Home for Incurables v. Bruff

153 A. 403, 160 Md. 156, 1931 Md. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1931
Docket[Nos. 34, 35, October Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 153 A. 403 (Home for Incurables v. Bruff) 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
Home for Incurables v. Bruff, 153 A. 403, 160 Md. 156, 1931 Md. LEXIS 62 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinin of the Court.

Georgia Gelston Jones, a resident of Baltimore City, died ■on July 21th, 1928, leaving a duly executed will which was executed on December 28th, 1891, and which devised and *160 bequeathed her property. The administration of her estate was substantially accomplished, with the exception of several disputed claims, and certain devises and bequests about which there was controversy. In order to obtain a construction of the will and to make the distribution under the control and with the guidance of a court of equity, the executor filed a bill of complaint, and from the ensuing decree certain of her next of kin and the Home for* Incurables of Baltimore City, a devisee and legatee, have' severally appealed. These appeals present a number of questions with reference to the validity of gifts to tire Maryland Bible Society, to the “Home for Incurables for Men” in Baltimore, Md.; to the “Home for Incurables for Women, in Baltimore,” Md.; and to< the “Invalid Fund for Disabled Ministers” in the care of the Trustees of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States (popularly known as the Southern Presbyterian Church). In order to’ avoid repetition, there will be no general statement of the problems presented, which can be grouped advantageously with respect to the separate beneficiaries.

1. Bv the fourth item of her will the testatrix devised and bequeathed to the Maryland Bible Society the sum of $1,000 and a ground rent of $27 yearly “to be applied to the uses of the said corporation as a ‘memorial’ of my father.” After her death the executor found a certificate for $1,000* of Baltimore City Dock Improvement 4 per cent, stock, due 1961, which the testatrix had issued on June 18th, 1913, to herself for life and at her death to the Maryland Bible Society. There is no evidence of any act or declaration by the testatrix from which it could be inferred that the subsequent gift of stock was intended to be a satisfaction or payment in whole or in part of the legacy of $1)000. The mere fact that the gift of stock was subject to the life estate of the donor, and that its face value was the same in amount as the legacy of $1,000, is insufficient to> raise a presumption of ademption or satisfaction, although the party takes both the gift and the legacy at the death of the testatrix. Loyola College v. Dugan, 137 Md. 545, 550, 113 A. 81; Gallagher *161 v. Martin, 102 Md. 115, 62 A. 247; Miller on Construction of Wills, secs. 144, 145; 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Juris. (4th Ed.), sec. 562.

2. In addition to this gift, the Maryland Bible Society was made the beneficiary of valuable gifts of land and money by the fifth, nineteenth, and twentieth items of the will. The gift under the nineteenth item of the will is of one-half of the residuary estate upon the death of a life tenant without issue surviving at the time of her death. As this contingency has happened and as, by the twentieth item of the will, the society is given an additional one twenty-fourth of the residuary estate, thirteen twenty-fourths of the entire residuary estate was attempted to he given to the society.

The contention is made by the next of kin that every one of the gifts to the Maryland Bible Society must fail and fall to the next of kin on the ground that intestacy results because the corporate existence of the Maryland Bible Society is at an end; but if the society be a subsisting corporate entity, then the gifts of the thirteen twenty-fourths part of the residuary estate are voidable, since they would increase the income of the society to more than the yearly statutory limitation of $10,000; and a court of equity will not lend its aid to enforce what the state may avoid and thereby create an intestacy as to the gifts mentioned.

The Maryland State Bible Society was incorporated by the General Assembly of Maryland, by chapter 290 of the Acts of 1842-43, and its corporate life was limited to thirty years. It was given the capacity “to hold by deed, bequest, and devise any interest, estate or property, real, personal or mixed in possession or expectancy and also to uso, sell, mortgage, lease, transfer or convey all or any part of said property; provided, that the clear annual income of said estate, interest and property shall not exceed the sum of ten thousand dollars.” The Legislature reserved the right to alter or amend the act of incorporation at pleasure. Sections 1-4.

By chapter 148 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1872, entitled “A supplement to an Act- entitled ‘An Act to *162 incorporate the Maryland State Bible- Society, passed at December session, eighteen hundred and forty-two, chapter two hundred and ninety, and to- change the name of said corporation to- The Maryland Bible Society,’ ” it was enacted “that the corporate franchises granted by the said Act of Assembly, entitled an Act to incorporate the Maryland State Bible Society, passed at December session, eighteen hundred and forty-two, chapter two hundred and ninety, be and the same are hereby continued and re-enacted without any limitation as to the duration of said corporation, subject to the provisions of this Act; and that the name of the said corporation be * * * changed to The Maryland Bible Society,” and that the provision with respect to- the clear annual income be continued. The Legislature- further declared that it reserved the right to- alter, amend, or repeal the new as well as the original act at any time.

The next of kin assert that the Maryland Bible- Society has no legal corporate existence;, and, so, it is incapable of taking any gift. In support of this position, they rely upon the two- provisions of article 3, section 29, of the Maryland Constitution: (A) That every law shall embrace but one subject and that shall be described in its title-; and (B) that no- law, or section of law, shall be revived or amended by reference to its title or section only.

A. The one subject-matter of chapter 148 of the Acts of 1872 was the charter of the Maryland State Bible Society, which had been granted by the General Assembly by chapter 290 of the acts passed at the December session, 1842. This charter was about to expire as its existence was limited to a period of thirty years, and the act was consequently introduced for the prevention of the end of the corporate existence through the passage of time, by enlarging the duration of its corporate existence in perpetuity; and to permit it to exercise its corporate powers under a slightly different corporate name, but subject to the same provisions with respect to the limitation of the clear annual income to $10,000, and the reservation to the Legislature of the right to alter, amend, or repeal both acts. The natural and obvious meaning of *163 the term “supplement to an act,” in the title to a pending legislative hill to amend a subsisting statute, is that something is to' be incorporated in the statute by way of addition, completion, or extension, SO' as to supply a deficiency or meet a want. Century Dictionary, “Supplement”; 37 Cyc. 605.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 403, 160 Md. 156, 1931 Md. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-for-incurables-v-bruff-md-1931.