Smith v. Warrenfeltz

81 A. 275, 116 Md. 116, 1911 Md. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 81 A. 275 (Smith v. Warrenfeltz) 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
Smith v. Warrenfeltz, 81 A. 275, 116 Md. 116, 1911 Md. LEXIS 48 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

*117 Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mary Ellen Sprecher, of Hagerstown, Washington county, Maryland, died in December, 1910, and by her last will and testament executed in October, 1902, and admitted to probate by the Orphans’ Court of Washington County January 0th, 1911, after making certain bequests not necessary to mention here, disposed of the residue of her estate as follows : She empowered and directed her executor or executors named in said will, to sell and convey all said rest "and residue, and out of the proceeds thereof she bequeathed in trust to such trustee as a Court of competent jurisdiction should appoint, the sum of two thousand dollars to be safely invested and reinvested, and the interest to be paid semi-annually by said trustee to her husband, Quinby A. Sprecher, during his natural life, this provision for him, being declared by said will to be “in lieu of his legal share in said estate,” and she directed that upon his death the said principal sum of two thousand dollars should be divided, one-half thereof to her niece, Laura E. Warrenfeltz, and one-half in equal shares between Harry Ellsworth Smith, Ella Gertrude Smith, Mary Louise Smith and Ira ITurless Smith, children of Calvin R. Smith, deceased. All the remainder of her estate she gave and bequeathed in the same manner and proportions between the same persons to whom she gave the principal sum of $2,000 after the death of her husband; and she appointed James P. Perry as executor of said will, and if he should die or refuse to act she appointed Harvey Ellsworth Smith and Ellen Gertrude Smith to be executors of said will, with full power to execute all its provisions.

The record contains a copy of this will as the same was admitted to probate, but it does not appear from the record whether the said James P. Perry, first named as executor of said will, had died or declined to act, nor whether Harvey Ellsworth Smith, named as executor with Ellen Gertrude Smith, in event of the death or refusal to act of James P. Pc-rry, is also deceased or had refused to act; but there is attached to the copy of the will a certificate of the register *118 of wills that on January 3rd, 1911 “Ellen Gertrude Smith, surviving executrix óf Mary E. Sprecher,” made oath that said paper was the whole and true will of said deceased that had come to 'her hands and that she knew of none other.

- JSTor is there in the record 'any evidence of the grant of letters testamentary to the said Ellen Gertrude Smith, but the three judges of the Orphans’ Court certified under their hands that the will was admitted to probate January 6th, 1911.

On February 11th, 1911, Laura E. Warrenfeltz filed a petition in said' Court alleging that she was a legatee under said will, and filling with said petition a copy of an advertisement of sale of the real estate of the decedent signed by Ellen Gertrude Smith as executrix of Mary E. Sprecher, giving notice that under an order of the Orphans’ Court of Washington County, she would'on the 14th day of February, 1911, between one and three o’clock P. M. in front of the Court House in Hagerstown, offer at public sale a tract of land, containing 17 acres and 6 perches of land within, the corporate limits of Hagerstown; the location and improvements . of the same and the terms of sale being sufficiently described therein.

The advertisement contained the following clause :

“This property will be offered subject to the right of the husbánd of said, deceased to renounce his legacy under her will and to come in at any time within six months from the granting of letters of administration of the estate of the deceased and elect to take in lieu thereof his (the husband’s) estate for life in the property hereby offered for sale.”

The petition of the appellee alleged that the above mentiond clause was calculated to hinder and prevent a proper and advantageous sale of said property, and would' certainly prevent the same from bringing its true value and would thus work to the injury of the appellee and others interested in said estate, and further alleged that the surviving husband of the decedent had no life estate, nor other estate or interest in said property than that provided for him by said will, *119 and that he had no right to come in within six months or any other time from the grant of letters of administration upon said estate, and elect to take in lien of the estate or interest-provided in the will, an estate for life as stated in said advertisement or any other estaté or interest in the property so advertised. The petition prayed that an order be passed “directing and ordering the said executrix not to sell said real estate at the time and as so advertised, but to readvertise the same for sale at some future time, and in accordance with the proper description of the estate to he sold.”

On the same day, February 11th, 1911, the Court passed an order that said executrix “be and she is hereby ordered and required not to sell the real estate left by the said Mary E. Sprecher, deceased, and which said real estate said executrix has advertised for sale on February 14th, 1911, on said day and in pursuance of said advertisement; and the said executrix is hereby ordered, directed and required to readvertise said property for sale at some future time, in a proper form and manner and free from the interests of all parties interested in said estate; and it is further ordered that a copy of this order be served upon the said Ellen Gertrude Smith, executrix, on or before February 13th, 1911.

From this order the executrix appealed February 21st, 1911, and the appellee has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal: (1) Because the property was not offered for sale on February 14th, 1911, but was readvertised for sale as directed by its order of February 11th — on February 25th;, 1911, before the appeal was taken, and that for that reason any order that this Court might pass would he nugatory; (2) because if there is any substantial question that could he raised on this appeal the only person affected thereby is the surviving husband of the decedent who has not appealed; (3) because the transcript does not present to this Court, certain facts which were before the Court below when it passed the order appealed from.-

The record does not show that anything was before the Court when that order was passed except the will of the testa *120 trix, the petition of the appellee and a copy of the advertisement, but the motion to dismiss the appeal states that the Court had before it when the order was passed, the Land Records and Marriage Records in the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court for Washington County, and the records in the office of the Register of Wills of said county, which records showed the following facts:

(1) That the real estate advertised to he sold, and of which Mary E. Sprecher died seized was acquired by her in fee simple, before her marriage, by deed dated April 28th, 1874.

(2) That she was married to her husband, Quinby A. Sprecher, April 23rd, 1878.

(3) That she died without issue leaving’ a will disposing of this real estate.

There are two imperative reasons for the dismissal of this appeal.

First.

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Bluebook (online)
81 A. 275, 116 Md. 116, 1911 Md. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-warrenfeltz-md-1911.