Holloway v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

134 A. 497, 151 Md. 321, 1926 Md. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 8, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 134 A. 497 (Holloway v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) 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
Holloway v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 134 A. 497, 151 Md. 321, 1926 Md. LEXIS 108 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

John Q. A. Holloway, by his will elated December 23rd, 1903, devised and bequeathed one-sixth of the residue of his estate to the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, in trust to invest the same in such manner as to said trustee shall seem best, and to collect the income from time to time arising from the investment so to be made by it, and to pay over the net income to his son John E. Holloway, “so long as he shall live, and at the death of my said son John E. Holloway, in trust to divide the corpus or principal of the property and estate so theretofore held in trust for him among his children and descendants in such portions as my said son shall by last will and testament direct or appoint, but if my said son shall die without having exercised such power of testamentary appointment, then at his death said trustees shall divide the same in equal portions among the children of my said son John E. Holloway, if any he shall have then living, and the then living issue of any child of his who may then be dead, such issue to represent its or their parent in the distribution^ and to take only the share or portion to which the parent if then living would be entitled. But if my said son John E. Holloway shall die without leaving children or descendants him surviving, then and in that event, the said trustee shall at his death pay over and deliver absolutely one-third of the corpus or principal of said trust fund and property to my son Edward Lee Holloway, free and clear of all trust, and shall continue to hold the remaining two-thirds thereof in trust in equal shares for my daugh *324 ter Anna Elizabeth Holloway and my son Clarence J. Holloway, in accordance in all respects” with the terms of trusts created for them in other paragraphs of the will. “With the proviso, however, that in any event if my said son John E. Holloway shall leave a widow him surviving and born in my life time, the trustee shall at his death retain for division at her death or remarriage, whichever shall first occur, one hundred thousand dollars of the trust fund and property, and shall only during her life or widowhood, pay over to her at regular stated periods the income arising from said sum of one hundred thousand dollars, which principal sum it_ shall divide as hereinbefore provided at the death or remarriage of such widow.”

Susanna Holloway, wife of John Q. A. Holloway, by her will dated March 20th, 1907, devised and bequeathed to said trustee in trust for her son the said John E. Holloway, for life, one-fourth of the residue of her estate in the same language and with the same remainder as to children and descendants as in the will of her husband, but providing that in case of failure of children or descendants surviving, the trustee should pay over absolutely to her son Edward L. Holloway one-sixth part of the trust fund, and continue to hold in trust for her daughter Anna Elizabeth Holloway and her son Clarence J. Holloway, each one-sixth part, the remaining three-sixths parts to be paid over to certain religious associations named as defendants in the bill filed by the trustee. There are three codicils to this will, the last dated October 20th, 1911.

John Q. A. Holloway died in January, 1904, and Susanna Holloway in December, 1911.

John E. Holloway, at the time these wills were executed, was living with his wife, Anne McClellan Holloway, whom he married in June, 1899. They lived in Baltimore several years, in Hew York five or six years, travelled considerably, visited Biarritz, France, several times, and settled there in 1905 or 1906, and continued to live together there until the 5th day of May, 1911, when they formally separated, *325 having executed an agreement of separation. There were no children born to them. She survived him and they were never divorced. In Biarritz he became acquainted with a little girl named Marie Calou, then about twelve years old, to whom he became very much attached. Subsequently Mr. and Mrs. Holloway took an apartment in the house where this girl lived with her grand-parents. When she was about eighteen, in 1908, the illicit intercourse between them began. In the early part of 1912, after the death of his mother, they came to Baltimore, where Miss Oalou was ill for several months and in July, 1912, they went to Reno, Nevada, with the intention of making that their home, and there Grace Suzanne Holloway was born in September, 1912, as the result of this illicit- intercourse. Her father promptly made out and filed in the department of vital statistics of that city a birth certificate, giving the name of the child as above, and acknowledging her to be his child. They continued to live as a family in Reno for several years, during which time she was publicly acknowledged by him to be, and generally recognized as, his child.

While living in Nevada John E. Holloway endeavored to obtain a divorce from his wife in order that he might marry Miss Calou, but failed. After about three years residence in Reno, he moved with Miss Calou and Suzanne to California, where they lived as a family until his death in 1925. There also he held out Suzanne as his child, and was in every way an affectionate father. It is contended by appellant that there, too, he complied with the legitimation statute. We shall not stop to discuss the arguments pro and con on this point, as it would add nothing to the strength of appellant’s case to hold that legitimation was accomplished a second time, if it had been effected in another state.

On the 24th day of March, 1913, John E. Holloway made a will in which he executed the powers of appointment under the wills of his father and mother in favor of “my beloved daughter, Grace Suzanne Holloway, born to me and *326 Marie Calou, at the city of Reno, County of Washoe, State of Nevada,upon the 23rd day of September, A. H. 1912”; and appointed Marie Calou as executrix. He left no child or descendant other that Grace Suzanne.

On being advised of the death of Holloway, and of his will, the trustee filed a petition in Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, which had taken jurisdiction of the trust under John Q. A. Holloway’s will, asking for a construction of the language of said will, “in so far as construction may be necessary for the determination of the rights of all parties who may be entitled thereunder”; and that the court determine for whose benefit said share “is now held and/or distributable in view of the death of the said John E. Holloway, leaving a will as. aforesaid.” And on the same day the trustee filed a bill of complaint against all the parties who were or might be interested under the wills of Mrs. Susanna Holloway and John E. Holloway, asking the court to take jurisdiction! over the further administration of the trusts created by Mrs. Susanna Holloway, and for the construction of that will so far as may be necessary for a determination of the rights of all parties who may be entitled thereunder. The cases proceeded to submission for decrees, when the learned chancellor decreed, in effect, in the cases respectively, that John E.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 497, 151 Md. 321, 1926 Md. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-v-safe-deposit-trust-co-md-1926.