State ex rel. Henderson v. Henderson

54 Md. 332, 1880 Md. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 54 Md. 332 (State ex rel. Henderson v. Henderson) 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
State ex rel. Henderson v. Henderson, 54 Md. 332, 1880 Md. LEXIS 96 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted by the appellant’s testatrix on the fifteenth day of July, eighteen hundred and seventy-eight, upon the bond of John S. Henderson, her father and guardian, dated the twentieth day of September, eighteen hundred and sixty-five. Henderson, the principal, and John W. Egnor, one of the securities, are before the Court; the other security was returned non est.

The narr. sets out that John S. Henderson was, by the Orphans’ Court of Cecil County, appointed guardian to Maria L. Henderson (appellant’s testatrix) and gave bond and security for the faithful performance of his duties as such guardian, and that John W. Egnor and one Alexander Hill were sureties on his bond. It then sets out the bond in substance, and alleges that after such appointment and the execution of his bond as guardian, he received into his hands large sums of money belonging to his ward, Maria L. Henderson, and that on the thirteenth day of November, 1867, John S. Henderson passed an account in the Orphans’ Court of Cecil County, of his receipts and disbursements on behalf of his ward, whereby after deducting all allowances for debts and commissions, it appeared that there was due the ward from her guardian the sum of seventeen hundred and thirty-eight dollars and forty-eight cents; that this account was passed by the Court; but that although often demanded the amount [341]*341thus found due had never been paid. The defendants pleaded nine pleas. The first two were pleas of general performance; the third and fourth pleas of payment; the fifth was a plea of release; the sixth, accord and satisfaction, and the seventh, eighth and ninth, pleas of the Statute of Limitations. General replication was entered to all hut fhe fifth plea. So that four special replications were interposed, and special replications were also filed to the seventh, eighth and ninth pleas. To the second replication to the fifth plea, defendant demurred, and issue was joined on the rest. The view which a majority of the Court take of the questions arising upon the Statute of Limitations, makes it unnecessary to consider and decide the question raised by the demurrer. It also relieves us of passing upon the questions of evidence which are presented in the bills of exception.

The first question then necessary for us to examine arises on the third prayer of the plaintiff which was rejected by the Court. That prayer invoked the principle that when a party has been kept in ignorance of his rights by the fraud of the defendant, the Statute of Limitations shall not be permitted to run until such time as with reasonable diligence the plaintiff might have discovered the fraud.

Reliance is placed on the Act of 1868, chapter 357. This •act was the subject of construction by this Court in Wear vs. Skinner, 46 Md., 257, and in that case it was decided that this Act “ was passed for the purpose of enabling parties to set up the fraud of the defendant in a Court of law as well as in a Court of equity,” for the purpose of removing the bar of the Statute.

There was no error in the Court in rejecting the prayer, for it excluded from the consideration of the jury one most material element necessary to the protection which the Statute intended to secure, namely, that by ordinary ■diligence the fraud could not have been discovered sooner. [342]*342Assuming that the prayer was free from this objection, we still think the Court right in rejecting it for want of sufficient proof to support it. The Court in Wear vs. Skinner, decides that where a fraud has been committed, no other distinct fraudulent act is necessary, but that concealment of the fraud is “in itself a fraud.” But the Court contemplated that there must be at some time conduct amounting to a fraud, the concealment of which would be a fraud, and relieve the party from the bar of the Statute. So long as that ignorance existed, or by reasonable, or, as the Statute says, “ ordinary” diligence, the fraud could.not be discovered. It is “the fraud” which the statute says is to be discovered. The concealment itself may be of such a character, by active means on the part of the defendant, as to be a fraud on the claimant; but the statute could not have intended that the bare omission on the part of a debtor to remind his creditor of his cause of action against him should be regarded as fraudulently intended to keep him in ignorance of his claim. If it were shown that the ward did not know her father was her guardian, and did not know that she had property in her guardian’s hands, that she was entirely ignorant on that subject till she was taken to the Register’s office for settlement, there would be some ground for holding that concealment under such circumstances was a fraud; but no such proof is here. This ward knew her father was her guardian, and that she had property. She had received money from him before the day of the settlement at the Register’s office on the 13th of November, 1861, and receipted for it to him. She so testifies herself. It was done, she says, at home, but the date of that transaction is not given. She was not therefore ignorant of her father being her debtor; and he had not concealed from her the fact of his indebtedness till the 13th of November, 1861, as the instruction left the jury to find might be the case. The question is, whether the ignorance of the plaintiff [343]*343was the result of fraudulent concealment on the part of the guardian, and we see nothing in the proof to warrant a jury in finding fraud in that regard. It follows, therefore, that the Court was right in rejecting the third prayer of the plaintiff, and in granting the second and third prayers of the defendants applying to the same subject.

The only remaining question is, whether the Circuit Court was right in granting the first prayer of the defendants ? That prayer presents the question, when the Statute of Limitation begun to run, and from what time it is to be computed in this case ? The defendants insist that the Statute begun to run from the moment the ward reached eighteen years of age, when, by law, she was emancipated from her guardian. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that Limitations did not begin to run until the guardian had passed his account in the Orphans’ Court. It is urged that, by the law, it was his duty to pass such account, and consequently his bond was bound till that duty was performed.

By the Code the Statute begins to run from the breach of the condition of the bond. When did the breach in this case occur ? Sec. 192 of Art. 93 of the Code provides thus : On a ward’s arrival at age, or on the marriage of a female ward, the guardian shall exhibit a final account to the Orphans’ Court, and shall deliver up, agreeably to the Court’s order, to the said ward, or to the husband, as the case may require, all the property of such ward in his hands, including bonds and other securities, and, on failure, his bond may be put in suit, and he shall he liable to attachment, and fine not exceeding three hundred dollars; and a female shall be of age at eighteen for the purposes of this section.”

This section is identically the same as the provision of the Act of 1198 on the subject, and commenting thereon in Green vs. Johnson, 3 Gill & Johns., Judge Dorsey says, [344]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnson v. Nadwodny
461 A.2d 67 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1983)
Durst v. Durst
169 A.2d 755 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1961)
Bankers' Etc. Assn. v. Bldg. Assn.
175 A. 214 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Insurance Co. of North America v. Parr
44 F.2d 573 (Fourth Circuit, 1930)
Parr v. Insurance Co. of North America
44 F.2d 567 (D. Maryland, 1929)
Southern Surety Co. v. Beal
1928 OK 691 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
New England Mutual Life Insurance v. Swain
60 A. 469 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1905)
State Ex Rel. Scaggs v. Reilly
43 A. 58 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1899)
Brandes v. Carpenter
71 N.W. 402 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1897)
Baldwin v. County Commissioners
36 A. 764 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1897)
McKim v. Glover
37 N.E. 443 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Md. 332, 1880 Md. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-henderson-v-henderson-md-1880.