Redwood v. Howison

99 A. 863, 129 Md. 577, 1917 Md. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 99 A. 863 (Redwood v. Howison) 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
Redwood v. Howison, 99 A. 863, 129 Md. 577, 1917 Md. LEXIS 83 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

It appears from the bill of complaint in this case that Dr. R. Dorsey Coale, of Baltimore City, died in May, 1915, leaving the following last will and testament:

“I, R. Dorsey Coale, do hereby make and declare this as my last will and testament.
1. I desire my executor and administrator to pay, from my estate, all of my just debts, and to properly adjust my accounts with the University of Maryland.
2. The above provision having been complied with, all the rest and residue of my estate, in property of every kind, and all sums of money due me, as fees uncollected or unpaid, or as salary due, from the University of Maryland, or from any other person or persons, I give and bequeath absolutely to my beloved wife, Minna Howison Coale.
3. I constitute and appoint Francis T. Redwood as my administrator and executor under this will, and I desire that no bond be required of him for the fulfillment of this duty.
*579 In the event of the occurrence of my death before that of my mother, I commend to the love and care of my dear mother, my beloved wife, with earnest request, that should such provision be needful, she will, so far as may be possible, and from the legacy which she may have intended to bequeath to me, in the event of her death preceding mine, provide for my wife until her remarriage.
Signed, sealed, published and declared by me as my last will and testament, revoking all previous wills, this second day of April, nineteen hundred and one.
R. Dorsey Coale. (Seal)”

The executor named in the will having died before the testator, letters of administration, with the will annexed, were granted to Mrs. Mary 33. Redwood, the widow of Erancis T. Redwood and sister of Dr. Ooale, who, on the 22nd day of June, 1915, returned to the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City an inventory of the personal estate of the testator, valued at $55,014.54, and made up of the following items: Household furniture, $262.75; bonds, $22,257.00; stocks, $24,802.00; cash in the National Bank of Baltimore, $2,-692.79, and proceeds of policy upon the life of the decedent in The Eenn Mutual Life Insurance Company, $5,000.00. The administratrix paid all the debts of Dr. Coale and settled her first account in the Orphans’ Court, by which it appears that the balance for distribution, consisting of furniture, bonds, stocks and cash, is $57,383.80, subject to the collateral inheritance tax.

Dr. Coale’s wife, Minna Howison Coale, died in October, 1911, leaving a will, executed in December, 1910, by which she left him all her property and appointed him executor. Letters testamentary were granted to him, and he returned an inventory of the estate amounting to $9,519,00, and consisting of bonds valued at $6,358.00, and stocks valued at $3,-161.00. Dr. Coale, as executor, filed an account in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City on the 22nd of October, *580 1913, by which, it appears that the income received from the bonds and stocks was sufficient to pay Mrs. Coale’s debts and the cost of administration, and that the bonds and stocks were distributed to him in accordance with the terms of the will. After his wife’s death, Dr. Coale found with her will the following letter, and also a list of articles which she described as “heirlooms in Coale family,” and which she stated were “to go to Mary B. Bedwood”:

“January third 1911

My dear Dorsey, here is my letter of bequests & if you do not object to any of them, I would like very much to have you carry them out at your convenience. I want Mother to have my fur coat. Aside from that I will leave her only her bed room- furniture if she wishes it, as I know you will look out for her & after your death, Kell will continue to take care of her. I would like Kell to have all my jewelry, silver and clothes & a pair of ‘Palm leaf cut’ decanters. They are my own and are on the lowest shelf of the glass closet. I want her to give Lida K"aney and Gretchen a piece of my jewelry. At your death, I would like you to leave Kell my share of Aunt’s money, & all our furniture & silver & glass which were not heirlooms in your family. I especially want Kell to have my Chinese and Japanese things & embroideries. I would like Gretchen to get $1000. Ellen to get $100. Henriette $50. The rest to go to Kell at your death; Please don’t let Bhett want in her old age. I want Mary Bedwood to have my cameo bracelet that Aunts gave me the cameos for. I want George to have any of my books & $100. I want Erancis to have my little ivory rabbit & $100. Please give Mr. Crosby the little cigarette holder on the mantel. And some book of mine. Give Aunt Bess a piece of glass or china. T think that is all & hope I have not left out anyone. Thank you Dorsey & God keep you my dear. You were always so good and patient with me.

■ Your loving wife Minna Coale.”

*581 The bill states that Dr. Ooale gave Margaret Rohe, referred to in the letter as “Gretchen,” a $1,000.00 bond, and that all his wife’s requests were complied with, “with possibly one or two exceptions,” during his life, except the request in regard to1 the heirlooms, which were not received by Mrs. Redwoood until after Dr. Coale’s death because they largely furnished the house in which he resided, and the request in regard to Eleanor Howison Witherspoon, spoken of in the letter as “Hell.” Mrs. Ooale’s mother, who was .living with Mrs. Coale at the time of her death, continued to live with Dr. Coale as his guest until his death. Dr. Coale kept the bonds and stocks received by him under his wife’s will in his box in the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore iu a package by themselves and separate from other securities owned by him, and each certificate of stock and each bond was marked in his handwriting in pencil either “From Minna H. Coale” or “M. H. C.”

Mrs. Caroline Donaldson Ooale, mother of Dr. Ooale, died in January, 1902, leaving a, will executed in October, 1900, and Dr. Coale received from her estate $17,563.11. The policy of life insurance for $5,000.00 was issued in 1896, and was made payable, in accordance, with Dr. Ooale’s application, to his wife, “if she survive him otherwise to his executors, administrators or assigns.” In December, 1912, the Aetna Life Insurance 'Company, of Hartford, issued an “Accumulative Disability Policy” to Dr. Coale, which was in force at the time of his death, by the terms of which, in case of his death by accident, the amount therein specified was payable to his estate. At the time of her death, Dr. Coale’s wife was thirty-eight years of age, and he was fifty-seven years of age when he died, and the bill alleges that at the time Dr. Coale made his will “he was without property or estate of any pecuniary value and that he was in receipt of no income except his salary as professor of chemistry at the University of Maryland and as Dean for a number of years of the Medical School of the University, which salary * * * *582

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 863, 129 Md. 577, 1917 Md. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redwood-v-howison-md-1917.