Shreve v. Shreve

43 Md. 382, 1875 Md. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 21, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 43 Md. 382 (Shreve v. Shreve) 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
Shreve v. Shreve, 43 Md. 382, 1875 Md. LEXIS 121 (Md. 1875).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

..The record in this case shows that Mrs. Mary E. Shreve died in 1855, leaving a will duly executed to pass real estate, which contains this clause:

“I give, devise, and bequeath all my lands, tenements and hereditaments, lying in the States of Maryland or Virginia, or either of them, to my children, namely: Daniel T. Shreve, Benjamin F Shreve, Charles W. Shreve, Thomas J. Shreve, Mary E. Shreve, Ann Olivia 'Shreve and Arthur B. Shreve, for and during their natural lives, to be equally divided between them, and on the death of said children, or either of them, I give, devise and bequeath the share or portion of said child to his or her issue lawfully begotten, and their heirs or assigns forever, [391]*391and if any of said children shall die without issue lawfully begotten, I give, devise and bequeath his or her "portion to the surviving child or children and their issue, aud to the heirs of said issue forever

These seven children survived the testatrix and were her sole lieirs-at-law. One of them, Mary E. Shreve, subsequently died intestate and without issue. The Maryland lauds of the testatrix consisting of about eight hundred and twenty acres, lie in Montgomery and Frederick Counties, and in 1866 a hill was filed on the equity side of the Circuit Court for the former county, by four of the surviving children against the oilier two, setting out the above clause of the will, and praying for a partition of the estate, and if that could not ho effected, then that the same he sold and the proceeds distributed to the parties according to their respective interests. XJnder this hill Commissioners were appointed, who divided the lands into three parts, and valued the same, the total valuation amounting to over $30,000. Two of the sons, Charles and Thomas, then elected to take these parts at this valuation, hut the latter abandoned his election, and the former on petition and order of the Court, was substituted in his place, and in March, 1867, decrees or orders were passed ratifying the Commissioners’ return, directing bonds to he given for the shares due the other children, and authorizing the Commissioners, on payment of these liens, to convey the whole estate to Charles W. Shreve. The latter tiren took, and has since remained in possession of the property, and in June, 1874, he aud his wife filed the hill in the present case in the Circuit Court for Frederick County. '

This hill sets out the will, the proceedings in the partition case, and avers that the complainant has paid the whole valuation of the Commissioners except $10,120, to two of the children which he has secured by mortgage, that the Commissioners have executed to him a deed for the property, and all the children of the testatrix now [392]*392living have also executed deeds to him therefor; that all the real estate in Virginia, valued at about $19,000, was • taken by Daniel, another son, under a similar understanding and construction of the will; that of the surviving children, Thomas has died leaving a widow' and two children, that Daniel, Ann Olivia, and the complainant Charles have each married and have children now living, and that Benjamin and Arthur have no children and have never married. The hill then charges that the children of the testatrix took under her will and the law of this State a fee in the property thus devised, and that the complainant has by this will, the proceedings in the partition case, and the deeds from his brothers and sisters, become the absolute owner in fee of the whole estate, but that doubts have arisen as to his title, and it is urged and claimed that the children of the testatrix took only life estates, and that the fee is vested in her grandchildren; that by reason of this doubt and cloud upon his title he is unable to sell, lease, or make any satisfactory disposition of the estate or any part of it, and he therefore prays the Court to quiet his title and remove this cloud upon it, or if he has but a life estate then that the propertjr be leased or sold, and the proceeds invested for his use.during the continuance of his interest, and then to the grandchildren, and for general relief.

The surviving children and all the grandchildren of the testatrix in esse (the latter to the number of twenty and all infants) are parties to this bill. The adult defendants by their answer admit the averments of the bill, and submit to such decree as the Court may deem proper. The infants answered by guardian that they do not admit any of the matters charged in the bill, and submit their rights to the protection of the Court. ■ Certain testimony was then taken under a commission, which need not be particularly stated, and the case submitted for a decree. The Circuit Court decided the children took but life estates, but being [393]*393of opinion a case was not made out authorizing a decree for a sale or lease of the lands, dismissed the bill, and the complainants have appealed.

We have therefore to decide what interest the complainant, Charles W. Shreeve, has acquired in this real estate ; and this depends upon the question whether the seven children of the testatrix took under her will, estates for life or in fee. But it is said that in construing this will, we are not to be confined to the instrument itself, but may resort for aid to the extrinsic testimony taken under the commission. That testimony consists of parol declarations by the testatrix after she had made the will as to its effect, .and her intentions in executing it, and like proof as to what interpretation had been placed upon it by the devisees, the Court in the partition case, and the Commissioners who divided the estate. The position is that as this testimony was not excepted to in the Court below, it may be resorted to by this Court in ascertaining the rights of the parties, and must be allowed its full force, and for this the case of Gibbs vs. Gale, 7 Md., 76, is cited. All this testimony was clearly inadmissible to affect the construction of the will or the rights of the infant defendants, and the Court below in fact refused to consider it for that purpose. The adult defendants having parted with all their rights in the property, had no interest in resisting the complainant’s claims, and the infants whose interests alone were antagonistic to those of the complainant do not appear to have been represented by counsel, either at the taking of the testimony, or at the hearing of the case, when exceptions to it ought to have been filed on their behalf. Under these circumstances, it would be an unreasonable extension of the doctrine in Gibbs vs. Gale, to apply it to this case, and we must therefore construe this will by the light afforded by the paper itself.

And in doing this, it is necessary to notice at the outset, two clauses of that instrument, other than the one [394]*394above cited. In one of these the testatrix devises the share she had previously given to her daughter Mary, to a trustee, in trust, for the sole and separate use of the said 'Mary during her natural life, free, clear and discharged from all liability and control of any husband she may marry, and after her death, to the issue of the said Mary lawfully begotten, and their heirs forever, and in case the said Mary shall die without issue, then to her surviving brothers and sisters, and their issue, to be equally divided between them and their heirs forever. The estate thus limited to the daughter, is' an equitable, whilst that to the issue is a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Md. 382, 1875 Md. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shreve-v-shreve-md-1875.