Kreamer v. Hitchcock

115 A.2d 255, 207 Md. 454, 1955 Md. LEXIS 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 22, 1955
Docket[No. 126, October Term, 1954.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 115 A.2d 255 (Kreamer v. Hitchcock) 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
Kreamer v. Hitchcock, 115 A.2d 255, 207 Md. 454, 1955 Md. LEXIS 324 (Md. 1955).

Opinions

Brune, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant is the widow of Adonis W. Kreamer, who died in June, 1948. In 1942 he purchased a lot of ground in Montgomery County, Maryland, and in August, 1946, he and a woman purporting to be his wife conveyed this property to third parties, who, in turn, conveyed it to the appellees in 1950. In 1954 the appellant [457]*457brought this suit in equity against the appellees as owners of the property to assert and establish her dower interest therein. The appellant does not allege that she ever filed an election to take dower, the opinion of the trial court states that she did not do so and this appears to be conceded to be the fact. The appellees demurred to the bill. The Chancellor filed a combined opinion and order which sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill., The,appeal is from that order.

The appellant’s husband left a will dated April 1,1948, and probated in the Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County September 15, 1948, by which he devised and bequeathed to his “dearest friend”, who was the woman who had joined as his purported wife in the 1946 deed conveying the land here involved, a life estate in all his property, with some additional powers. He bequeathed one dollar to his “legal wife”, the appellant, stating that she had seen fit to leave his bed and board in 1924; and he also bequeathed one dollar to each of his children stating that they had seen fit to go with their mother when she left him.

The case calls for some consideration of the rights of a widow in her husband’s estate at common law in Maryland, as well as under statutory provisions contained in Articles 46 and 98 of the Code. So far as practicable, references below to Section numbers of Code provisions will be to their numbers as given in the 1951 Code, with parenthetical or explanatory references to their numbers in other Codes, where such references may seem desirable in the interests of convenience or clarity. The statutory law in force at the time of the death of the testator (June, 1948) was contained in the 1939 Code, as amended up to that time; and the law as then in force is controlling in this case as to the rights of heirs or distributees and of devisees and legatees. Rowe v. Cullen, 177 Md. 357, 9 A. 2d 585. There were no changes, other than in the numbering of sections in Article 93, in any of the Code provisions here deemed pertinent between 1948 and 1951.

[458]*458The will left no interest in realty and only a nominal sum in money to the appellant. Under these circumstances she was not required to file a renunciation of the will and an election to take either dower and her legal share of the personal estate or her legal share of both the real and personal estate in order to avoid the bar of such rights under Code (1951), Article 93, Section 325 (1939, Section 314). Code (1951), Article 93, Sections 328 and 329 (1939, Sections 317 and 318); Marriott v. Marriott, 175 Md. 567, 3 A. 2d 493; Harrison v. Prentice, 183 Md. 474, 38 A. 2d 101; Hokamp v. Hagaman, 36 Md. 511; Malkus v. Richardson, 124 Md. 224, 92 A. 474 (as to a bequest of nominal amount).

To say that the widow was not required to renounce does, however, not dispose of the case. Rather, it brings us up to the real question which it presented. This question may be stated as follows: May a widow successfully assert a claim for dower in real estate owned by her husband during coverture, but conveyed by him to others without her joining in the conveyance, where: (1) the widow was not required to file, and did not file, a renunciation and election to take dower (or other rights) under Section 325 of Article 93 of the 1951 Code; (2) she did not file an election to take dower (and other rights) under Section 4 of Article 46 of the 1951 Code; (3) the time for filing such an election under either of those Sections had expired before the institution of her suit; and (4) there is no charge against the persons who now own the property of any fraud or collusion in seeking to defeat the widow’s rights.

It would be rather easy to expand this opinion greatly by a full review of the history of the law and of the statutory changes therein relating to the rights of a widow in the estate of her husband; but we shall endeavor to go into history to only a limited extent.

In Griffith v. Griffith’s Executor, 4 H. & McH. 79, which was decided in 1798, but which arose before the great codification of the testamentary law made by Chapter 101 of the Acts of 1798, the widow’s common law right [459]*459to an interest in her husband’s personal.estate (in that case, where there were surviving children of the testator, one-third) was recognized. There was a devise of an interest in a part of the testator’s realty upon conditions, one of which was that she assert no claim for thirds in other realty. She appears to have accepted the devise in lieu of dower, and did not renounce the will: Her right to thirds in the personal property was the only question litigated and was decided in her favor.

Section 1 of sub-chapter 13 of Chapter 101 of the Acts of 1798 remains unchanged in terms as Section 324 of Article 93 of the 1951 Code and reads as follows:

“Every devise of land or any estate therein, or bequest of personal estate to the wife of the testator shall be construed to be intended in bar of her dower in lands or share of the personal estate, respectively, unless it be otherwise expressed in the will.”

Section 2 provided that the widow should “be barred of her right of dower in land, or share of the personal estate, by any such devise or bequest,” unless she filed a renunciation and election to take dower or her legal share of the estate of her husband. It also provided that by renunciation the widow should be entitled to one-third “and no more” of her husband’s net personal estate. Except for an amendment made by Chapter 315 of the Acts of 1831, which extended the time for renunciation and election from ninety days to six months after probate of the will, this Section was not amended in terms until 1922, thought it was amended in scope by Chapter 331 of the Acts of 1898, referred to below.

In Coomes v. Clements (1819), 4 H. & J. 480, the widow renounced the will which contained a devise of realty, but no bequest of personalty to her. There were no surviving descendants of the testator, and in these circumstances the widow was held entitled under the common law to one-half of the net personal estate. The case was held not to be within the “restriction” of Sec[460]*460tion 2 of sub-chapter 13 of Chapter 101 of the Acts of 1798.

A like result was reached on Hokamp v. Hagaman (1872), 36 Md. 511. It was also held in the Hokamp case that since there was a will, the provisions of Article 93 relating to distributions in intestacy did not apply.

By Chapter 457 of the Acts of 1898, usually known as the “Married Women’s Property Act” the reciprocal “dower” rights of husband and wife were provided for, and by Chapter 331, approved on the same day as Chapter 457, the rights of surviving husbands in the estates of their deceased wives under Sections 291-306 of Article 93 of the Code of 1888 (Sections 324-340 of the 1951 Code) were made the same as of widows in the estates of their deceased husbands.

In 1916, by Chapter 325 of the Acts of that year, the Legislature amended Article 46 of the Code relating to the descent of real estate.

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Kreamer v. Hitchcock
115 A.2d 255 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 A.2d 255, 207 Md. 454, 1955 Md. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreamer-v-hitchcock-md-1955.