Krieg v. McComas

95 A. 68, 126 Md. 377, 1915 Md. LEXIS 159
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 95 A. 68 (Krieg v. McComas) 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
Krieg v. McComas, 95 A. 68, 126 Md. 377, 1915 Md. LEXIS 159 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Stockbridoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal was taken from an order of the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City overruling exceptions by a purchaser to the ratification of a sale of leasehold property which purported to have been made by Joseph L. McComas, as administrator c. t. a. of Ellen Vernon. The exceptions set forth two grounds of objection to the title: (1st) Because said Ellen Vernon at the time of her death had no title to the leasehold estate or any interest whatever in said property; (2nd) Because the said administrator had no interest whatever in said property.

The somewhat complicated condition of the title to the property involved will he best understood by a summary -in chronological order of the several instruments which affected it, or were supposed tó do so.

*379 In 1875 Ellen Vernon was seized in fee simple of a lot of ground on South Ann street, and by a will dated June 15th, in that year, devised the property in the following terms:

“I give and bequeath my house and furniture No. 133 South Ann street, together with the lot on which said house stands, to my daughter Mary Ellen Vernon, to be possessed by her during the term of her natural life, and after her death said house, lot and furniture to go to my daughters, Margaret O’Brien and Susan Vernon, to be equally divided between them.”

On November 12th, 1875, or about five months after executing the will already mentioned, Mrs. Ellen Vernon executed a deed of trust to her daughter, Mary Ellen Vernon, by which she granted the said fee simple property and certain household goods and chattels and all choses in action in her possession. The trust was expressed in the following language:

“That the said Ellen Vernon shall have the uses, benefit, income, rents and profits in, into, of and out of said property during her natural life, with full power and authority to the said Ellen Vernon during her natural life to sell, mortgage, assign and transfer all or any of said property as fully, lawfully and completely as if this deed had never been made, and to dispose thereof, if the said Ellen Vernon shall so choose, by last will and testament; and upon the death of the said Ellen Vernon without having disposed of said property then said property, or so much thereof as may remain undisposed of, shall go to the said Mary Ellen Vernon for and during the term of her natural life, free, clear and discharged from the control of any husband of the said Mary Ellen Vernon, with full power and authority to her to sell, mortgage, assign or otherwise dispose of the same by deed or will without the consent and approbation of any husband the said Mary Ellen Vernon may have, and as fully, freely and lawfully as if she were a feme sole. *380 And if the said Mary Ellen Yernon shall die without having disposed of said property, then the said property or so much'thereof as shall remain undisposed of shall go to Margaret O’Brien and Susan Yernon, the two sisters of the said Mary Ellen Yernon, as tenants in common, to be held by them share and share alike, free from the power and control of any husband or husbands of each and both of said tenants in common, with power to them to dispose of said property without the consent or approbation of the husband or husbands of each or either of them, as fully as if said tenants in common were femes sole.”

It is to be observed that there is this point of difference between the disposition of the property as made by the will previously executed and that made by the deed. By the will Mary Ellen was given a life estate only, with remainder over to her two sisters; by the deed she was given a life estate with power of disposition by sale, mortgage or otherwise, and only so much of the property was to go to Margaret and Susan as should remain undisposed of by Mary Ellen at the time of her death.

The deed of trust contained the reserved powers in the settlor already set forth in the trust clause, to be exercised by sale, mortgage, assignment or transfer of the property, ■or disposition of the same by will.

The first question thus presented is as to the effect on the title resulting from the will executed in May, followed by the deed of trust of November, and this will be considered hereafter.

In 1877, Ellen Yernon executed a deed in fee of the Ann •street property to William H. and Lydia J. Williams, as joint tenants, and at the same time took a lease back from them of the lot at an annual rental of $30, in the usual form then prevailing for ninety-nine-year leases.

Ten years later, after the death of Ellen Yernon, Mrs. Williams (whose husband had died in the meantime) con *381 veyed the reversion in fee and the ground rent of $30 to Mary Ellen Vernon. This conveyance was not made to her as trustee, but to her individually. *

In 1896 Mary Ellen Vernon mortgaged to Gebhard Leimbach “all her right, title, interest and estate at law and in equity” in and to the South Ann street lot.

So matters rested until July, 1910, when Mary Ellen Vernon, as trustee and individually, conveyed the property to her sister Susan, then Mrs. McComas, her other sister Margaret being then dead. This deed purported to grant the lot in fee.

In May, 1914, the mortgage to Leimbach being in default,, a decree was passed for the sale of the property, and it was advertised and sold, as being in fee simple, and the sale reported to the Circuit Court.

To this sale exceptions were filed, on the ground that the mortgagee had and could mortgage only a reversion and ground rent of $30. These exceptions have never been disposed of.

In October, 1914, the will of Ellen Vernon executed in 1875 was offered for and admitted to probate (she having died in 1878), and a few weeks later letters of administration c. t. a. were granted to the appellee. An inventory of this property was returned, an order passed for its sale, and to the sale made under this order exceptions were filed, the ruling of the Orphans’ Court on which gave the basis for this appeal.

As the result of these various instruments with reference to the title several questions are raised. It is urged on behalf of the appellant that the deed to Williams and the lease back having been taken simultaneously, that the effect of these instruments was not that which the face of the instruments themselves would import, but that it amounted to a mortgage for $500, and occasioned no real change in the title to the property. The basis of this contention is the doctrine that equity will look through the form of a transaction to what the transaction really is, and give effect to it *382 as the parties intended, irrespective’ of the form in which that intent was sought to be carried out. This doctrine is too firmly established, and has been too often recognized in the courts of this State to require any citation of authorities in its support.

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

Related

Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Purifoy
371 A.2d 650 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1977)
Rowe v. Cullen
9 A.2d 585 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Rabe v. McAllister
8 A.2d 922 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Bird v. Bird
168 A. 885 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1933)
Gilmer v. Aldridge
141 A. 377 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)
Aldridge v. Gilmer
4 Balt. C. Rep. 615 (Baltimore City Circuit Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 A. 68, 126 Md. 377, 1915 Md. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krieg-v-mccomas-md-1915.