Savings Bank v. Weeks

64 A. 295, 103 Md. 601, 1906 Md. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 16, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 A. 295 (Savings Bank v. Weeks) 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
Savings Bank v. Weeks, 64 A. 295, 103 Md. 601, 1906 Md. LEXIS 150 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

Burke,

J., delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Genera! Assembly of Maryland in the year 1896 passed an Act intended to repeal and re-enact section 230 of Art. 93 of the Code of 1888 relating to testamentary law, subtitle “Orphans’ Court.” The Act constitutes ch. 246 of the published laws of that session, and embraces sec. 234 of the Code of 1904. The provisions of the Act relating to the administration of the estates of persons supposed to be dead, because of absence from the State for a certain number of years, are the ones presented for consideration in this case. It is provided that:. “The Court shall have full power to take probate of wills, grant letters testamentary and of administration, direct the conduct and settling of accounts of executors and administrators, superintend the distribution of estates of intestates, secure the rights of orphans and legatees, and to administer justice in all matters relative to the affairs of deceased persons; and also persons who by their uninterrupted absence, unheard of for above seven years, are supposed to be dead; provided, that when any will or codicil shall be presented for probate, or application shall be made for letters testamentary, or administration upon the estate of a person so absent and unheard of for above seven years, the person presenting such will or codicil, or making application-for letters as aforesaid, shall file a written petition, under oath, setting forth the time when, and place where such absentee was last heard of by his family or friends, that diligent inquiry has been made among the family, relatives and friends of such absentee; and that advertisement and inquiry by letters or other *603 wise has been made, at the most likely place of his last residence, and that no information, by any of these means, has been obtained of such absentee since the date set forth in the petition, which must be above seven years prior to the date of the petition, and that the applicant verily believes such absentee to be dead, whereupon the Court shall order notice, by publication, to be given in one or more newspapers, stating that a will or codicil purporting to be the will or codicil of such absentee, had been presented for probate, or that application had been made for letters testamentary or of administration upon- the estate of such absentee, as the case may be, and warning such absentee to appear on or before the day fixed in such order, and show cause why the will or codicil should not'be probated, and letters testamentary granted thereon, or letters of administration granted, if there be no will; and such notice shall be published as the Court may direct, not less however than once a week for four successive weeks, fifteen days before the day fixed by such order, for the appearance of the absentee; and that if no appearance be made, the Court may, if it see fit, summon before it, and examine under oath, any relations or friends of such absentee, respecting his absence, and if no information or evidence shall be obtained indicating the probable existence of such absentee, the Court may judicially determine such absentee may be dead, and may proceed to probate the will or codicil in the usual manner, and to grant letters testamentary thereon, or to grant letters of administration, as the case may be, as upon the estate of a deceased person; and such probate and such letters, either testamentary or administration, when granted, shall have the same force and effect as if granted upon the estate of a person proven by direct testimony to be dead. ” A radical change upon the subject of testamentary law was attempted to be made by this Act, as will appear by a comparison of its provisions with sec. 230 of Art. 93 of the Code of 1888, which it purported to repeal.

It appears that Margaretta Behrens, as evidenced by her pass book, 341,077, had on deposit in the Savings Bank of *604 Baltimore the sum of $i,324.64, representing deposits made by her from time to time in said bank and the accrued interest thereon. On December 8th, 1905, Henry W. Weeks filed a petition in-the Orphans’ Court for Baltimore City, asking that letters of administration be granted upon the estate of the said Margaretta Behrens under the Act above quoted.. The petition purported to be filed under and in conformity to its provisions. The bank, as custodian of the fund, intervened in the proceedings in the Orphans’ Court, denied the power of the Court to grant letters of administration upon the estate of Mrs. Behrens, and prayed that the order nisi issued upon the petition of Weeks be rescinded. It was agreed that the intervening petition filed by the bank should be taken as and have the same force and effect as if the same had been filed as an answer to the petition of Henry W. Weeks.

The petition and answer of the bank were dismissed, and without- a hearing, or the production of any evidence to support the allegations of the petition, the Orphans’ Court adjudged “that Margaretta Behrens or Margtta Behrens is hereby judicially determined to' be dead, and that letters of administration on the personal estate of Margaretta Behrens or Margtta Behrens be and are hereby granted to Henry W. Weeks, the said petitioner, and that he give bond in the penalty of two thousand dollars with the United States Fidelity and Guarantee Company as security.” From this order the savings bank appealed.

By section 808 of the Act of 1898, ch, 123, it is provided that the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City “Shall order and direct the funds arising from intestates estates, that may be administered upon in said Court, and which remain undistributed for want of legal representatives of the intestates to claim the same, to be paid to the Board of School Commissioners.” Henry W. Weeks, the petitioner, and to whom letters were granted, is neither a relative, nor creditor of Margaretta Behrens, and the obvious and admitted purpose of the proceeding is to turn her estate over to the School -Board of Baltimore City.

*605 The order of the Orphans’ Court is objected to upon two grounds,

First. Because the petition of Henry W. Weeks does not comply with the requirements of the Act .of 1896, ch. 246, and

Secondly. Because the Act is unconstitutional and void ■ in that it contravenes both the 23rd Article of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

We are of opinion that both objections are well taken, but as the proceeding can in no event be sustained, the defects in the petition will not be discussed. The decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States' have established, as true the following propositions:

First. That under the general authority conferred by statute upon the Orphans’ Courts of the various States to grant administration upon and to settle the estates of deceased persons, those Courts are not authorized to decide conclusively against a living person that he is dead.

Secondly. That all proceedings in such Courts, in the granting of administration under such general power, depend upon the fact of death, and are null and void if the person be in' fact alive, whether such administration be granted upon a misapprehension of the fact of death, or upon the presumption of death arising from absence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 295, 103 Md. 601, 1906 Md. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savings-bank-v-weeks-md-1906.