Oxenham v. Mitchell

153 A. 71, 160 Md. 269, 1931 Md. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1931
Docket[No. 75, October Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 153 A. 71 (Oxenham v. Mitchell) 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
Oxenham v. Mitchell, 153 A. 71, 160 Md. 269, 1931 Md. LEXIS 75 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Many years ago James A. Oxenham was the owner of a tract of land called “Asbury,” containing 317 acres, in .Talbot County, and he desired to borrow $3,500 of William M. Poisal. He offered the land to secure the loan, but. Poisal ■demanded the usurious rate of eight per centum, and the loan and the lien to be put in a form which would at once conceal the usury and preserve the essential features of a mortgage deed. So a scheme was devised and was executed. On December 21st, 1877, Oxenham and wife conveyed the tract of land to Poisal in fee simple; and simultaneously Poisal granted the same tract to Oxenham for a term of ninety-nine years from December 21st, 1877, renewable forever, upon an annual rental of $280, payable on the 20th of August, subject, to the provision that at any time during the *271 period of two years beginning on August 20th, 1878, on the payment to the said Poisal, his heirs and assigns, by the said Oxenham, his heirs and assigns, of the sum of $3,500, and all rent owing and apportioned to the day of settlement, the said Poisal, his heirs and assigns, would grant and convey to the said Oxenham, his heirs and assigns, the land and premises demised, free from the rent reserved and of all the estate and interest of the said Poisal and all claiming under him whether by way of dower or otherwise.

Oxenham remained in possession of the land and died intestate without paying the principal of the debt, and left surviving him a widow and eight children as his next of kin and heirs at law. Letters of administration were granted to his widow, Elizabeth E. Oxenham, on September 19th, 1882, and two days later the widow and the heirs at law of James A. Oxenham paid to Poisal the full sum of $3,500 and all the rent or interest apportioned to the day of settlement, and Poisal and his wife, pursuant to the covenant of the grant, conveyed in fee simple the tract of land mentioned to the widow and heirs at law of James A. Oxenham.

On October 3rd, 1882, the administratrix returned an inventory of the personal estate of her intestate that did not embrace any leasehold property; and on December 28th, 1882, the Orphans’ Court of Talbot County passed her first and final administration account, which showed a residue of $916.32 for distribution.

The widow and heirs remained in possession of the property until a bill in equity was filed for the purpose of making-sale of the tract in question and of several other parcels of land of which James A. Oxenham died seised and possessed. There is no dispute that all the parties in interest were joined in the proceeding’s, and a sale was decreed on January 1st, 1927, and a trustee appointed, who made sale and conveyed on August 4th, 1927, upon the payment of the purchase money of $21,500 for all the tracts, the interest of the parties to the cause in the land to the purchasers, Millard C. Oxenham, Hester E. Oxenham, and James A. Oxenham, as joint tenants. The decree was passed in the belief that an *272 absolute fee simple title was the subject of the adjudication, and the sale was so made, and the deed specifically conveyed all the right and title of the parties to the cause. An audit was stated and the proceeds of sale distributed among' the parties in interest.

The three joint tenants took possession of the property under the deed, and one of the joint tenants, James A. Oxenham, having died on March 4th, 1928, Millard C. Oxenham and Llester E. Oxenham became the surviving joint tenants, who sold the tract involved, called “Asbury,” in 1929. The purchasers had the title examined, and declined to comply with their contract bn the ground that the leasehold estate created in 1877 was subsisting and an unadministered asset of the estate of the lessee, James A. Oxenham, in whose estate a purporting", final administration account had been passed in 1882. The owners took counsel, and, notwithstanding the facts here stated and the further circumstances that since September 19th, 1882, the specific rent reserved, or any part of it, had never been paid or demanded, and that the property had been so enjoyed and held as an absolute fee simple estate by the joint tenants and those under whom they claimed since 1882, the owners were informed that to give a good title it would be necessary to have a< further administration upon this extinct leasehold estate. Code, art. 53, sec. 27: Safe Deposit Co. v. Marburg, 110 Md. 410, 72 A. 839; Lewis v. Kinnaird, 104 Md. 653, 65 A. 365; Sowers v. Keedy, 135 Md. 448, 109 A. 143; Rosenthal v. Traub, 155 Md. 167, 169-172, 141 A. 558.

In pursuance of this advice, Millard G. Oxenham, a joint tenant, as the only surviving son of the original owner and lessee, James A. Oxenham, filed on October 1st, 1929, in the Orphans’ Court of Talbot County a petition wherein is set forth the circumstances which induced the execution of the deed and lease between Oxenham and Poisal instead of the usual mortgage deed, and the further fact that the leasehold interest had never been considered an asset of his father’s .estate, but that “because of the existence of said lease your petitioner: is advised that further administration on said es- *273 tide "will be necessary.” The petitioner renounced his right to administer, and a third party was appointed administrator de bonis non, who, on October 3rd, 1929, filed an inventory and appraisal, containing as its single item the ancient leasehold estate in the tract called “Asbury” and its appraisement at $6,000. The administrator de bonis non thereupon filed on October 8th a petition and report, wherein he laid before the orphans’ court a complete narrative of all that had previously occurred. He .further stated that the joint tenants, Millard C. Oxenham and Hester E. Oxenham, his wife, have the entire ownership of Asbury, except the “bare legal title to the above mentioned leasehold interest,” and, in order to perfect their title, are willing to pay the appraised value of the leasehold estate, and that he recommended that he be authorized to make the sale. The court authorized the sale, 'which was reported and finally ratified and confirmed. The two joint tenants paid the purchase price, and on March 4th, 1930, the administrator d. b. n. reported to the orphans’ court that, after stating his administration account, there remained in his. hands, as the residue of the sale, the net sum of $5,449.66 for distribution among the next of kin of the decedent, and set forth the next of kin at the death of the intestate, and those taking under them by representation. The administrator then repeated the circumstances which have been here recited, and the claim of the joint tenants that, because of them and their substantial ownership, which was only incomplete to the extent of the naked legal title in the leasehold estate at the time the proceedings to clear the title were begun, the joint tenants were entitled to the net proceeds of sale of the alleged leasehold estate in Asbury. Because of this situation, the¡ administrador d. b. n. then prayed for a distribution or payment of the fund to be made under the provisions of section 148 of article 93 of the Code, and the orphans’ court fixed a day for this purpose, and the prescribed notice was given. As a result of this action, Millard C, Oxenham and Hester E.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 71, 160 Md. 269, 1931 Md. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxenham-v-mitchell-md-1931.