Murphy v. Coale

68 A. 615, 107 Md. 198, 1908 Md. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 A. 615 (Murphy v. Coale) 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
Murphy v. Coale, 68 A. 615, 107 Md. 198, 1908 Md. LEXIS 24 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

*200 Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

John Murphy, of Baltimore City, died in 1880, leaving a last will and testament, by which he directed his executors therein named to; sell all his property, and after the payment of his “debts and funeral and testamentary.expenses,” to divide the .remainder of his estate, provided it did not exceed the sum $120,000, among his six children, viz: Mary Louise, Mary Cecilia, Frank K., Nannie Eulalia, Charles and Alice Margaret Murphy, “share and share alike.”

The third, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth paragraphs of the will are as follows:

“3rd. It is my desire that the estate and moneys hereinbefore given to my children subject to my wishes hereafter expressed, shall be invested by my executors or their guardians respectively, as the case may be, in secure fee-simple ground rents or Baltimore City stock, in the names of my said children respectively. The shares of my daughters to be and enure to their sole, separate and exclusive use for life, so that they may take the rents, issues and profits thereof, without the intervention or control of any husbands whom they may marry; remainder at their decease respectively to their children or descendants (to take per stirpes) and in default of such children or descendants living at their death, then to their brothers and sisters and the descendants of such (to take per stirpes.)

“Should any of my said children die before me, without leaving lawful issue who shall survive me, or should any of my said children die after me, before reaching twenty-one, without leaving lawful issue then respectively surviving, the share or shares of such child or children shall pass equally to their brothers and sisters and descendants (to takzper stripes) of any who may have previously died, leaving lawful issue surviving them.”

“6th. Having entire confidence in the judgment, integrity and friendship of my executors hereinafter named, I leave entirely to their .discretion (subject however to the provisions hereinafter contained) the time and mode of closing up my *201 business, and realizing my estate as hereinbefore provided as well as of investing the moneys of my children and reinvesting the same if required. I shall have a general statement of my property and affairs, with certain indications of my ideas and wishes in respect thereto, but I desire it understood, that I mean the same merely as suggestions, and not in any way to control the deliberate judgment of my executors, should'they, under the circumstances then existing, differ with me in opinion. For their trouble in settling my estate and looking after the interests and investing the property of my children, it is my desire that my executors shall be allowed the usual commission.”

“7th. As it is my will and desire that the business which I have established, and I am now engaged-as a printer, publisher, bookseller and stationer, shall, if possible, be perpetuated under the same name and style of John Murphy & Co., I desire it to be continued and hereby qualify the foregoing provisions, in order that it may be continued, for the benefit of my estate, under the direction and management of my executors hereinafter named, until such time, as my son Francis K. Murphy, if he survives me, shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years,.which will be on the sixth day of August, in the year eighteen hundred and eighty, at which time, or as soon thereafter (not exceeding six or twelve months) as in their judgment, my executors may deem it expedient, I desire that the business on the part of the estate shall be discontinued, unless, in the meantime, from ill health, or any other cause, my son Francis shall be unable to, or does not in the judgment of my executors, give such attention to the business as shall be proper and necessary, in which case I desire that the business, on the part of the estate, shall be closed and wound up as soon as may be practicable, consistently with proper prudence, and that the portion of my property, consisting of the printing office and all appertaining to it; the stereotype plates and copyrights appertaining to them, the steel plates, wood engravings, brass stamps, &c., &c., and all the stock, consisting of books paper, stationery and all matters appertaining thereto, *202 shall be valued by careful and discreet persons of judgment in such matters. After ascertaining the value thereof, my executors shall sell or dispose of the same in such manner as to them may seem best and safest, and as promptly as may be, without incurring sacrifice.”

“8th. If, at the time specified above, (that is, on his reaching twenty-one, or within six or twelve months thereafter as aforesaid) my son Francis shall be in the enjoyment of good health, and it shall be his desire to continue the business,and he shall manifest capacity, therefor and attention thereto as aforesaid, in the judgment of my executors, — the portion due to him as his share in the estate shall be paid to him in the stock and in the valuation aforesaid, and, in the discretion of my executors, they may sell to him, at the assessed value, any portion or the whole of the same over and above his proportionate share of said stock taking mortgage or security for the whole excess beyond the portion due to him, or, if they deem it to the interest of my children aforesaid, they may continue the business in connection with my son Francis, for such time as in their judgment, they may deem best.”

“9th. I desire that the estate of my children, female as well as male, shall be managed by their guardian or guardians, until they reach the age of twenty-one, or are married. Should any of my children marry before reaching twenty-one, they shall still be entitled only to the rents aud profits of their estates respectively, and the same shall remain under the control of their guardians, unless the latter should deem it prudent and safe to let them manage the same themselves; without power, however, of alienation or disposition of the principal or any power of anticipation, until they respectively reach their majority.”

By the nth paragraph of his will the testator appointed Thomas C. Yearly, Benjamin G. Harris and his daughter, Mary Louise Murphy, executors, and provided that “should any of them die before the entire fulfillment of the trusts herein confided to them, it is my desire that my friends shall take their place from time to time in the order in which they *203 are named.” He also appointed Mary Louise Murphy, and, in case of her death, Mary Cecelia Murphy, guardian of his children.

In 1892, Mary Cecelia Murphy, Alice M. Murphy, Nannie E. Coale, and Thomas E. Coale, her husband, filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City their bill of complaint against Mary Louise Murphy “in her own right as executrix of the last will and testament of John Murphy, deceased,” alleging that letters testamentary had been granted to Mary Louise Murphy, Thomas C. Yearly and Benjamin G. Harris, the executors named in the will; that the estate had been finally settled; that said Thomas C.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 615, 107 Md. 198, 1908 Md. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-coale-md-1908.