Polk v. Linthicum

69 L.R.A. 920, 60 A. 455, 100 Md. 615, 1905 Md. LEXIS 39
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 23, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 L.R.A. 920 (Polk v. Linthicum) 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
Polk v. Linthicum, 69 L.R.A. 920, 60 A. 455, 100 Md. 615, 1905 Md. LEXIS 39 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the lower Court dismissing the petition of the appellant for the removal of the appellee from the trust created by the last will and testament of the' late Gabriel D. Clark.

The decedent left surviving him a widow, the appellee in this case, and two children by a former wife; a son, Gabriel *617 D. Clark, Jr., and a daughter, Mary, who with her husband, Lucius C. Polk are the appellants.

By his last will, made in the year 1892, he distributed a large estate, except as to a small portion donated to certain charitable purposes, among the several members of his family. For his wife he made an ample provision; he gave her his residence and contents, and one-half of his personal estate, amounting to more than a million and a-half of dollars, for her life or widowhood, and one-third of the residue of his realty for life. All the residue of his estate, including that portion that might remain after the termination of the estate given to the wife for life or for widowhood, he divided among his son and daughter. The son took his share absolutely, but that of his daughter was given to his widow, his son and The Mercantile Trust Company of Baltimore in trust, to hold and manage the same and pay over the income thereof to Mrs. Polk, “into her hands and not into another,” for her life, and from her death to his grandson, if he be then living, during his natural life, and then for the benefit of his child or children, until the youngest child shall have reached twenty-one years of age, when the trust is to close, and the property shall vest absolutely in the said children. In the event of his grandson dying, without leaving child or descendant, the property is to go to the children of the testator’s brother. He died on the 8th December, 1896, and in June, 1898, the Court assumed jurisdiction of the trust.

The appellee and the decedent were married in 1883. From the time of the marriage up to his death, it seems not to be questioned, their intercourse was harmonious and agreeable. From the period of Mr. Clark’s death, there arose causes of estrangement between the widow and the children, which have brought about much bad feeling and broken up all the pleasant relations that may have theretofore subsisted between them..

We do not deem it necessary in the view we take of the case to enter into a discussion of the nature ,of these causes, nor to make any attempt to determine how far the suspicion *618 and distrust the children seem to entertain for the appellee may be justified by the circumstances as they are disclosed by the record. It will be sufficient to observe that in fact, ever since Mr. Clark’s death, these causes have operated to bring about a most unfortunate state of bad feeling in the family, and to develop differences respecting the conduct of the trust which have kept the estate in constant litigation. The appellee it is true has testified that she has never entertained “one moment of ill will against one of them” (meaning Mr. Clark and his sister); and it may be conceded that the appellee has testified with entire candor and honesty. But notwithstanding this it seems improbable if not impossible that under all the circumstances of the case she can ever resume with thep the kindly and sympathetic relations that existed during the lifetime of the testator, and are so necessary for the successful conduct of a trust like the one under this will. It may not unreasonably be assumed that the testator made selection of his widow not only because of his entire confidence in her judgment and integrity, but also because he knew of her satisfactory relations with Mrs. Polk. He must have sought not only that his daughter’s share of his estate, should be wisely and honestly controlled but that her dealings with those managing the trust might be through the medium of the appellee whose affectionate solicitude for her comfort and welfare would soften to some extent at least the burden of having to submit to the will of others. These remarks are not intended as the statement of a sufficient ground for a removal; for-the reason that it seems to be well settled that mere unfriendliness of the cestui que trust towards the trustee is not a sufficient ground per se for the removal of the latter. Forster v. Davies, 4 DeGex, Fisher & Jones, 139; Wilson v. Wilson, 145 Mass. 492. But these reflections we think enable us to approach the consideration of other features of the case in our judgment of more importance.

The last will of the testator was made and executed in the year 1892, four years prior to his death. It evinces a solicitude for the welfare of each member of his family as well as *619 an earnest desire to maintain an absolute equality among his children. He intended it is true to guard the share of Mrs. Polk by means of the trust, for reasons of which we are not informed, but which we must assume were inspired by the expectation that it would operate for her benefit But he bestowed upon each of his children an equal share of the estate. To the widow he was extremely liberal. He gave her a life interest in more than one-half of his estate. It included the dwelling and contents and an income estimated by one of the counsel to amount to more than $50,000 per annum. He seems therefore to have regarded the interest and probably the wishes of all the members of his family. At the time he selected his widow as one of the trustees • for his daughter, he must have believed that the agreeable relations between her and his children would continue to exist after he was gone. He probably did not anticipate that she would re-marry within less than a year and a-half after his death and thereupon would be broken up the home where they had so happily resided; nor that there would spring up so soon estrangements of serious character and far-reaching effect. His object in joining her in the management of the trust could not have been to supply the business skill needed for the successful control of so large an estate; for that was already supplied by the other trustees. What else could have been his motive but that there might be at his daughter’s side, a safe, agreeable and sympathetic medium, through which she could convey her wishes respecting the trust estate to those that had it in charge? Her position on the board of trustees seems to be an additional proof of the fact that he intended the trust estate primarily for the benefit only of his daughter to be enjoyed by her in the most agreeable as well as the most advantageous manner. It is apparent also from the face of the will that the scheme of the testator was, after providing liberally for his widow, to so dispose of all his property, in such a manner that it should eventually go down in the line of his own blood. The testitimony also shows that he was exceedingly solicitous that his dispositions should be acceptable to his wife. He trusted her, *620 talked with her about his will, read it to her, and she promised to do' what he wished her to do. Mr. Snowden who prepared the will testified that after the will was executed, the appellee “was called into the parlor and Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Schmidt v. Chambers
288 A.2d 356 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1972)
Lopez v. Lopez
243 A.2d 588 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1968)
Mangels v. Tippett
173 A. 191 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Suffolk v. Leiter
261 Ill. App. 82 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 L.R.A. 920, 60 A. 455, 100 Md. 615, 1905 Md. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-v-linthicum-md-1905.