Melville v. Page

170 A. 175, 165 Md. 597, 1934 Md. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1934
Docket[No. 58, October Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 A. 175 (Melville v. Page) 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
Melville v. Page, 170 A. 175, 165 Md. 597, 1934 Md. LEXIS 169 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

John C. Melville, late of Carroll County, died testate, and named his wife, Mary Elsie Melville, his executrix. The will was duly admitted to probate, and his executrix qualified and proceeded with the administration. The second codicil of the will contained the following provision: “It is my wish and desire that my two sisters, Mrs. L. T. Wood and Mrs. Mary Harden, be cared for, should they be then living, and that $10,000 out of my estate be placed on deposit with some good banking institution, each of them to receive the interest on $5,000, the principal to revert back to my estate (one-half at the death of each sister) as set forth in the foregoing will.” The provisions referred to give, upon the death of each beneficiary for life, her $5,000 portion of this bequest to the wife of the testator for life and then in equal shares to the four sons of the testator.

On the application of the executrix, the Orphans’ Court of Carroll County passed on October 29th, 1929, an order that the executrix should deposit with the Sykesville National Bank at the best rate of interest obtainable and in her name as executrix the sum of $10,000, and that one-half of the interest thereon would be -payable to Elizabeth Taylor Wood (Mrs. L. T. Wood) during life, and the other half would be payable to Mary Harden during life, and the whole made subject to the further order of the Orphans’ Court of Carroll *599 County. Mary Harden, one of the beneficiaries for life, died,, and $5,000 was thereupon withdrawn and distributed under the testator’s will, and the other $5,000 remained on deposit. The Sykesville National Bank became a branch or subsidiary of the Central Trust Company of Maryland, a banking and trust- company whose principal place of business was Frederick, and tlie status of the depositary bank with reference to-this fund was assumed by the Central Trust Company of Maryland, with which the deposit remained in its original form until the Central Trust Company became insolvent and its affairs passed into the hands of the Circuit Court for Frederick County, with the State Bank Commissioner of Maryland as receiver.

Elizabeth Taylor Wood, the beneficiary for life of the remaining $5,000, survives, and, on October 19th, 1932, Mary Elsie Melville, executrix of the will of John C. Melville, filed a petition in the equity cause in the Circuit Court for Frederick County, sitting as a court- of equity, where the affairs of the Central Trust Company are being administered. The-object of tbe petition is to secure a preference for tbis sum of $5,000 in the distribution of the assets of the company,, upon the theory that the circumstances here related brought the depositary within the meaning of section 48 of article 11 of the Code.

This section has been recently construed in Frederick County Commrs. v. Page, 163 Md. 619, 164 A. 182; Frederick Iron & Steel Co. v. Page, 165 Md. 212, 166 A. 738;, Ghingher v. O’Connell, Trustee, 165 Md. 267, 167 A. 184.

The decisions make it clear that the preference in the distribution of the assets of the company upon its insolvency or dissolution to all debts or liabilities of any nature whatsoever, including salaries and wages of employees and other preferred debts or liabilities, is granted only when the fiduciary has been duly appointed by a court. Passing the question presented by the fact that the order of the orphans’ court, directing where the deposit should be made, applied to a national bank, and therefore to a banking institution not within the scope of section 48, and that no , order of any *600 court later authorized the deposit in the Central Trust & Banking Company of Maryland, and confining' the opinion to' the problem as presented by the petitioner, the question for determination is whether or not the deposit made by the .executrix, pursuant to' the terms of testator’s second codicil and the authorization of the orphans’ court having jurisdiction of the testator’s estate, would constitute a trust company a depositary within the terms of section 48. To know the meaning of section 48, it is necessary to' read its terms in connection with two preceding sections. All these sections relate to trust companies, and section 46 enumerates the powers possessed by the trust company upon its incorporation. Among these is the capacity “to act under the order or appointment of any court of record as guardian, receiver or trustee of the estate of any minor or other person or corporation, and as the depositary of any moneys paid into court, whether for the benefit of any such minor or other person,' corporation or party.” And, among other things, the succeeding section 41 declares, in its last sentence, that: “Any court into which moneys may be paid by parties, or be brought by order of judgment, may, by order, direct the same to be deposited with any such corporation.” Section 48 exempts the trust company from giving bond or other security for or in respect to any trust to which it shall be appointed executor, administrator, guardian, trustee, receiver, committee, or depositary by the order of any court. “In all cases,” in the words of the section, “in which such trust companies, whether incorporated under this article or by special act, shall be appointed, or shall be acting, as executor, administrator, guardian, trustee, receiver, committee, or in any other fiduciary capacity, they shall be responsible for losses of moneys or property received or held by them in any such character in the same cases and to the same extent as individuals so acting would be. Upon the dissolution of any such company by the Legislature, court or otherwise, or in case of its insolvency, all debts or liabilities due or owing by such corporation in any of said fiduciary capacities, shall be preferred in the distribution of the assets of such company to all debts or lia *601 bilities of any nature whatsoever, including salaries and wages of employees and other preferred debts or liabilities.”

Vo contention is made that the Central Trust Company of Maryland was appointed as either trustee, receiver, guardian, committee, administrator, or executor by the order of any court, but the argument is that the trust company had been appointed as a depositary by the order of the orphans’ court. The argument, however, ignores the statutory definition of a depositary, and the relation of the executrix of the will to the fund involved.

The terms of these sections are plain that, to constitute a trust company a depositary within the meaning of the statute, it is indispensable that the money be paid into court either as the voluntary act of parties “or be brought by order of judgment,” and that, when so paid, the court pass an order directing; that the money be deposited with a trust company. The payment of money into court is a familiar practice at law and in equity. In all actions, except for assault and battery, false imprisonment, libel, slander, malicious arrest or prosecution, criminal conversation, or debauching of the plaintiff’s daughter or servant, the defendant, or any one or more of several defendants, may pay info court a sum of money by way of compensation or amends. The mode by which this is done in practice is by a plea of payment into court. 1 Poe, Pl. & Pr., sec. 652; Code, art. 75, secs. 24, 25;

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 175, 165 Md. 597, 1934 Md. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melville-v-page-md-1934.