Hutchins v. Hope

7 Gill 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Gill 119 (Hutchins v. Hope) 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
Hutchins v. Hope, 7 Gill 119 (Md. 1848).

Opinion

Frick J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

The bill and answer in this cause, will be found in 12 G. & J., 244; where the chancellor’s order, refusing to dissolve the injunction, upon the answer of the appellant, was affirmed; and the cases having been remanded, the injunction, on final hearing by the chancellor, was ruled perpetual; and this decision, by appeal, comes now under review of this court.

The material allegations in the bill, are: — 1. That Mrs. Hope, under whom the appellant claims as assignee, by inadvertence and mistake of the appellee, the executor was overpaid $600 of her claim, under the will. And 2. That the appellee boarded and furnished her, and her negroes and stock; for which he claims to be allowed, against certain bills obligatory, executed to her in her lifetime, and by her assigned to the appellant.

Supposing her to have acquiesced in, and taken under the will of Thomas Hope, Sen., this alleged overpayment is then manifest. The terms of the will assigned to her one-third of the personal estate, after the payment of debts and three legacies, amounting to $1800. The executor gave bond for the payment of debts and legacies; and for the purpose of distribution, two persons were chosen, by whom the entire personal estate of the deceased was appraised; amounting, by the appraisement, to $3306; out of which the appellee passed over to Mrs. Hope, specific property of the estate, to the exact value of $1102.

But can such a presumption of acquiescence be predicated upon this state of facts, so directly opposed to it, in which she [121]*121must have believed that she received, and the executor supposed he had paid her, but one-third of the residue of the estate — after alloioing for the debts and legacies. She was entitled to a full third of the personal estate, to the exclusion of these legacies; and that she could have rejected the will and claimed to this extent, is conceded. If, as an ignorant woman, she was uninformed of her rights, shall we presume against the executor, her son, that she was left in ignorance by him of this, her right of election ? Is not the reverse a more probable and favorable interpretation in Ms behalf, that she was made to understand her true position, and that she required, and received, all that the law allotted to her, and no more? In the adjustment of this fund of $3300, more than one-half of it to be applied to specific legacies, it is difficult to conceive so gross an error to have been committed, and to remain undetected so long. The transfer and delivery to her, took place soon after her husband’s death in 1815, and she appears to have held or disposed of the property as her own, up to the period of her death in 1833. As the specific legacies were paid off, this mistake, if such it was, must have been evident, that left but $1500 of the personalty, of which, by the terms of the will, the widow was to receive one-third, and the appellee, as residuary legatee, two-thirds, “after payment of debts and legacies.” And yet she received of this sum, $1100; leaving to the appellee, $400; less the debts of the estate, if any existed.

In the absence of any evidence to weaken it, the rational inference then is, that she claimed and received what the law allowed her, with the privity of the appellant; who passed it over to her, and could not have failed to see at the time, how the arrangement affected him as regards the small balance remaining of the personalty. If a mistake, in the nature of things, it must have been made apparent then, or soon after; and if now only brought to light, after this lapse of years, some causes or circumstances ought to be adduced to explain it, other than what are relied upon and deduced from the will itself and its provisions. It is part of the case, also, that this will restricted her to a smaller portion of the realty than the, law would award her; and upon the presumption that her son, [122]*122the executor, dealt fairly with her, she was by him apprized of her rights in this particular; and he properly surrendered, and she received, her full third of the personal estate.

If Mrs. Hope had received any thing beyond what was her just and rightful portion of the estate, it would afford some ground for the relief asked by the appellee. But when all that was done; is so entirely consistent with her rights, and is so easily reconciled' and accounted for by the presumption, that she claimed and the executor acquiesced; it is now too late to open and repudiate this settlement,-by recalling the will, and giving to its provisions their literal import and construction, to establish the allegation of inadvertence and-mistake on the part of the appellee.

But we are not left to inference alone in the matter. We have before us the actual terms of the settlement between the1 widow and the executor, by which the whole third of the personalty is conceded to her as she received it.

The agreement to this effect, found in- the record, runs' thus:

“A list of articles taken by Mrs: Hannah Hope, being one-third part of the property appraised by Wm. Nelson and' A. Alderson, by agreement between the said H. H. and' Thomas Hope, executor of Thomas Hope deceased, and in part of her third of the whole personal estate of the deceased.” And after enumerating them to the value of $1102, proceeds: “The above statement is made agreeably to an agreement' made between Hannah Hope and me, for the division of the personal property of Thomas Hope, late of Harford county,deceased.” Signed and sealed, “ Thos. Hope.”

It is impossible to conjecture, after this, upon what the alleged mistake is to rest, unless upon the naked contrast or comparison of this agreement with the provisions of the will,which assigns to her only one-third after payment of the legacies. Yet this agreement has been acquiesced in through a' long series of years, without the slightest evidence that it was to be impugned or disputed by the appellee. With the will before him, and the duty incumbent upon him to execute it, he must have been fully aware of his rights, and the limited [123]*123pretensions of Mrs. Hope, if it was intended by the parties to sustain the will.

In 1822, the notes (which are here enjoined,) were given by him to Mrs. Hope. They were given in settlement between them, for rent due by him at the time. This alleged mistake was said to be made several years before this settlement; and yet, if any such ground of sett-off or claim then existed, it was not brought into view. If it really existed, and as is maintained, was reserved, under the peculiar circumstances of the parties, until the maturity of the notes, and after the death of Mrs. Hope, it is, at all events, too late to assert it against her assignee, whose right and claim, as a bona fide holder of them, is unimpeached; and the consideration by which he holds them, being legally sufficient to protect him. Looking, then, to the terms and provisions of this will,- — which are so simple, that it is almost impossible the appellee could have mistaken his rights under it; regarding, further, the emphatic terms of the agreement, by which the will is disregarded, and one-third of the whole personal estate conceded to her, and the long acquiescence of the appellee, (no matter under what circumstances,) in the settlement thus made, — we must conclude, that as Mrs. Hope

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Bluebook (online)
7 Gill 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchins-v-hope-md-1848.