legal and technical objections urged by the solicitor for the defendants, an order or decree must be passed in accordance with the prayer of the bill.

It appears by the proceedings, that a Mrs. Ann Maccauley, in November, 1812, executed her last will and testament, by which she gave and bequeathed all her property, of every description, to her friend Gideon White, in trust, for the use of her granddaughter, Ann Higgins, the wife of George W. Higgins, during her natural life, and after her death, all the said property, and its increase, to be equally divided among the children her said granddaughter should leave at the time of her death, share and share alike. And the testatrix further declared it to be her will, that in case her said granddaughter should survive her husband, that then the trust created by the will should cease and determine, and the whole of the property of which the testatrix died possessed, and the increase thereof, should be vested in, and be the sole right, property and estate of her said granddaughter, her executors, administrators and assigns.

The testatrix died in the following year, when the will was duly admitted to probate, and the trustee, White, having refused to assume the trust, and having also renounced the executorship of the will, the Chancellor, on the 16th of May, 1815, upon the petition of Higgins and his wife, passed an order directing that White should assign the trust to Thomas II. Dorsey and Thomas W. Hall, and vesting in them authority to act as trustees under the will, in the same manner as if they had been appointed by the testatrix.

After some further proceedings upon this petition, which it does not appear to me to be necessary to notice particularly, [240]*240the trustees, Dorsey and Hall, on the 8th of April, 1827, filed their petition in that case asking to have their accounts audited, and that they might be relieved from any further execution of the trust, and on the 11th of September following, an order was passed referring the case to the Auditor, to state the necessary accounts.

The Auditor, on the 14th of September, 1827, reported an account, showing a balance due the trustees of $280 95, which was ratified by the Chancellor on the 8th of. October following. And on the same day, upon the petition of Higgins and wife, the defendant, Richard W. Higgins, and the complainant, Joshua Higgins, were, by an order of the Chancellor, appointed trustees, to complete the trusts of the will of Ann Maccauley, in the place of the said Dorsey and Hall.

On the 15th of October, 1827, a bill was filed in this court, by Higgins and wife, Richard W. Higgins, Joshua Higgins and Dorsey and Hall, against James Higgins, an infant son of the said Higgins and wife, in which the proceedings in the other case are referred to, and praying upon the allegation, that the negroes had so much increased in number as to be burdensome to the estate, that a portion of them, of which a list was annexed to the bill, and numbering 23, might be sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the balance due Dorsey and Hall, and the residue to the use of the other complainants. The Chancellor passed a decree upon this bill, on the 6th of December following, for a sale of the property, and appointing the said Richard W. Higgins and Joshua Higgins trustees, to sell, who on the 27th of February, 1828, executed a joint bond for the faithful performance of the trust.

Richard W. Higgins, one of the trustees, reported the sale of one of the negroes, on the 8th of May, 1834, and on the 10th of April, 1835, he reported the sale of two others, both of which sales were duly ratified; since which period there does not appear to have been any further proceeding in that case.

The bill in the present case, was filed on the 27th of June, 1846, by James Higgins and Joshua Higgins, two of the children of Ann Higgins, who died early in that year, (her husband [241]*241surviving her,) against Richard W. Higgins, her remaining child, and his insolvent trustee, in which the proceedings in the first of the other two cases are referred to, and the aid of the court is asked in settling up the estate by sale or division thereof, among the parties entitled, and upon the allegation that Richard W. Higgins had, by selling and appropriating the money to his own individual use, received a much larger share of the trust estate than he would, upon a fair distribution thereof, be entitled to; the complainants pray that neither he nor his insolvent trustee, he having petitioned for the benefit of the insolvent laws in the year 1840, should be allowed to participate therein.

The bill was answerd by the defendant, Higgins, and his permanent trustee, David Stewart. The answer of the latter puts the complainants to the proof of the case, and pleads the statute of limitations, against any claim against Richard W. Higgins founded upon the alleged conversion by him of the personal property to his own use.

The answer of Higgins, admits most of the material averments of the bill. And in his testimony, which was taken under a commission, and order for his examination, subject to exceptions, and which, I think competent, though objected to, he proved, that while acting as trustee and manager he sold a number of the negroes, whose names and prices are stated, and that the proceeds of sale so made by him, as of the crops made upon the trust property, which consisted in part of real estate, he appropriated to his own use one-half, and the other half to the support of the estate, and of the family, of whom his brothers Joshua and James were members. He further stated, that Joshua always objected to the sales made by him of the negroes. And in a deposition made by the same witness, which it was agreed should avail as if taken under the commission, he proved that he had received the sum of about $700, as hire of a portion of the trust negroes, of which he had appropriated at least four-fifths to his own use.

Under an agreement for the purpose, the two cases founded [242]*242upon the will of Ann Maccauley were introduced as evidence in this cause.

Upon this state of facts, the question is presented, and has been argued, whether in case of a sale or division of the remaining trust property, the insolvent trustee of Richard W. Higgins can be admitted to a participation until he shall have first accounted for that portion thereof which it is apparent, from his own testimony, he has received and applied to his own individual benefit ?

In the event which has happened, the death of Mrs. Ann Higgins in the lifetime of her husband, her children, the two complainants, and Higgins, one of the defendants, were to receive share and share alike the property bequeathed by Mrs. Maccauley and its increase, such being the express language of 4he will, and it is therefore perfectly obvious that if the defendant, Higgins, should be allowed to retain that which he has already appropriated to his own use, and to receive his share of what remains equally with the other children, he will have enjoyed a larger portion of the proceeds than he is fairly entitled to, and the provisions of the will must be disregarded and frustrated.

Against a consequence so unjust, the principles settled by the orders of the late Chancellor, in the case of Harwood’s estate,

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Bluebook (online)
4 Md. Ch. 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-higgins-mdch-1847.