Trupp v. Wolff

335 A.2d 171, 24 Md. App. 588, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 596
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 19, 1975
Docket466, September Term, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 335 A.2d 171 (Trupp v. Wolff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trupp v. Wolff, 335 A.2d 171, 24 Md. App. 588, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 596 (Md. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinions

Lowe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. Menchine, J., dissents and filed a dissenting opinion at page 621 infra.

On October 21, 1968 Susan C. Wolff, the appellee, sought declaratory relief in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. Mrs. Wolff, the only child of Florence Hendler Trupp, was born during Mrs. Trupp’s first marriage. After the loss of [591]*591her first husband, Mrs. Trupp married Bernard L. Trupp, an advertising executive for an oil company, whose death on August 1,1968 was the genesis of this action.

By deed of gift dated April 19, 1965 Mrs. Trupp gave to Mr. Trupp a somewhat diversified stock portfolio valued at three hundred twenty-four thousand dollars. The largest portion by far was stock of The Borden Company which she had inherited from her father, L. Manuel Hendler, who was previously the source of Mrs. Trupp’s sustenance. The transfer to Bernard Trupp was conducted under the auspices of an attorney, Sidney Weiman.

Upon Mr. Trupp’s death three years later, Mrs. Trupp realized that her husband had divided the stock among his six brothers using a “do it yourself” trust form from a book titled How to Avoid Probate.1 She immediately advised her daughter that the gift to Mr. Trupp had not been outright, but rather was conditional. Although Mr. Trupp had the income and absolute control of the stock during his lifetime, he had it solely upon the condition, according to Mrs. Trupp, that he bequeath the corpus to Mrs. Trupp’s daughter, Susan Wolff. When it became apparent that he had not done so, Mrs. Wolff promptly brought suit for declaratory and other relief in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, naming as defendants Bernard Trupp’s estate and his six brothers.

Partially as a result of preliminary, but crucial, pleading skirmishes the trial was not commenced until January 18, 1971. Nearly a month was consumed with the taking of testimony. For reasons not apparent from the record the opinion was not rendered until March 1st nor the decree filed until March 15th of 1974, over three years after the taking of testimony was concluded.2 The essence of this long-awaited opinion was the imposition of a constructive trust upon the securities in favor of Susan Wolff.

Rather than synopsize over two thousand pages of testimony and describe in excess of one hundred exhibits, we [592]*592will treat the testimony pertinent to each issue raised by appellants as we respond to these issues. We were mildly surprised at argument to hear appellants concede that all of these questions were evidentiary in nature. We were not so surprised to find that the simplicity of that shorthand characterization contrasted markedly with the issues’ analytic complexity.

Necessary Parties

The fulcrum upon which all other issues are balanced is whether Florence Trupp was a necessary party. Even that seemingly simple question was raised in an unusual manner. Rather than filing a plea in abatement or demurrer, appellants chose to petition the court to order that Florence Trupp be made a party plaintiff under Md. Rule 203 d alleging that she was the real party in interest. The strategy of this was apparent since Mrs. Trupp and the attorney Sidney Weiman were the only two living persons cognizant of the circumstances surrounding the transfer of the stock to Bernard Trupp. Thus if Florence Trupp were made a party plaintiff, the key to Susan Wolff’s relief would be lost under the Dead Man’s Statute, Md. Code, Art. 35, § 3, the substance of which is now Courts Art., § 9-116. That statute precludes testimony of a party regarding any transaction with or statement by a decedent “unless called to testify by the opposite party.”

The chancellor ordered Florence Trupp to show cause why she should not be made a party plaintiff pursuant to the defendants’ petition. Her response included the following disclaimer:

“Further answering the motion, she says that she disclaims any interest in the controversy between plaintiff, Susan C. Wolff, and the defendants; that any right growing out of the contract referred to in the Bill of Complaint is a right of Susan C. Wolff; that Florence H. Trupp has no intention to Dring and formally renounces any right to bring another action against the defendants for substantially [593]*593identical relief on the ground of breach of any agreement with the deceased; that having no interest in the outcome of this litigation, it would be burdensome and unfair to require her to be a party and to engage counsel.”

Choosing to err, if at all, on the side of caution the chancellor declined to join Mrs. Trupp as a party plaintiff but elected to join her as a defendant, sua sponte.3 Appellants contend that they were prejudiced by the chancellor’s denial of their petition to make Mrs. Trupp a plaintiff, and even were that not so, his error in making her a defendant was prejudicial.

Appellants petitioned the trial court on the basis of Md. Rule 203 d which reads:

“Where it appears that the action has not originally been filed in the name of the real party in interest under section a, the court may, upon petition of a defendant, order the real party in interest to be made a party plaintiff.”

In support of their argument, they allude to the mandatory language of 203 a.

“An action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest except as provided in section b.”

Significantly, however, § b permits but does not require a person who contracts for the benefit of another to bring an [594]*594action in his own name.4 Decisional law now makes it equally clear that the beneficiary of a third party contract may likewise sue on his own behalf. Spates v. Spates, 267 Md. 72, 77.5 In short, § b and our case law allow either or both the offeror and/or beneficiary to bring suit on the contract.

[595]*595Appellants do not dispute Susan Wolffs status as a donee beneficiary and hence real party in interest to the suit. Thus in our view, even though Mrs. Trupp could properly have brought suit in her own name, her ability to do so made Susan Wolff no less appropriate as the plaintiff. On the face of the statute, Md. Rule 203 d, supra, it is clear that the rule is operative only

“Where it appears that the action has not originally been filed in the name of the real party in interest. . . .”

Since appellants do not maintain that Susan Wolff was an inappropriate party to file suit, but only that Mrs. Trupp could also have initiated it, they have not met the condition precedent to the rule. The suit was indeed “originally . . . filed in the name of the real party in interest . . .,” though obviously not the litigant appellants would have preferred.6

We note that our rule 203 d stands in sharp contrast to R. 19A, F.R.C.P. providing the federal courts with broad power in joining parties, voluntary and involuntary. Inasmuch as the Maryland rules are patterned after the federal rules, 1 Poe’s Pleading and Practice, § 295, and the Court of Appeals did not adopt a provision comparable to 19A, we find its absence conspicuous. We must conclude, simply, that R. 203 d means what it says.

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Bluebook (online)
335 A.2d 171, 24 Md. App. 588, 1975 Md. App. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trupp-v-wolff-mdctspecapp-1975.