Ruhl v. Wagner

127 A. 495, 146 Md. 595, 1924 Md. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 A. 495 (Ruhl v. Wagner) 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
Ruhl v. Wagner, 127 A. 495, 146 Md. 595, 1924 Md. LEXIS 165 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Oitutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees in this ease filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County their bill of complaint against the appellants asking for the sale in lieu of partition of a tract of land on Eastern Avenue and Hace Avenue in that county.

It is alleged in the bill that the complainants are the “owners as tenants in common with the respondents” of that tract of land, and that they are seised and possessed thereof “as heirs at law of Conrad Ruhl, Sr., deceased, and acquired title thereto “under the terms of the last will and testament of said Conrad Ruhl, Sr.,” which was filed with the bill as an exhibit and prayed to be taken as part thereof. It alleged that a number of parcels of .the property had been leased to various tenants and that the property yielded an annual income of about $4,500, which had for a long time been collected by Henry Wagner, one of the complainants, but that Conrad Ruhl, Jr., had become dissatisfied with the collection of the rents by Wagner, and had announced that he intended to collect them himself, and that irreconcilable- differences had arisen between the various owners as to the collection of rents. It then alleged that the property was not susceptible of partition in kind, without material loss and injury to the several owners thereof, and prayed that it might be sold and the proceeds divided among those entitled according to their respective interests, and as incidental to that relief that a receiver be appointed to collect the rents and profits from the property pending the litigation.

The exhibits filed with the bill as a part of it, show that the land was acquired by Oonrad Ruhl, Sr., under a deed from Noble H. Oreager, Trustee, December 5th, 1882, and that he. by his last will probated in the Orphans’ Court of *598 Baltimore City in 1910, devised it to bis wife Mary Ruhl for ber life, and tben to bis children, Mary Wagner, Henry and Conrad Buhl, “to be equally divided between them.”

The defendants answered the bill and in their answer admitted the allegations thereof, except those relating to the collection of the rents, the indivisibility of the property, and the existence of irreconcilable differences among the owners, and as to those allegations they say:

“That they deny the averments of matters and facts as alleged in each and every the 9th and 10th paragraphs of said bill of complaint, except, only the aver-ments, that the complainant, Henry W. Wagner, has, for a long time past, been collecting the income from much of said property, which is admitted. Further answering the 9th paragraph of said bill of complaint, these defendants say, that there are no such irreconcilable differences existing between the parties to this cause, as to justify this Court, in appointing receivers pendente, lite, and thereby subject the estate to be further depleted by the expense incident thereto. Further answering the 10th paragraph of said bill of complaint, these defendants most emphatically deny each and every averment of alleged matter and fact therein contained, and on the contrary, most emphatically affirm, aver and allege that all the property belonging to the parties to this cause, in the bill of complaint mentioned, described or referred to is susceptible of partition in kind between the parties entitled, according to their respective interests and estates, without loss and injury to them. And they further aver and allege that the parties to this cause would suffer great and unnecessary loss by a sale of said property in order thereby to effectuate division of their interests.”

They further set up by way of defense the pendency of a prior suit concerning the same subject matter between the same parties, and also allege that the complainants had orally agreed with the defendants to sell to them all their right, title and interest in the property for $25,000 and that, while *599 that agreement was never consummated, Henry Wagner bad been allowed to collect under it the income from the property, and that he did collect thousands of dollars therefrom for which he has never1 accounted, and that

“by reason of the unconscionable action and conduct of the said complainant, resultant in the hindering, delaying and defrauding these defendants, in the enforcement of their rights, thereby depriving these defendants of the usufruct of their property, the subject matter of this litigation, that said complainants are barred from seeking any relief through the medium of this or any other Court until such a time, hereafter, as he places these defendants, in status quo, the same, in all respects as though said oral agreement had not been entered into, and the same, in all respects, as though he, the said complainant, Henry W. Wagner, had faithfully accounted for the income arising from said jointly held properties, under aforementioned deed of trust.”

Finally they assert that the right of “division and election” given in certain cases under article 46, O. P. G. L. of Md., applies to the facts of this case, and that, the provisions of that statute not having been complied with, the bill should be dismissed.

The complainants then filed a petition asking the court to hear and determine whether the right of division and election, as provided by article 46, section 32 eí seq., C. P. G. L. of Md., applied to the facts of this case. On that- petition the court set the question for a hearing and, on April 3rd, 1924, decreed that the right of division and election did not apply to the facts of this case, and from that order this appeal was taken.

Assuming that the question was properly before the court, we fully concur in that conclusion. Under no circumstances could the right of division and election provided by article 46, C. P. G. L. of Md., apply to the facts of this case, since by its very terms its application is limited to- cases of intestacy, and does not apply where the property is held by *600 purchase or under a will. Johnson v. Hoover, 75 Md. 489. And this is not a case of intestacy. It is time it is alleged in the bill that the complainants hold the property as “heirs at law” of Conrad Ruhl, Sr., but it is also alleged that they acquired it under the will of Conrad Ruhl, Sr., and manifestly they could not hold the land in both capacities, as heirs and devisees, and as it conclusively appears that Ruhl did dispose of it in his last will, the appellees could not have held it as his heirs at law, and must have taken it directly under the will or mediately or immediately from some devisee named in that will. Nor would that condition be affected by the fact, if it were a fact, that they took their interest as heirs at law of some devisee named in that will, because, while in such ease we do not decide that the statute would not apply to such interest, we do decide that it would not apply to the whole property affected by the interest.

The appellants, however, suggest that the question as to whether the right of division and election exists in this case was never properly before the trial court, and that it had no power to consider it at all.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 A. 495, 146 Md. 595, 1924 Md. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruhl-v-wagner-md-1924.