Thomas v. Marriott

140 A. 91, 154 Md. 107, 1928 Md. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1928
Docket[Nos. 30, 31, October Term, 1927.]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 A. 91 (Thomas v. Marriott) 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
Thomas v. Marriott, 140 A. 91, 154 Md. 107, 1928 Md. LEXIS 5 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A single question of law is presented in these cases: How are degrees of consanquinity to be computed to determine who are “collateral relations in equal degree” to take the estate of a deceased owner under section 135 of article 93 of the Code? The parties were all collaterally related to a decedent whose property is to be distributed under this statutory provision, and are all descended in three degrees from different common ancestors of the decedent, but the decedent on his side was not descended in equal degrees from all these common ancestors; so that, if comparative degrees of collateral relationship are to be ascertained by merely counting down from the common ancestors (the canon or common law method), all the parties stand equally in the third degree to the decedent and will divide the property equally, while if the degrees are to be ascertained by the civil law method, of beginning the count with the decedent, and counting up to the common ancestors and down to the claimants, those on *109 the side of that common ancestor nearer to the decedent will themselves be nearer in degree to the decedent, and will take all the property. The court below came to the conclusion that the latter method of computation, the civil law method, was the one intended by the statute in Maryland, and ordered the property distributed accordingly. The question has never before been directly presented for decision in this court; it has now been exhaustively investigated and argued in this case by counsel on both sides.

The deceased owner, Henry T. Keyser, late of New York City, died in 1924, leaving a will dated in 1904, by which he had given, and bequeathed all the residue of his property to his sister, Mrs.'Mary P. Dexter, who had died in 1915 without leaving a husband or descendants surviving her, and leaving as her heirs only those who are the heirs of herself and her brother alike. The property included real estate in Baltimore City, and Telfair W. Marriott, the appellee, "brought a bill in the court of equity praying a sale under'the jurisdiction of the court and a distribution of the proceeds to those entitled as heirs. As real property now, under the Act of 1916, ch. 325, descends to those relatives who take personal property of an intestate in distribution under article 93 of the Code, those entitled are to be ascertained by reference to that article. The decedent left no children or descendants, parents, brothers or sisters, or children or descendants of brothers or sisters, and the right to take in that situation is covered by the provision in section 135 of the article, that then all “collateral relations in equal degree shall take.” All the relatives named in the proceedings are great grandchildren of common ancestors of Henry T. Keyser, but Telfair W. Marriott traces his descent from a paternal grandfather of the decedent, while all the others trace from his maternal great-grandfather, and the court below concluded that Marriott was related to the decedent in the fifth degree of consanguinity within the meaning of the statute, and the remaining parties in the sixth; these latter contend on their appeals that under the proper method of computation they *110 and Marriott stand equally in the third degree, and should share equally.

Section 135 contains in itself no reference to a method of computation, and if it stood alone would be construed by the ordinary, established, meaning of the words at the time of original enactment, if there was such, or by customary methods of computing the degrees, but section 140, on the passing of property of a deceased owner to the State for the schools in case there are none of the various classes of relatives previously enumerated, provides:

“If there be no widow or relations of the intestate within the fifth degree, which shall be reckoned by counting down from the common ancestor to the more remote, the whole surplus shall belong to the State, and shall be paid to the board of county school commissioners of the county wherein letters of administration shall be granted upon the estate of the deceased for the use of the public schools of said county.”

And the question in the case is; finally, one of the effect, if any, of these words, inserted in section 140, “which shall be reckoned by counting down from the coinmon ancestor to the more remote,” upon the method of determining what collaterals are in equal degree under section 135.

The method of reckoning by counting down from a common ancestor was a familiar one, which might conceivably have been adopted for all calculations of degrees, having been used at common law in determining rights of inheritance in land (2 Blackstone, Comm. 206); and it is open to question whether, if a selection of method was to be made, this or the other would be deliberately adopted for one section of the statute only, and not for all calculations. Both sections, in their present form at least, were originally enacted at the same time, subchapter 11, sections 11 and 15, of the Acts of 1798, ch. 101, which was a comprehensive collection and codification of all the Maryland law on the subjects of probate and administration. On the other hand, it seems likely that, if the particular method was to be specified for com- *111 pitting degrees, of relationship among collaterals under the earlier section, it would have been so stated in that section, or been more clearly made to apply to computations of degrees under any section. Moreover, the particular method is not provided in section 140 for precisely the same purpose; that section is clearly intended to provide for passing the property to the State upon failure of any relations in the various classes successively enumerated in previous sections, — construed otherwise, section 140 would pass the property to the State merely upon failure of a widow and collaterals.

The provision is intended merely to set a limit to the claims of relationship to be recognized before passing the property to the State, and for the purposes of the provision itself should be construed as if worded: If there be no widow or relations of the intestate within the fifth degree (as to collaterals) beyond a common ancestor, the property shall pass to the State for the schools. The apparent origin of the provision indicates this. The draftsman of the Act of 1798 apparently had before him, when he drafted this particular provision, acts passed in 1719 (chapter 14) and 1729 (chapter 24) to save, from volunteering administrators who were pocketing them for themselves without just claim, the residues of estates of persons dying without known relatives or representatives legally entitled. These residues, instead of being held by the administrators, were thenceforth to be passed to the public treasuries of the counties for schools (Act 1719), or directly to the visitors of the schools'(Act 1729). In both acts there was a proviso (sections 3 and 18 in the respective acts) : “That in case such administrator be of kin to the deceased within the fifth degree of either consanguinity or affinity, that then such administrator shall have as good a right to such residue as if he or they were brothers’ or sisters’ children to the deceased, and such balance shall be distributed accordingly.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A. 91, 154 Md. 107, 1928 Md. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-marriott-md-1928.