Packard v. Ulrich

67 A. 246, 106 Md. 246, 1907 Md. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 67 A. 246 (Packard v. Ulrich) 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
Packard v. Ulrich, 67 A. 246, 106 Md. 246, 1907 Md. LEXIS 86 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On January 25th, 1898, Charles C. A. Osterbole filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City alleging that his niece, Mrs. Annie Vonderheide, a widow of that city, had been for several years of unsound mind and a lunatic, without lucid intervals, and had been recently sent upon the certificates of two physicians to the “Richard Gundry Home” near Baltimore City ; that she was possessed of leasehold and personal estate of the value of about ten thousand dollars, but was incapable of the management of her property or the government *247 of herself, and praying that a writ de lunático be issued to inquire into her lunacy. This petition was supported by the affidavit of the petitioner and by the affidavits of Dr. Chas. W. Hartweg and Dr. Hampson H. Beidler.

The writ was issued in the usual form on the same day, and on January 26th, 1898, an inquisition was taken and returned by which the said Annie Vonderheide was found to be of unsound mind, and a lunatic without lucid intervals, and not capable of the government of herself, or the management of her estate, and on the following day this inquisition was confirmed, and Charles E. Shanahan was appointed as committee of her person and estate.

He continued in the discharge of his duties as such committee until his death in the fall of 1903, when Henry A. Ulrich was appointed as committee in the place of said Shanahan, which position he still occupies.

It appears from the proceedings that sometime in May, 1904, said committee, after consultation with physicians, and upon their advice, permitted the said Annie Vonderheide to make a journey to her native place in Germany, in company with her brother Otto Zatsch, a resident of that country, who came to Baltimore to see his sister ; that she is still in Germany with marked improvement in her condition and with some hope of ultimate recovery ; that said Otto Zatsch has been appointed by the Grand Ducal Official Court of the city of Stadt Langsfeld, committee of the person and estate of said Annie Vonderheide, and has there given good and sufficient security for the faithful performance of the duties of such committee, and that application has been made to the Circuit Court of Baltimore City for the sale and conversion of all the estate of said lunatic into money and its payment and delivery under the order of the said Circuit Court to said Otto Zatsch, as committee, subject to the order and direction of said Grand Ducal Court of the city of Stadt Langfeld.

It further appears that pending this application for the transfer of said estate to said Otto Zatsch as committee in Germany, a decree was passed by the Circuit Court for Baltimore City *248 directing the said Henry A. Ulrich, committee as aforesaid, to sell the property of said lunatic, consisting of two annual ground rents of $54 each, and seven annual ground rents of $50 each, all on North Montford avenue, also leasehold property, No. 953 Druid Hill avenue, and a life estate in leasehold property No. 918 Druid Hill avenue, and said committee subsequently reported to said Court the sale under said decree, of an annual ground rent of $54 upon No. 1700 North Montford avenue, to Henry Duffy for $886.64 > three annual ground rents of $50 each, upon Nos. 1702, 1704 and'1706 North Montford avenue to Henry Duffy for $820.96 each ; an annual ground rent of $54 upon No. 1701 North Montford avenue, to Catherine E. Tyson for $886.64 i four annual ground rents of $50 each upon Nos. 1703, 1708, 1710 and 1712 North Montford avenue, to Catherine E. Tyson, Emily J. Smith, Mary H. Smith, and Meta Packard, respectively, at $820.96 each ; a life estate in leasehold No. 918.Druid Hill avenue, to Jacob M. Kahn for $350 ; and leasehold No. 953 Druid Hill avenue to Benjamin Voloscher for $825.

These sales were all ratified and confirmed December 13th, 1906, but on January 26th, 1907, the order of ratification was rescinded upon the petitions of the several purchasers above mentioned, with leave to them to file exceptions to said sales within ten days from that date, and exceptions were accordingly filed. The ground of these several exceptions is, that it nowhere appears from the proceedings in which said Annie Vonderheide was found to be a lunatic, that she was summoned to appear before the jury, nor that she was notified of said proceeding, nor that she did in fact appear before said jury, either in person or by solicitor, nor that she ever had any knowledge or notice of said proceeding, nor that the Court by its order dispensed with such notice to said lunatic, or her personal attendance before said jury; that it does not appear that said lunatic had any notice of the substitution of said Ulrich as committee in place of said Shanahan, nor that she was ever summoned to answer or in any manner notified of the petition for sale of said ground rents, or of any of the proceed *249 ings thereunder, and the exceptions allege that for these reasons said proceedings are void from the beginning because the Court had no jurisdiction in the premises, and the committee can convey no title to the property sold to the exceptants.

Henry A. Ulrich answered the petitions for the rescission of the order ratifying said sales, admitting his inability to show that the said lunatic had notice of the inquisition, or that she attended the same, or that her presence was dispensed with by order of the Court, but asserted that he personally notified her of his substitution as her committee in place of said Shanahan, and that she was then rational in manner and conversation and expressed her great satisfaction at the change, as he was able to converse with her in German which was the only language she could speak or. understand, and said Shananan had no knowledge of that language. It was agreed by counsel that the form of the writ de lunático inqiárendo in this case, and the form of the inquisition returned by the jury thereunder, was in conformity with the practice for more than thirty years past in the equity Courts of Baltimore City; that Wm. R. Brewer would testify that he had been connected with the Clerk’s office of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City for over 39 years ; that he was familiar with the chancery practice of said Courts, and that in proceedings de lunático inqiárendo it has never been the practice to summon the alleged lunatic or to notify him of the proceedings.

The Circuit Court, upon hearing, overruled these exceptions and ratified these sales, and from that order the purchasers have appealed.

The present case, grows out of the recent case of the Royal Arcanum v. Camilla D. Nicholson, Jr., 104 Md. 472, decided by this Court December 19th, 1906, and which these exceptants contend determines that in no case can a valid sale of any property of a lunatic be made, unless the alleged lunatic was notified by summons, or appeared, or notice, or his presence was dispensed with by order of the Court. A careful examination of that case, however, makes it apparent that the Court did not intend to go beyond what was actually necessary to *250 the decision of the precise case before it, and that the present case is not necessarily concluded by that decision. There,

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Bluebook (online)
67 A. 246, 106 Md. 246, 1907 Md. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packard-v-ulrich-md-1907.