Shriver v. State ex rel. Reister

4 A. 679, 65 Md. 278, 1886 Md. LEXIS 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 30, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 4 A. 679 (Shriver v. State ex rel. Reister) 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
Shriver v. State ex rel. Reister, 4 A. 679, 65 Md. 278, 1886 Md. LEXIS 28 (Md. 1886).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case the suit is upon an administration bond. The récord is meagre and in some respects defective, but [281]*281we gather from it the following facts which appear to be undisputed :■ — ■

Margaret Reister, of Baltimore County, died in 1877, intestate, and letters of administration upon her personal estate were granted to William L. Shriver and Charles E. Lanver, who gave bond with Charlotte Dwyer and Samuel A. Lanver as sureties thereon. The intestate was unmarried, and left neither children nor descendants, nor father nor mother surviving her, and the distributees of her estate were, therefore, her surviving brothers and sisters and the children or descendants of deceased brothers and .sisters. Code, Art. 93, sec. 128. In her life-time the intestate had four sisters and two brothers, Jesse and James. Two of her sisters died when she was living, and left no children or descendants, while the other two sisters survived her, and to these two surviving sisters the administrators distributed the personal estate as sole distributees thereof.

The plaintiff in this action is Jesse C. Reister, who claims to be a legitimate son of Jesse Reister, one of the brothers of the intestate, and therefore her nephew. The proof adduced in support of this relationship is to the effect, that the two brothers, Jesse and James, left their home in Baltimore County, between the years 1833 and 1837, and removed to one of the Western States; that Jesse was married in Cincinnati in January, 1839, lived with his wife for about ten years until his death, and had several children, all of whom .died without issue except the plaintiff; that the said Jesse died in July, 1849, of cholera, and that the plaintiff was born in February, 1850, and was therefore a posthumous child; that though there had been some correspondence after he left this State and after his marriage, between the said Jesse and his wife, and one of his sisters in Maryland, yet shortly after, or about the time of his death, such correspondence ceased, and there was no intercourse of any sort between the families until [282]*282the appearance of the plaintiff to claim a share of this estate of his deceased aunt. As to the other brother, J ames, all that the proof shows is that he visited his brother, Jesse, in Cincinnati, about the time of the latter’s marriage in January, 1839.

The suit was instituted in November, 1884, less than twelve years after the date of the bond. The plea of limitations could not, therefore, be interposed, and upon the assumption that the plaintiff is the legitimate son of a deceased brother of the intestate, or that a jury would so find from the evidence above stated, we are clearly of opinion he can maintain the suit and recover, unless one of the two defences relied on by the administrators as a bar to the action is valid, and these we must now consider.

1st. The administrators contend they are protected by the distribution made in the Orphans’ Court. The only proof on this subject, apart from the distribution account itself, is to the effect that the acting administrator sought and followed the instructions of the Orphans’ Court, acted under its orders, and did all he thought he could or knew how to do, to distribute the estate properly; that he married a connection of the family, but knew nothing of James or Jesse Reister, except that he heard they had died in the west, and that he never heard of the plaintiff until he appeared in Reisterstown in August, 1884. But there'is nothing to show that the distribution was made either under sec. 138 or 139, or 143 of Art ’. 93 of the Code. The administrators do not appear to have proceeded under either of these provisions, and the law is thoroughly well settled, that unless one of these sections is followed, no ex ■parte distribution in the Orphans’ Court will afford protection to the administration against the claim of a party excluded therefrom. Conner vs. Ogle, 4 Md. Ch. Dec., 450; Hanson vs. Worthington, et al., 12 Md., 441; Scott vs. Fox, 14 Md., 396 ; Donaldson’s Ex’rs vs. Raborg, Adm’x, 28 Md., 56; Wilson vs. McCarty, 55 [283]*283Md., 283. The last of these sections is the one immediately applicable to this case, and it declares that any administrator shall be entitled to appoint a meeting of persons entitled to distributive shares or legacies, or a residue, on some day by the Court approved, and payment or distribution may be there made under the Court’s direction and control.” In reference to this provision the Court in Conner vs. Ogle say, “in most cases an administrator would be safe in acting under that direction and control; but ho mu'st show that the meeting was duly appointed, notification of some kind given to the parties interested, and the case presented to and acted upon by the Court.” Nothing of the kind appears to have been done in the present case, and the distribution relied on is clearly no. bar to the plaintiff’s claim.

2nd. The next defence is founded upon section 134, which, while it allows posthumous children of an intestate to take in the same manner as if they had been born before the decease of the intestate, declares “.that no other posthumous relation shall be considered as entitled to distribution in his or her own right.” The contention is that as the plaintiff is a posthumous child, because born after the death of his father, he is therefore a “posthumous relation ” to his aunt within the meaning of this section, though he was in fact born more than twenty-five years before her death. But we do not so construe this section. What the section means is simply this, that children of an intestate born after his death shall take in the same manner as if born before his death, but no other relation born after his death shall be entitled to take as distributee in his own right. The same idea is more clearly and accurately expressed in the corresponding provision in the Inheritance Law (Code, Art. 41, sec. 25), which declares, that “‘no right in the inheritance shall accrue to or vest in any person other than children of the intestate, and their descendants, unless such person is in being, and capable [284]*284in law to take as beir at the time of the intestate’s death, but any child or descendant of the intestate, born after •death of the intestate, shall have the same right of inheritance as if born before the death of the intestate.” We take it, therefore, to be very clear that the plaintiff, who was in esse long before his aunt’s death, is entitled to a distributive share of her estate-, whether he was born before ■or after his father’s death, provided the father himself died before the intestate, as the proof shows was the case.

It follows. from what we have thus said, that the Court below was right in its rulings upon all the defendant’s prayers except the third, and also in granting the plaintiff’s first and fourth prayers. It has been objected to the plaintiff’s first prayer, that it assumes the fact that the intestate died leaving no father. It certainly does assume this fact, but the exception taken to it in the Court below is not sufficient to raise that question in this Court. A mere general exception that a prayer “ assumes certain facts,” without pointing out what the facts so assumed are, ■does not gratify the fourth Rule Respecting Appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
4 A. 679, 65 Md. 278, 1886 Md. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shriver-v-state-ex-rel-reister-md-1886.