Roberts v. Roberts

17 A. 568, 71 Md. 1, 1889 Md. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 9, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 A. 568 (Roberts v. Roberts) 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
Roberts v. Roberts, 17 A. 568, 71 Md. 1, 1889 Md. LEXIS 75 (Md. 1889).

Opinion

McSherry, J.,

delivered tlie opinion of the Court.

On the 28th of July, 1881, Jane P. Roberts executed her last will and testament in due form of law. After making bequests of specific articles of small value to her children, she devised as follows: “1 desire my farm to be sold as soon as it can be sold to advantage after my death, that is' if it is not sold before. But no one shall force a sale to get their share without the majority is willing for it, and one-half of the price 1 want to be secured in the farm while iny dear husband lives, or if it is taken out, it must be secured in some other real estate so as to keep the principal, to be equally divided after my husband’s death among all my children; my husband is to have the interest only while he lives. The other half I want to be equally divided among my children, or if any of them is dead, their share is to be equally divided among their heirs. If any one owes us anything, take it out of their share before giving it to them, and divide it among them all. * * And lastly, I hereby nominate and appoint my dear husband, William H. Roberts, and my two sons, Charles W. Roberts and William L. Roberts, the executors of this, my last will and testament.” Her husband died after the date of this will and during the life of the testatrix. At the time of her decease Mrs. Roberts owned some personal property situated in Harford County, and a farm located in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. This is the farm mentioned in her will and the only real estate she possessed. Her will was admitted to probate in Harford County, Maryland, and also in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, and letters testamentary were duly granted in both States to William L. Roberts, one of the executors. The farm was sold by William L. Roberts who received the purchase money, but the deed to the purchaser was signed and executed by the adult children of Mrs. Roberts and by the guardian of the [4]*4infant grandchild. Something over two years after-wards Edward H. Roberts, one of the sons of the testatrix, sued out of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, a foreign attachment against his brother, William L. Roberts, for the recovery of his, Edward’s, share of the proceeds of that sale. William apj>eared and contested the claim made against him. The judgment being in favor of Edward, William has brought the case here for review.

We need make no other allusion to the jdeadings than to state that the whole controversy was narrowed down to two leading questions, viz., first, whether William L. Roberts had authority to sell the Pennsylvania land as executor of Jane P. Roberts; and secondly, whether the claim of set-off made and relied on by the appellant can he sustained. There are three exceptions in the record. The second and third present these two questions, whilst the third relating to the admissibility of evidence is of little or no consequence.

It will be observed that Mrs. Roberts’ will does not in terms confer upon her executors power to make sale of the Montgomery County farm. She expressed a desire that the farm be sold as soon as a sale could be advantageously made; but as far as she was able she prohibited an enforced sale by any one of her children unless made with the concurrrence of a majority of them. In the absence of authority either express or implied, given to the executors by the will, they had no power to make sale of the land, as executors, unless the laws of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania permitted them to do so. The provisions of those laws to which we have been referred, are to be found in Brightly’s Purdon’s Digest. It is there provided “All powers, authorities and directions relating to real estate, contained in any last will, and not given to any person by name or by description, shall he deemed to have been given to the executors [5]*5thereof; but no such power, authority or direction shall be exercised or carried into effect by them, except under the control and direction of the Orphans’ Court having jurisdiction of their accounts. ’ ’ Brightly’s Purdon’s Dig., (10th Edition,) 418, sec. TO. From this it is quite clear that the executors named in Mrs. Robert’s will, though not specially empowered by the terms of that instrument, were clothed with full authority by the statute to sell the land in question. By sec. T2 this authority devolved upon the surviving or acting executor. But whilst this is so, it is expressly provided in sec. TO, just quoted, that this power or authority to make sale of the real estate of a decedent under this statute, shall not be “exercised or carried into effect” by the executor “except under the control and direction of the Orphans’ Court having jurisdiction of” the executor’s accounts. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has had occasion to construe this statute, and it has held that the executor, under such circumstances as are presented in this case, could only make a valid sale of the land by applying to the Orphans’ Court and obtaining its order and direction, or possibly by reporting the sale to the Court and obtaining an order confirming it on due notice to all parties in interest. Bell’s Appeal, 66 Pa. St., 498 ; Kirk vs. Carr, 54 Pa. St., 285.

It is not pretended that the appellant obtained from the Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County, any order or direction whatever either authorizing or confirming the sale. On the contrary he sold the land without any such order and caused all the adult children of Mrs. Roberts and the guardian of the infant grandchild to unite with him in the deed to the purchaser. It thus abundantly appears that whilst he had the power to make the sale, he did not exercise or profess to exercise that power; and had he attempted, without complying with the statute, to convey the property, the purchaser [6]*6would have acquired no’title under a deed from him. This case, however, does not involve the title of the purchaser or the validity of the sale. Under the statute the power to make the sale was in the executor, though he had not complied with the conditions upon which the exercise of that power depended. Having, however, in fact negotiated the sale, and having secured a good title to the purchaser, as just stated, he collected the purchase money, and charged himself with the whole amount thereof in an account stated on the 3rd- of September, 1887, in the Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County, which account was, there being no exceptions filed to it, absolutely confirmed l>3r that Court on October 13th, 1887. His failure to procure an order authorizing him to execute his power of sale did not extinguish the power, but suspended his right to exercise or carry it into effect.

But the power of sale was not the only power he possessed, under the will and the Pennsylvania statute, with respect to the property and the proceeds arising from its sale; and it b3r no means follows, because he omitted to exercise or carry into effect this particular power, that he thereby surrendered all control over the proceeds of sale, or abandoned the other duties devolved upon him with regard to the investment, disposition, and distribution of those proceeds. If, instead of selling-under and in conformity with the power conferred b3r the statute, and giving such a deed as he would then have had authority to give, he sold in the manner stated l)3r the appellee, and delivered the deed we have mentioned, he clearly did not therein deprive himself of other pow-ers over the proceeds of sale when those proceeds actually came into his hands.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A. 568, 71 Md. 1, 1889 Md. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-roberts-md-1889.