Jones v. Jones

270 A.2d 126, 259 Md. 336, 1970 Md. LEXIS 812
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 20, 1970
Docket[No. 31, September Term, 1970.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 270 A.2d 126 (Jones v. Jones) 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
Jones v. Jones, 270 A.2d 126, 259 Md. 336, 1970 Md. LEXIS 812 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant Donal A. Jones (husband) here seeks to have the interest of husband and wife in a draft payable to him and his wife, the appellee Alice Y. Jones (wife), and their attorney declared to be owned by the parties as tenants by the entireties. The draft in question was issued in settlement of the wife’s claim relative to injuries sustained by her in an automobile accident and the husband’s claim for reimbursement of certain medical expenses paid by him. We shall affirm the decree of the chancellor.

The accident in question took place in January of 1968. Eight days later both parties signed an agreement retaining an attorney. The husband and wife subsequently separated. They ultimately entered into a voluntary separation agreement. The agreement has all of the earmarks of having been prepared by the parties without the assistance of counsel. It made no reference to the damage claim. In September of 1969, five and a half months after the separation, settlement was effected.

The husband and wife could not agree as to the allocation between them of the sum collected. The wife retained other counsel and instituted a declaratory judg *338 ment action to determine the ownership of the funds. The .sum of $755.00 in medical expenses was paid by the attorney from the sum received in settlement. The parties were agreeable to this payment and the payment of the attorney’s fee. There then remained $4,710.67, the subject of this litigation. The chancellor directed disbursement of $4,340.76 to the wife and $369.91 to the husband in accordance with stipulation that husband paid this sum ■for medical expenses. 1

The husband contends that the sum obtained in settlement was owned as tenants by the entireties and, therefore, that this sum cannot be divided. For this reason he ,says the court lacked jurisdiction.

The husband cites in support of his position Brewer v. Bowersox, 92 Md. 567, 48 A. 1060 (1901), which held that -a tenancy by the entireties might be created in personal property, and Schilbach v. Schilbach, 171 Md. 405, 189 A. 432 (1937), for the proposition:

“A tenancy by the entireties is essentially a joint tenancy, modified by the common law theory that the husband and wife are one person. 1 Tiffany on Real Property, 645. Except for the fact that it cannot be defeated, during their lives, without the joint action of both, the same rules of law apply to it as to any other cotenancy.” Id. at 407-08.

.From there he moves on to Kolker v. Gorn, 193 Md. 391, 67 A. 2d 258 (1949), which he dubbed “a controlling »case”, citing the comment:

“Where the conveyance is to husband and wife and a stranger, without qualifying words, it is the common-law rule that husband and wife take one-half as tenants by the entireties and the third party takes the other half as tenant in common. Haid v. Haid, 167 Md. 493, 175 A. 338; *339 Bartholomew v. Marshall, 257 App. Div. 1060, 13 N.Y.S. 568. See also Tizer v. Tizer, 162 Md. 489, 492, 160 A. 163, 161 A. 510 and Baker v. Baker, 123 Md. 32, 90 A. 776.” Id. at 397.

The holding in that case was that a conveyance to “John M. Gorn, Samuel G. Gorn and Margaret A. Gorn, his wife, as joint tenants, and not as tenants in common their assigns, the survivors or survivor of them, and the survivors’ or survivor’s heirs and assigns, in fee simple” with a habendum clause reading, “the parties of the second part as joint tenants, and not as tenants in common, their assigns, the survivors or survivor of them, and the survivors’ or survivor’s heirs and assigns, forever, in fee simple” created a joint tenancy because there were qualifying words.

We do not regard any of these holdings as controlling here. It is true that Maryland has recognized that there may be a tenancy by the entireties in personal property. In Haid v. Haid, 167 Md. 493, 175 A. 338 (1934), a motor boat which a husband insisted be titled in the name of husband and wife and a third party was held to vest an undivided one-half interest in the husband and wife as tenants by the entireties and the other undivided one-half interest in the third party as a tenant in common with the husband and wife. When a husband deposited money in a savings bank to the credit of himself and his wife without reserving the right to withdraw the fund from the bank it was held in Baker v. Baker, 123 Md. 32, 40, 90 A. 776 (1914), to constitute a tenancy by the entire-ties. In Banking & Trust Co. v. Neilson, 164 Md. 8, 164 A. 157 (1933), the dispute concerned ownership of rent from land owned by husband and wife as tenants by the entireties. It was held that the rents were owned as tenants by the entireties and were therefore not subject to attachment for the debt of the husband.

Since the passage in 1899 of what is now Code (1957), Art. 45, § 5, a wife has been permitted to maintain a separate suit for torts committed against her. Sezzin v. Stark, *340 187 Md. 241, 49 A. 2d 742 (1946). Previously it was necessary that her husband join in any suit for tort committed against her. In Clark v. Wootton, 63 Md. 113 (1885), decided prior to that act, there was an attempt made to reach by way of attachment the interest of the husband in a judgment obtained by the husband and wife against a railway company for injuries sustained by the wife. Our predecessors, after observing, “Independently of his wife, the husband had no cause of action whatever for personal injuries to her, and in this respect his rights were different from those which he had in a certain class of choses in action of his wife, on which he might sue without joining her in the action”, held the judgment thus obtained for personal injuries sustained by the wife was protected by the constitutional provision that the property of the wife should be protected from the debts of the husband.

When a husband and wife purchase real estate and it is conveyed to the two of them as tenants by the entireties there is a positive direction for the creation of the estate. If one spouse has contributed the entire purchase price, then by directing that it be titled as tenants by the entireties he has manifested a positive intent to create the estate. Likewise, the creation of a bank account as in Bowersox and Baker calls for positive action, thereby evidencing an intent to create a tenancy by the entire-ties. When the boat was titled in Haid the husband directed the official to register the boat as being owned by him and his wife and his son, an intent relative to title being thereby shown. Similarly, when a testator devises real estate to husband and wife he presumably knows the law and the land is transferred to those parties accordingly. In each of these examples an intent to transfer can be determined.

Here we have a situation in which husband and wife retained an attorney to represent them relative to claims arising out of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 A.2d 126, 259 Md. 336, 1970 Md. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-jones-md-1970.