Pratt v. Hill

92 A. 543, 124 Md. 252, 1914 Md. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 92 A. 543 (Pratt v. Hill) 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
Pratt v. Hill, 92 A. 543, 124 Md. 252, 1914 Md. LEXIS 29 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

*253 Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore County ordering and directing the appellant to file an additional inventory and additional bond. The appellee filed a petition in that Court, in which she alleged that the appellant had filed an inventory of the personal estate of the decedent, consisting of chattels appraised at $49.50 and a leasehold property appraised at $700, which leasehold property had been sold for the sum of $950, that she had proved her claim for $88 for rent, etc., due her and that there had been other claims filed amounting to $637.63; that she is credibly informed and avers that since filling the inventory there had come into the hands of the administrator a sum of money exceeding $900, being the net proceeds of a policy of insurance on the life of James M. Squirrel, deceased; that the assets of said estate have increased and are now more than double the amount of the bond filed by the administrator and the debts due by the estate (aggregating $725.63) together with a mortgage debt amounting to about $200, are more than the penalty named in the bond.

The petition prays that the administrator be required to furnish additional security in an amount which to the Court may seem right and proper.

An order was passed upon the petition and affidavit by which the administrator was required to file an additional bond in the penalty of $900, on or before the 21st day of April, 1914. Apparently it was intended as an order to show cause, as a copy of the petition and affidavit was served on the administrator who on April 21st filed an answer to the petition.

In the answer it was alleged: (1) That Sadie Squirrel, wife of the decedent, James M. Squirrel, had her husband insured in the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of New York for $1,000, the premiums thereon were paid by her and as she was the beneficiary; .(2) That she died on Hov. 26, 1912, leaving her husband and four children who kept *254 up the premiums and that upon the death of James M. Squirrel the proceeds of said policy of insurance (being $932.72 balance due), became vested absolutely in’the children of Sadie Squirrel; (3) That-the Insurance Company had arranged to pay the policy to the children of Sadie Squirrel, and would have done so, had not one of them been a minor, and in order that the company could get a valid receipt it paid over to petitioner .(meaning respondent) the said sum of $932.72; (4) That said sum is no part of the estate, and belongs absolutely to the children of Sadie Squirrel and James Squirrel.

The petition and answer were sworn to by the respective parties. An order was passed which recited that, “This cause coming on for hearing on the petition of Haney Ann Hill and the answer thereto of Philip H. Pratt, administrator, and the same having been fully argued by counsel for the- respective parties and the Court being of the opinion that the sum of $932.72 (mentioned in said petition and answer and being the net proceeds of a policy of insurance on the life of the said James M. Squirrel, deceased,) is a part of the assets of the estate of James M. Squirrel, deceased;” and then ordered that the administrator file an additional inventory showing said sum of money so coming into his hands and that he file an additional bond in the-penalty of $900.

That is the order from which the appeal is. taken. The record presents some peculiar conditions. In the first place, neither the insurance policy nor any substitute for it is in the record, and we have no means of knowing what provisions, if any, it contains as to payment in case of the death of the benefi.ciary named. The answer, it is true, alleges that Sadie Squirrel, the wife of the decedent, was the beneficiary and that the balance due under the policy of insurance became vested in the children of Sadie Squirrel, but there is nothing to show-whether the policy contained any provisions as to1 who should have the proceeds of the policy in case of the death of the beneficiary, and if so," what they were, or whether there were *255 any by-laws or other provisions controlling them. The allegation as to the sum being vested in the children of Sadie Squirrel is, so far as shown by the answer, simply tlie conclusion or construction of the appellant.

Section 8 of Article 45 of the Code fully protects the amount of insurance due a wife on a policy on her husband’s life for her sole use from the claims of the representatives of her husband or any of his creditors, and section 9 protects policies of insurance taken out for the benefit or bona fide assigned to the wife or children or any relative dependent upon such person or any creditor, from claims of the creditors of the insured person, and section 10 provides that: “If the wife shall die before her husband the amount of such insurance may be payable after her death to the children or decedants for their use, and to their guardian, if under age, and if there be no children or decedants of the wife living at the time of her death, to her legal representative.” But notwithstanding that provision of the Code, the policy or by-laws may make other provisions, and in that case, of course, section 10 would not apply. It would therefore be impossible for us to determine who is or are entitled to this fund from anything in the record, and we could not attempt to do so, even if the appeal is properly before us.

Section 38 of Article 93 in requiring a bond to be given by every administrator before administration shall be granted to him provides that “nothing herein shall prevent the Court or register for increasing the penalty of any.bond to such an amount as they or be may see proper, for sufficient cause shown.” It is clear therefore that the action of the Orphans’ Court in requiring an additional bond is not subject to' review—at least not unless the discretion vested in that Court lias been manifestly abused, or has been arbitrarily exercised, and whether it could then be, need not be determined in this case, for, inasmuch as the administrator admitted in his answer that the sum due on the policy had been paid to him, it cannot be said that the Orphans’ Court acted arbitrarily or even went beyond its clear duty in requiring an additional *256 bond, regardless of what may be ultimately determined as to. who- is or are entitled to the amount. The appeal therefore, cannot be sustained on that ground.

Section 243 of Article 93 makes provision for an administrator filing a petition against any person who he believes is concealing a part of his decedent’s estate, and Section 244 extends those provisions “to all cases where any person interested in any decedent’s estate shall by bill or petition allege that the administrator has concealed, or has in his possession and has omitted to return in the inventory or list of debts any part of his decedent’s assets.” It then provides that “if the Court shall finally adjudge and decree in favor of the allegations of such petition or bill, in whole or in part, they shall order an additional inventory, or list of debts, as the case may be, to> be returned by the administrator, etc.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 A. 543, 124 Md. 252, 1914 Md. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-hill-md-1914.