Righter v. Clayton

194 A. 819, 173 Md. 138, 1937 Md. LEXIS 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 4, 1937
Docket[No. 6, October Term, 1937.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 194 A. 819 (Righter v. Clayton) 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
Righter v. Clayton, 194 A. 819, 173 Md. 138, 1937 Md. LEXIS 293 (Md. 1937).

Opinion

Shehan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Cecil County, overruling and dismissing exceptions to the ratification of a sale, made under power and authority in a mortgage from Thomas D. Mews, deceased, unto James E. Dean, and assigned unto Joshua Clayton, *140 who proceeded to advertise and sell the property in a foreclosure proceeding. The property is known as 104 East Main Street in the Town of Elkton in Cecil County. The exceptions are filed by John R, Righter and Alfred S. Righter, an infant, grandnephews of the deceased.

There survived Thomas D. Mews a sister, a brother, a niece, and the following grandnephews and grandnieces: Martin Robosson, Wilmer C. Ford, Alma Joseph, and Helen M. Ford, and the two grandnephews who filed these exceptions, who are appellants herein.

It is urged by the appellee that, the appellants being grandnephews, and there being a brother, a sister, and a niece living, these exceptants have no right or interest in the mortgaged property after the death of Thomas D. Mews, and are, therefore, not entitled to file these exceptions. It is apparent that, if this contention is correct, this appeal should be dismissed, and, unless the statutory enactments passed after the decision in the case of Hoffman v. Watson, 109 Md. 532, 554, 72 A. 479, changed the law as it then existed, these exceptants are not proper parties. That was a well considered case. It was argued and then re-argued, but it was directly held by a majority of the court that grandnephews, under the state of the law at that time, had no interest in real property as against brothers, sisters, arid nephews. We would be cornpelled to dismiss this appeal unless there have been statutory enactments that so changed the law from that existing in the year 1909, when that case was decided, as to vest in grandnephews an interest in the decedent’s property. Such changes, we believe, have been made by Acts of Assembly affecting the devolution of both real and personal property.

It was the intention and design of the Legislature, in passing the Acts of 1916, ch. 325, secs. 1, 2, 3, and 4, to bring into accord the law relating to both these classes of property, and that the law governing the distribution of personal property should apply equally to both real and personal property with respect to decedent’s estates. But the amendatory acts go further than that. *141 The Acts of 1916, ch. 224, repealed and re-enacted sec-tions 126, 127, 128, and 129 of article 93 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland, 1911, and these re-enactmeñts are incorporated in article 93 of the present Code of Public General Laws (1924) in the same order as is contained in the Act of Assembly, 1916, and are designated as sections 131, 132,133, and 134. In the Code of 1904, which existed at the time of the decision in Hoffman v. Watson, supra, the above provisions appeared different in number as to sections, but the same in verbiage as in the Code of 1911.

In the case of Hoffman v. Watson, supra, the questions as to the devolution of both real and personal property were involved, and at that time the provisions relating to inheritance and descent of real property were considered, and it was there held, because of the proviso at the end of section 27, article 46, entitled “Inheritance,” subtitled “Descents,” that grandnephews and nieces did not share with nephews and nieces, these latter taking, by representation, the share of their parents, but it was not so held with regard to personal property. It is from this pronouncement of the law that the appellee in this case contends the grandnephews and nieces are now excluded. To this contention -we cannot subscribe, in view of the state of the law as it now exists. Sections 133, 134, and 135, article 93, are those that govern the situation with which we are here concerned, and are as follows:

“133. If there be a brother or sister or a child or descendant of a brother or sister and no child, descendant, father or mother of the intestate, the said brother, sister or child or descendant of a brother or sister shall have the whole.”
“134. Every brother and sister of the intestate shall be entitled to an equal share, and a child or children of a deceased brother or sister of the intestate shall stand in the place of such brother or sister and a grandchild or grandchildren and every other descendant or other «descendants of a deceased brother or sister of the intes *142 tate in existence at the death of the intestate shall stand in the place of his, her or their deceased ancestor.”
“135. After children, descendants, father, mother, brothers and sisters of the deceased, the child or children, grandchild or grandchildren of brothers and sisters of the deceased and their descendants, all collateral relations in equal degree shall take, and no representation amongst such collateral shall be allowed, and there shall be no distinction between the .whole and half blood.”

For convenience, section 27, article 46, Code of Public General Laws (1904) is here set forth: “If in the descending or collateral line, any father or mother shall be dead, the child or children of such father or mother shall by representation be considered in the same degree as the father or. mother would have been if living, and shall have the same share of the estate as the father or mother, if living, would have been entitled to, and no more; and in such case, when there are more children than one, the share aforesaid shall be equally divided among such children; provided, that there be no representation admitted among collaterals after brothers’ and sisters’ children.”

Section 135, before amendment, appeared in the Code of Public General Laws (1904) as section 130, but was repealed and re-enacted by the Acts of 1912, ch. 91, sec. 129, and now reads as above indicated. Thus the laws as contained in sections 133, 134, and 135 are brought into harmony and clearly indicate an intention to repose by representation in grandnephews and grandnieces the same rights of property as would have been possessed by their deceased ancestor, if living at the death of the intestate, and, this being true, the exceptants in this case have such right or interest in the property of their granduncle, Thomas D. Mews, upon his death, as entitle them to file exceptions in this case.

Sections 133,134, and 135 should be read and construed > together. By the very terms of section 134, grandchildren of a brother or sister of the deceased take and stand in the place of his, her, or their deceased ancestor, *143 and by direct implication from the terms of section 135, grandchildren' who are grandnephews of the deceased take in preference to other collateral relations. Thus, by direct provisions in section 134, and implications in section 135, grandchildren of deceased sisters and brothers, being grandnephews of the decedent property owner, may become entitled to an interest in the property of a granduncle. The exceptants in this case are the grandnephews of Thomas D. Mews.

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Bluebook (online)
194 A. 819, 173 Md. 138, 1937 Md. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/righter-v-clayton-md-1937.