Link v. MacNabb

74 A. 825, 111 Md. 641, 1909 Md. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 17, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 A. 825 (Link v. MacNabb) 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
Link v. MacNabb, 74 A. 825, 111 Md. 641, 1909 Md. LEXIS 133 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

• The proceeding before us, although adversary in form, is in fact an amicable one conducted to test the validity of a title. The appeal was taken from an order of the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City overruling exceptions and finally ratifying an executor’s sale of the land of which the title is challenged.

• ' The appellant does not question the power of the executor or the regularity of the sale but he is unwilling to consummate his purchase unless doubts which he entertains as to the validity of the testatrix’s title to the land can be set at rest. A brief statement of the manner in which the land was acquired by her will disclose the issues raised by the appeal.

On March 1st, 1888, R. E. Diffenderfer and wife leased to, T. H. Blakely a lot of ground in Baltimore City known as No. 1621 North Calhoun street for 99 years at an annual rent of fifty-three dollars. , The lease was drawn in the usual *643 form and provided among other things “that if said rent in whole or in part shall be in arrear for six months then the said Diffenderfer, his heirs and assigns may re-enter upon the premises and thenceforth hold the same as though this lease had never been made.”

The reversion in fee under this lease with the rent of fifty-three dollars, after divers mesne conveyances came to be vested in Mary A. Davis under a deed from Rachel S. Davis which-was executed and delivered on the 9th of June; 1896, but was not recorded until May 21th, 1900. The leasehold estate created by the lease had in the meantime passed through a succession of assignments of which the last was made on Nov. 5th, 1890, by George Utterbaugh to Rose Taylor for her life with remainder to her children.

On June 5th, 1897, after Miss Davis had received the deed' for the reversion in the lot, but before it had been recorded, she instituted a landloi’d’s ejectment in the Superior Cowrt of Baltimore City to recover possession of the lot upon a default of more than six months’ ground rent. Rose Taylor, who thexx held the legal title to the leasehold with the right of possession; and all of her then living children, except James R. Taylor who lived out of Maryland, were made defendants to the ejectment and were duly served with process and a copy of the declaration left with each of them. Mrs. Taylor had several other children who had died, prior to that time in childhood unmarxñed and without issue. Her son James R. Taylor also died afterwards unmarxied and without issue.

None of the defendants resisted the ejectment-and judgxxxent in favor of the plaintiff therein was entered by default which, after the filing by her of the statutory landlord’s affidavit, was made absolute on July 31st, 1897, and a writ of habere facias possessionem issued thex’eon under which she was put in possession of the lot and premises by the sheriff. The r-ecord in the present case does not show the filing of the landlord’s affidavit in the ejectment but that fact was dis *644 closed, by an examination of the original papers in the proceeding in the Superior Court.

After the reversion and leasehold estates in the lot bad thus been united in Miss Davis she, jointly with Rachel S. Davis from whom she bad acquired the reversion, executed a deed to William H. Bradley on October 25th, 1897, purporting to convey him an interest in the lot. The grant in that conveyance was in absolute terms to Wm. H. Bradley his personal representatives and assigns while the habendum ran to bis use “for life and bis personal representatives and assigns for all the residue of the term of years yet to come and unexpired therein with the benefit of renewal forever subject to the payment of the annual rent of fifty-three dollars payable semi-annually to the aforesaid Mary A. Davis,” etc. In the recitals of the conveyance the lot was said to be the same as the one assigned by George Utterbaugh to Rose Taylor on November 5th, 1890.

'William H. Bradley in March, 1898, made a conveyance of the lot to Charles C. Levy in all respects similar to the one which Miss Davis bad made to him, except that the habendum did not attempt to limit the grantee’s interest to a life estate. Levy then made a similar conveyance on May 22nd, 1899, to Albert H. Horner, who jointly with his wife conveyed the lot back to Miss Davis by an ordinary deed in fee on April 7th, 1902. No wife joined in the execution of the deed from Levy or Bradley. It appears from the record that when Levy executed bis deed be bad a wife who is still living but it does not appear whether Bradley was married or single when be executed bis deed.

Mary A. Davis died seized and possessed of the Calhoun street lot, leaving a will in which the appellee Charles H. MacHabb was named as executor and given power to sell the real estate of the executrix. He sold the lot, in exercise of the power so conferred on him, to the appellant and reported the sale to the Orphans’ Court for ratification. The appellant excepted to the ratification on several grounds of which the *645 only one now insisted upon is an alleged defective title to the lot in the testatrix at the time of her death.

The Orphans’ Court overruled the exceptions and ratified the sale by the order from which the present appeal was taken. It does not appear that any claim adverse to the title of the testatrix has ever been asserted by any person, but the appellant contends that the title offered him is open to attack from Rose Taylor and her children because the ejectment by which their leasehold is claimed to have been extinguished was defective first, because Miss Davis did'- not have the legal title to the reversion in the lot by reason of the fact that the deed of it to her had not been recorded, and secondly for want of proper parties defendant.

He also contends that the conveyance from Wm. H. Bradley to Ohaides O. Levy vested in the latter a fee simple estate in the lot and conferred on his wife a light of dower in it which is still outstanding as she did not unite in the deed from her husband to Albert N. Horner.

We will consider these contentions in the order in which we have stated them.

As no rights of creditors of Miss Davis or grantees under conflicting deeds of the reversion in the lot are involved in this litigation, it is unnecessary for us to determine whether under section 19 of Art. 21 of the Code the recording of the deed conveying the reversion to her, more than six months after its execution and delivery, operated by way of relation to vest the legal title in her from its date. Whatever might have been the effect of the delay in recording that deed upon the rights of Miss Davis as plaintiff in the ejectment if it had been set up as a defense in that case, neither Rose Taylor nor such of her children as were defendants in that suit and duly served with process and made no defense, but permitted judgment to go against them by default could at this late day successfully contest the validity of that judgment or its operation to extinguish their leasehold interest in the lot. Klinefelter v. Carey, 3 G. & I. 349.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 825, 111 Md. 641, 1909 Md. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/link-v-macnabb-md-1909.