Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore v. Thom

83 A. 45, 117 Md. 154, 1912 Md. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 83 A. 45 (Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore v. Thom) 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
Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore v. Thom, 83 A. 45, 117 Md. 154, 1912 Md. LEXIS 88 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the fifth of July, 1911, Charles E. Rieman of Baltimore County, Maryland, filed in the Orphans’ Court of said county a petition in which he stated that his mother, Annie Lowe Rieman, of said county, died on the third of March, 1911, leaving as her only heirs at law and next of kin two daughters, namely, Mary Isabel Thom, of Baltimore City, and Charlotte Rieman McIntosh, of Baltimore County, and three sons, Carlton Alexander Rieman, of Baltimore County, the petitioner and Perlee L. Rieman, who has been adjudicated non compos and whose trustee and committee is the petitioner. The petition further averred that the petitioner *156 and bis two sisters and his said brother, Carlton Alexander Rieman, some days after the death of his mother made diligent search among her papers for the purpose of ascertaining whether she left a will, and that they found the will hereinafter referred to among her private' papers; that upon examination of the same in the presence of his said brother and sisters and George R. Willis, Esq., an attorney at law of Baltimore City, he discovered that “the face of the paper contained evidence of the erasure, or attempted erasure of the first item of the will;” that subsequently Mr. Willis informed the petitioner and his said brother and sisters that the deceased had told him that she had erased the “First Item,” and had given him her reasons for so doing. The petition then stated that said will when found was in a sealed envelope in which was also enclosed a letter addressed by the deceased to Mr. Willis ; that the will and letter had been in the possession of the petitioner ever since the envelope containing them had been found, and were “in the same condition in which they were when so found,” and that he presented them, with said petition, to the Court for such action $ as might be proper to be taken in connection with the probate of said will or instrument of writing.

By agreement of counsel representing all persons interested in the estate and The Safe Deposit & Trust Company of Baltimore, appointed trustee by said will, said trustee, after notice to the heirs of law and next of kin of the deceased, on the thirteenth of July, 1911, presented and propounded the will for probate in said Orphans’ Court, and thereupon Mrs. Thom and Mrs. McIntosh filed in said Court .their petition charging that the deceased had erased the first item of the will; that her said act operated as a cancellation and revocation of said item and of the whole will, and that she intended that it should so operate, and praying that said will be by said Court-declared cancelled and revoked, and that said trustee, the said Charles E. Riemans trustee and committee for Perlee Lowe Rieman, and Carlton Alexander Rieman and Charles E. Rieman, named as executors of the *157 will, be required to answer, etc. This petition was answered by The Safe Deposit and Trust Company, trustee, denying that the will or any part of it had' been revoked. The answer of Charles E. Pieman and Carlton Alexander Rieman, executors, states that they do not admit that the deceased ‘■'attempted to erase, believed she had erased and did erase the first item in said” will, or that her act in connection “with the alleged erasure of said first item, operated as a cancellation and revocation of said first item, and of said” will, and that they require proof thereof by the petitioner, while the answer of Charles E. Rieman, trustee and committee, “neither admits nor denies” the alleged revocation of the will. A replication was filed by the petitioners, evidence was produced before the Orphans’ Court, and, by agreement of counsel, was subsequently written by the stenographer and filed in the case. On the 18th of July, 1911, the Orphans’ Court passed an order adjudging that the will had been can-celled and revoked by the deceased, and that probate of the same be refused, and, on the same day, passed a further order granting letters of administration on the estate of the deceased to Charles E. Rieman and Carlton Alexander Rieman. It is from these orders that The Safe Deposit & Trust Company, trustee, has appealed.

In order to arrive at the real intention of the deceased, and to determine the effect to be given to the alleged act of revocation, it will be necessary to keep in view the provisions of the will in question. After providing for the payment of her just debts and funeral expenses, it proceeds:

“Item: I give and bequeath unto each of my children, that is to say: Mary Isabel Thom, Carlton Alexander Rie-man, Charles E. Rieman and Charlotte Rieman McIntosh, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000).”
“Item: I give and bequeath unto the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, in trust for the use of my son Peidc-e Lowe Rieman, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) to be held by the said trustee for and during the term of his natural life and subject to the same limitations *158 hereinafter expressed' of that part of the rest and residue of my estate which I have given unto the said trustee for the use .and benefit of my said son, Perlee Lowe Rieman.”

By the third item the deceased gives to Mary Ann Donovan, nurse of her deceased daughter, provided she was living at the death of the deceased, the sum of $250. By the fourth item she gives to, each of certain servants $100, and to certain other servants each the sum of $25, and by the fifth item she gives to her two daughters all her wearing apparel, jewelry, laces, toilet silver, contents of her wardrobe, writing desks and store rooms. The sixth item is as follows:

“Item: I give, devise and bequeath all of the rest and residue of my- estate hereinafter called my Trust estate’ unto the Safe Deposit and'. Trust Company of Baltimore, in special trust and confidence, with the powers and to and for the uses and purposes following, that is to say: With full power and authority to invest all moneys which it'may receive in permanent or transient investments, ground rents, annuities, stocks, bond's, mortgages or other good and safe income-producing securities, as may to it seem most advantageous to those interested in the rest and residue of my estate, and my said trustee is further authorized and empowered at all times during the continuance of said trust, for the purpose of re-investment to sell any of the securities or investments so made or to change any investments left by me or which may be procured by it and to re-invest the proceeds of any sale or sales upon the trusts herein declared, and in turn to sell or change any of the investments thus made by it, submitting, however, in the administration of this trust all of its acts so to be done with reference to the management of the trust estate to some Court of competent jurisdiction for its approval. And my trustee is further directed to pay unto each of my four children : Mary Isabel Thom, Carlton Alexander Rieman, Charles E. Rieman and Charlotte Rieman McIntosh, in quarterly installments, one-fifth (1/5) part of the net income of the rest and residue of my estate, such payments to be continued to be made to each of my said four children for and *159

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Bluebook (online)
83 A. 45, 117 Md. 154, 1912 Md. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safe-deposit-trust-co-of-baltimore-v-thom-md-1912.