In re Estate of Gies

2 Balt. C. Rep. 89
CourtBaltimore City Orphans' Court
DecidedMay 13, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 89 (In re Estate of Gies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Orphans' Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Gies, 2 Balt. C. Rep. 89 (Md. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

SAVAGE, C. J., BLOCK, J.,

concurring—

We wish to note and commend the ability with which this case was argued. We have given it careful examination and consideration. The facts are not numerous, and save those related by the two witnesses who were called by the respondents are of record in .this Court and contained in the paper-writing hereinafter set forth.

On the afternoon of Sunday, October 30, 1898, Miss Matilda W. Gies, aged between sixty-five and seventy years, came to this city from Washington, D. C., in company with a relative, Mrs. Malinda J. Warren, who had been requested by Miss Gies to come to Washington for her, and together they went without delay in a carriage to the then residence in Baltimore of Mrs. Warren and her husband, Aaron Warren, who hospitably entertained her. She was, according to the testimony of Miss Mary J. Warren, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren, and sole witness in this case except Mr. John S. Deale hereinafter mentioned, “suffering from dropsy,” but she was apparently at that time in no immediate danger of death, and did not, as far as Miss Warren’s testimony disclosed, say anything to indicate that she anticipated her demise within a brief time. No testimony was offered as to her mental condition, and we presume it was sound. Soon after Miss Gies reached the home of Mr. and Mrs. Warren she said to Mrs. Warren (without a suggestion from any one, as far as shown) : “Malinda, all I have is yours; you and Aaron shall have it all.” After taking supper on the day of her arrival she again said to Mrs. Warren: “Malinda, I am very grateful to you; you shall have all I have, every cent of it.” She then handed to Mrs. Warren the key to her trunk, and said: “Go get my bank book out of my trunk.” Mrs. Warren brought her bank book to her, and she handed it to Mrs. Warren, and said: “Malinda, that is yours.” Miss Gies then retired to the room assigned her, and she never left it. She died on November 10, 1898, twelve days after she reached Balti[90]*90more. She was not in bed during-the entire time she was in her room, but occasionally walked about it. Mrs. Warren was her constant nurse. The testimony of a physician was not offered.

On October 31, 1898, the day after Miss Gies reached the home of Mr. and Mrs. Warren, Mr. Aaron Warren presented to her a paper writing which he had prepared, and of which the following is an exact copy:

Baltimore Oct 31st, 1898.

To paying teller

Dear Sir:

I hearby transfer my bank account, (In ease of death,) to Mrs. Malinda J. Warren and husband, Aaron Warren of Baltimore Md. of whom I am now living.

Miss Gies signed her full name to the above paper writing. It was not witnessed, but Miss Warren testified that she saw Miss Gies sign it. It is without a seal. It is unquestionably not a will. The bank book and the writing were retained by Mr. and Mrs. Warren without objection or other words or acts of Miss Gies as far as is known to us. Mr. and Mrs. Warren are incompetent as witnesses under Section 2 of Article 35 of the Code, and were not called. The case must be decided by us without even a conjecture as to what they might have said under oath.

On November 12, 1898, as we were informed through the testimony of Mr. Deale, assistant treasurer of the Eutaw Savings Bank of Baltimore, Mr. and Mrs. Warren presented to the careful and experienced officers of that long-established corporation the bank or deposit book of Miss Gies, which showed that the balance in bank to her credit stood in her name alone and that no rights of joint ownership or survivor-ship attached to it, and the paper writing now before us, and requested payment to them of the entire sum of money (which then amounted to $2,-035.22), standing therein to the credit of Matilda W. Gies. Payment to them as individuals was promptly and rightly refused.

On November 17, 1898, letters of administration on the estate of Matilda W. Gies were granted by this Court to Aaron and Malinda J. Warren on their application in person, and on November 18, 1898, the Eutaw Savings Bank of Baltimore paid to them, as such administrators, the above-mentioned sum of money, by check No. 290, drawn on the Western National Bank of Baltimore to their order as administrators, and which they endorsed as administrators. They thus became possessed of the entire fund.

No inventory of the estate of Miss Gies has been filed in this Court, and though it consisted of the above named sum of money one is necessary (Art. 93, S. 221). On June 19, 1899, Mr. and Mrs.\ Warren filed in this Court their first administration account, in which, after charging themselves only with $2,035.22 (the amount paid to them as before stated) they craved allowance for funeral expenses,- debts, $50 for a ■ tombstone erected to the memory of Miss Gies, and full commissions to themselves, and balanced their account by this entry: “Amount remaining in hands of these accountants pending controversy as to ownership of fund $1,363.34.” On the same day after Mr. and Mrs. Warren had signed the above account as administrators of Matilda. W. Gies, and sworn that it was “true and just as stated” it was examined, proved and passed by this Court and immediately filed and recorded. The testimony of Miss Warren and Mr. Deale and the written proof in this case embody the above recited facts.

Mr. and Mrs. Warren rested after proving and filing their first and only administration account, and we were not formally apprised until December 23, 1899, that the “controversy” had reached an acute stage, and then by the filing by Messrs. Gans & Haman, attorneys for Rachel W. Werntz and eight others who claim as distributees of said estate, of a petition in which after complaining of the unusual delay of the respondents and their verbal claim that they were entitled to further time in which to state another account, they allege “that it has also been claimed on behalf of said administrators that said administrators themselves are entitled to the balance of $1,363.34 shown by their first administration account, but your petitioners have been unable to learn definitely upon what grounds such claim is based, and aver that no just grounds exist for such claim.” In conclusion the petitioners prayed for an order requiring the said [91]*91administrators to state a second account at once “accounting for and distributing tbe balance in tlieir hands and interest.”

The answer of the respondents denied that the petitioners are distributees of said estate, and also that their first account showed “a balance for distribution,” and concluded with the statement that the amount of money remaining in their hands “belongs to Malinda .J. Warren,” and that the estate of Matilda W. Gies is indebted to her for payments made by the administrators on account of the estate. The matters in controversy when argued stood as above detailed, and we have stated them in full in order that the essential facts may be herein set forth as presented to us and the legal questions involved may be the better understood.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Whalen v. Milholland
44 L.R.A. 208 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1899)
Robson v. Jones
3 Del. Ch. 51 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1866)
Pole ex rel. Pole v. Simmons
45 Md. 246 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1876)
Crow v. Hubard
62 Md. 560 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1884)
Daugherty v. Daugherty
33 A. 541 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-gies-mdorphanctbalt-1900.