McKenney v. McKenney

135 A.2d 423, 214 Md. 397
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 29, 2001
Docket[No. 29, September Term, 1957.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 A.2d 423 (McKenney v. McKenney) 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
McKenney v. McKenney, 135 A.2d 423, 214 Md. 397 (Md. 2001).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William McKenney, III, the son of William McKenney by his first marriage, seeks to recover from John McKenney and Maria McKenney, the son and daughter of the second marriage, his share of the furniture of his father who died in 1921, which he says belongs to him under his father’s will. Demurrers to the bill were sustained without leave to amend, and the appeal followed.

The bill alleges that William McKenney died in 1921 leaving a will, which was duly admitted to probate by the Orphans’ Court for Queen Anne’s County, in which he named his wife and Thomas J. Keating (later Judge Keating of the Second Judicial Circuit) executors. By the will his wife received one-fourth of his estate for life, with remainder to his children living at her death, and the residuary three-fourths was given to trustees to be appointed by the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County for the respective benefit of William McKenney, III, John McKenney and Maria McKenney, with the right in each child to receive one-fourth of the principal of his or her trust estate upon becoming twenty-one and the further right to receive an additional one-fourth at the age of thirty. At the death of any of the equitable life tenants, the trust estate remaining in the hands of the trustee was left to his or her issue free of trust. The testator directed that “The division and allotrhent of my estate to be *401 made by a commission of three male citizens of Queen Anne’s County, to be appointed by the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County, in Equity, upon the petition of any person interested in the distribution and allotment of my estate: the division to be reported to said Court for its rejection or confirmation.” The bill alleges further that Margaret D. Mc-Kenney and Thomas J. Keating, the executors named, duly qualified as executors in the Orphans’ Court for Queen Anne’s County; that Thomas J. Keating died April 26, 1951; that the widow, Margaret D. McKenney, died September 10, 1955, and that the inventory of her estate does not include the furniture claimed; that William McKenney possessed at the time of his death certain antique furniture and oriental rugs, listed in an exhibit, of a present value of $36,000.00, which were never inventoried by his executors as part of his estate; that there was a proceeding brought in the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County by Margaret D. McKenney, etc., et al. versus William McKenney, III, et al., for the allotment and division of the estate of William McKenney; and that said court, by its final decree of partition, did on September 26, 1924, divide and allot decedent’s estate “in so far as it was placed before” the court, but that no reference to, nor division of, the furniture was made in said suit or in the division and allotment. It is alleged that although a federal estate tax was paid on the estate of William McKenney, no furniture was listed as belonging to him, and no tax was paid on the value of any furniture. Paragraph 11 of the bill recites: “That possession of said furniture was taken by said Margaret D. McKenney either in her capacity as life tenant or as co-executor from the date of the death of her husband, said William McKenney, deceased, the aforesaid testator, on June 4, 1921, until September 10, 1955, the date of her decease, and thereafter has been and still is in the possession of the said John McKenney and Maria M. McKenney, in Queen Anne’s County, Maryland.” The bill concludes that under the will of William McKenney, the complainant below and appellant here, William McKenney, III, is entitled to have allotted to him, absolutely, since he has reached the age of thirty, three twenty-fourths of the said furniture free of trust *402 and three twenty-fourths thereof to be held in trust by the trustee of his estate, as well as an additional two twenty-fourths share (being one-third of the remaining six twenty-fourths, “which should have been held by the said Margaret D. McKenney, deceased.”)

The bill concludes that it will be necessary, “in order to make division and allotment under the aforesaid will of said William McKenney, deceased”, for this court to assume jurisdiction and “appoint a commission of three male citizens of Queen Anne’s County to make said division and allotment and to report the same” for rejection or confirmation.

Joining with their father in this suit were his two adult daughters, contingent remaindermen under their grandfather’s will, and named as respondents, in addition to John Mc-Kenney and Maria M. McKenney, were John McKenney, as administrator of his mother, Margaret D. McKenney, and Thomas J. Keating, Jr., as executor of Thomas J. Keating (although Thomas J. Keating, Jr., identifies himself as administrator c. t. a. of Thomas J. Keating). Respondents demurred, relying on laches.

The appellants claim that laches may not be invoked since the widow and the three children were tenants in common of the furniture and the possession of one co-tenant is in contemplation of law the possession of others. We do not read the will as intending or creating a tenancy in common. The right of possession is an essential element of a tenancy in common. 14 Am. Jur., Cotenancy, Sec. 2; 86 C. J. S., Tenancy in Common, Sec. 5. William McKenney’s will did not refer to the furniture specifically, and if it was his property at his death it would pass as part of the rest and residue. No right of possession to any part of the personalty in the rest and residue would vest in any beneficiary until there had been a division and allotment, as the will directed, and then there would be no joint right of possession. The furniture allotted would become the property of him or her to whom it was given by the division. In Blessing v. House, 3 Gill & J. 290, 307, 308, the Court said: “It is an essential attribute of a tenancy in common, that there should be a unity of possession; wherever, therefore, the tenure of the estate in *403 tended to be conveyed, indicates a holding in severalty, or by particular or specific description, a tenancy in common cannot exist. * * * In this case, the 100 acres were to be laid off by executors, and the devisee was to hold them exclusively in her own possession, which provision in the will is wholly destructive of the idea of a tenancy in common, to which estate, a unity of possession is essential.” See too Potomac Lodge v. Miller, 118 Md. 405, 410, where the will gave each of the children the right of selection of one lot of ground from those owned by the testator, and they were held not to be tenants in common.

The bill alleges that Margaret D. McKenney took possession of and retained the furniture either as life tenant or as co-executor. The recitals of the bill make it plain that she could not have taken as life tenant since her right to any portion of the estate depended upon an allotment which, as far as the furniture is concerned, was never made. As a general rule, legal title to personal property not specifically bequeathed is in the executor of a decedent and can pass to the beneficiary only through the executor or through an administrator d. b. n. Alexander v. Stewart, 8 Gill & J. 226; Home for Incurables v. Bruff, 160 Md. 156.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A.2d 423, 214 Md. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenney-v-mckenney-md-2001.