Plaenker v. Smith

52 A. 606, 95 Md. 389, 1902 Md. LEXIS 179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 A. 606 (Plaenker v. Smith) 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
Plaenker v. Smith, 52 A. 606, 95 Md. 389, 1902 Md. LEXIS 179 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant is the owner of the leasehold estate in three lots of ground on Biddle street in Baltimore City each of which is subject to an annual rent of forty-two dollars. The three rents were reserved by a single lease for ninety-nine *394 years made on the 29th of December, 1891. The rents therefore come within the operation of Art. 21, sec. 85 of the Code, which provides that “All rents reserved by leases or-sub-leases of land made in this State after April 5th, 1888,-for a longer period than fifteen years shall be redeemable at any time after the expiration of ten years from the date of such lease or sub-lease at . the option of the tenant after a-notice of six months to the landlord, for a sum of money-equal to the capitalization of the rent reserved at a rate- not to exceed six per cent.” The effect of this statute is to give-to the appellant the right to redeem the rents upon the terms and at the. time set forth in the statute as fully as if the lease, creating the rents had contained a formal covenant on the-part of the lessor to permit such redemption.

The reversion in fee in the three lots- in question with the rents reserved thereon was purchased, prior to the filing of-the bill in this case,-by John-H. Smith, trustee, under the will, of Joseph Thomas, as an investment of a portion of the funds given to him in trust-by the fourth clause, of the will for the benefit of the testator’s wife, and children.- That .clause of: the will is a very long one- and it is unnecessary to here insert it in full.- Its substance may be for the purposes of this opinion be stated as follows :

• It gives the rest and residue of the testator’s estate to Smith in trust to annually, pay out of the income thereof twenty-five hundred dollars or so much thereof as may be necessary, to the widow to be applied by her as guardian to the support and maintenance of the testator’s children by her “until his youngest child by his said wife shall have attained the age of twenty-one years.” Then follows a provision for paying to the widow, if the income of the trust fund prove sufficient for that purpose, three hundred dollars per year until her death or remarriage whichever should first occur. Then comes a direction to the trustee “from and immediately after my youngest child by the said Mary Frances Thomas-shall have attained the age of twenty-one years” to set apart and invest from the said rest and residue- of the estate suffi- *395 cient property to produce the annuity of $300 given to her during her life or widowhood and hold such property in trust for that purpose. Then, after a semi-colon, the clause proceeds to say : “And as to the remainder of said rest and residue of my estate including any unexpended balance that may be left over of the sums of money set apart as aforesaid for the maintenance, support and education of my children as aforesaid, and as to all of said rest and residue of my estate (including the increase thereof) in case my said wife shall have married or shall have departed this life, before my youngest living child shall have attained unto the age of twenty-one years as aforesaid that this trust shall cease and the same shall be equally divided among my children by my said wife Mary Frances Thomas, who may be living at the time of my death,, their heirs and assigns share and share alike. Provided that if any of my children by my said wife shall have departed this life at the time of my death leaving a child or children, that then such child or children shall take the share of .its or their parent; and hrthe event of my said wife surviving and remaining unmarried at the time of the distribution directed as aforesaid, that then as to the property set apart as aforesaid for her benefit, this trust shall cease when she shall depart this life or shall marry, and the said property, together, with the property bequeathed to her in the first item of this my will, shall be equally divided among all my children by my said wife, who may be living at the time of my death, their heirs and assigns, share and share alike.” '

. The will confers power upon the trustee and his successors “at any time during the continuance of this trust as provided in this my will at his or their discretion to sell and dispose of the said rest and residue of my estate or any part or parts thereof,” and directs that the proceeds of any such sales be reinvested upon the same trusts and declares that purchasers from the trustee shall not be liable to see to the application or investment of the proceeds of sale.

Joseph Thomas, the testator, left surviving him, in addition to his widow, Mary Frances, a daughter and two sons, all of *396 whom are now living. The sons are still under twenty-one years of age. The widow has married the trustee and her in-? terest in the residuary estate of her former husband has thus been eliminated and it will not be further noticed in this opinion.

In this state of the title to the three lots in question the appellant, after the expiration of ten years from the date of their lease, desired to exercise the right conferred upon him by the Code of redeeming the rents. Being in doubt as to who was entitled to receive the redemption price and execute to him a deed extinguishing the rents he filed the bill in this case against the appellees, who are Mary Frances Smith (formerly Thomas) and her three children by the testator together with the husband of the daughter and the trustee Smith and the guardian of the two infant sons.

. The bill after narrating the facts already stated in this opinion, together with other matters which it is unnecessary for us to notice, avers that the plaintiff is in doubt as to the proper persons upon whom to serve the six month’s notice of his intention to redeem the rents and to whom to pay the redemption price of the rents, and that a construction of the will of Joseph Thomas is necessary to enable him to obtain a good title to the said rents and reversions. The prayer of the bill is ist. That the Court may take jurisdiction and “advise and direct your .orator in the exercise of his right to redeem said rents and 2nd for further relief.

The appellees demurred to the bill upon the ground that the will was free from ambiguity and presented no ground for doubt as to the plaintiff’s rights and that .the bill showed no right on the part of the plaintiff to a construction of the will or to the relief prayed for. The Court by its decree sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill, and from that decree the present appeal was taken. . .

The language, used, in the fourth clause of the will under consideration especially the portion of it which we have quoted in full is undoubtedly redundant and is at first sight somewhat confusing, but a careful reading of it leaves no doubt in our *397 minds as to the true intention of the testator in reference to the matters embraced in that clause. lie intended to give the residue of his estate to Smith to be held in trust by him only until the youngest child shall arrive at twenty-one years of age when the corpus of such residue is to be divided equally among the children who were living at the time of the testator's death with the proviso that if any child should

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 606, 95 Md. 389, 1902 Md. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plaenker-v-smith-md-1902.