Turk v. Grossman

17 A.2d 122, 179 Md. 229, 1941 Md. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 3, 1941
Docket[No. 72, October Term, 1940.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 A.2d 122 (Turk v. Grossman) 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
Turk v. Grossman, 17 A.2d 122, 179 Md. 229, 1941 Md. LEXIS 117 (Md. 1941).

Opinion

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The problem in this case has arisen on the distribution of a decedent’s estate. The appellant, trustee under the will of Heinrich Turk, and his widow, excepted to the allowance made to a former wife of a lump sum of $25,-500 with interest, to represent or replace an annuity which the decedent had agreed to pay that former wife during her life. The sum is greater than any estimate value of the annuity, and the claim to it is founded on an alleged compromise agreement, acquiescence and estoppel. The exceptions were dismissed, and the appeal has followed.

Many of the introductory facts have been recited in the opinion of a former case, Turk v. Grossman, 176 Md. 644, 6 A. 2nd , 639, and need not be repeated with the same fullness. The husband died in November, 1934, and his will, probated in Baltimore County, appointed his wife of that time, Eileen Turk, and a brother, Karl Turk, Sr. executors. By this former wife, now Mrs. Grossman, he had one child, now a Mrs. Roberts, and by the second wife, two minor children. All are living. On October 14th, 1925, prior to a divorce from the former wife, the husband had entered into a valid agreement to transfer to her stock of a corporation owned by him, and her residence, and to pay her the yearly sum of $1500 for life; and the annuity was paid until shortly before the death of decedent, when $325 was due and unpaid. The will ignored the child of the first marriage, and she filed a caveat to its probate on January 12th, 1935.

At the time of the death and for some years after-wards, the assets of the estate appeared far from suffi *233 cient to pay the annuity for any considerable time in the future, and there were other debts. At first a claim for continuance of the annual payments as parts of a preferred debt was filed in the Orphans’ Court. A discussion of the claim of a preference followed between Mr. Theodore R. McKeldin, representing the claimant, and Mr. Edward H. Burke, who, with Mr. Philip Sachs, represented the executors; and it is contended for Mrs. Grossman that in this discussion the alleged compromise was made, Mr. Burke, as it is supposed, having agreed to payment of the dividend on that sum to avoid delay from assertion of the preference. On May 27th, 1936, Mr. Burke wrote Mr. McKeldin asking whether his client had “decided as yet what she intends to do with respect to the proposed settlement of her claim.” The reply, if written, is not in the record. On December 8th, of the same year, Mr. Burke wrote Mr. McKeldin that he thought Mr. McKeldin realized that Mrs. Grossman was not a preferred creditor, and that Mr. Burke thought she could file her claim as a general creditor and share in the distribution, in such amount as the court might determine, at a meeting of creditors to be arranged. After that letter a difference of understanding seems to have arisen. Mr. McKeldin abandoned his claim for a preference, and, as he testified “a compromise claim for 825,500 was then filed.” Mr. Burke, on the other hand, testified that he explained to Mr. McKeldin orally that Mrs. Grossman could not be paid as a preferred creditor, and pointed out as her proper procedure that of commuting the annuity upon the basis of Mrs. Grossman’s life expectancy, to be ascertained from some insurance man and his mortality tables. Mrs. Grossman was then thought by her counsel .to be 61 years of age, and the expectancy of such a women was found to be 17 years, and the claim was made up by multiplying the annual sum of $1500 by 17, but without commutation. Thus the claim of $25,500 was arrived at, and was evidently the result of oversight in making the calculation. The dividend then available, 2.3363 per cent, was paid on that total, nevertheless, and *234 this fact is advanced as confirmation of the alleged compromise for the whole claim. Mr. Burke testified, however, that he called Mr. McKeldin’s attention to the failure to commute the sum, but discussed with Mrs. Turk and Mr. Sachs the wisdom of incurring the expense of a controversy over the difference in dividend, and decided that they should not do so, but should merely pay the claim and pass the point. Mrs. Grossman was later found to be not 61 years old, but 58.

In this testimony the court does not find proof that a compromise affecting the larger, remaining, claim was made. The figure was arrived at by calculating all that Mrs. Grossman was entitled to, not a compromise amount. The direct testimony of the attorneys, with its conflict, shows no compromise. Only the one small dividend was considered, and agreement by Mr. Burke on an enlarged capitalization of the annuity for the further purpose was unlikely, for there was no further purpose in mind. He knew that the amount was figured out by mistake, as his letter shows. He must be presumed, moreover, to have known that merely as attorney he had no authority to make a compromise. Abrams v. Eckenrode, 136 Md. 244, 245, 110 A. 468; Peckham v. German Fire Ins. Co., 91 Md. 515, 530, 46 A. 1066, 50 L. R. A. 828, 80 Am. St. Rep. 461; Maddux v. Bevan, 39 Md. 485, 493. And he must be presumed to have known that even a compromise by the executors required the approval of the court to render it effectual. Code, Art. 93, sec. 271. While this court has sanctioned approval after a good compromise had been made, Blum v. Fox, 173 Md. 527, 537, 197 A. 117, it has never placed the action entirely within the discretion of the personal representative, and thus dispensed with the statutory requirement. Even if Mr. Burke had not known of these limitations on authority, the existence of them would prevent an effectual compromise without approval by the court.

An authorization in the will to the executors to do all that the testator might do personally could not, as the court *235 interprets it, be taken to authorize their making any addition to a debt due by the estate. There are many acts which a testator might do personally, such as the complete release of a debt, which nobody would include within that authority, and we think the addition to the claim here is equally outside of it. The act of abstaining from contesting the dividend first claimed and allowed to Mrs. Grossman, even if it were not explained otherwise, as it is, would not support an inference of compromise, or ratification of a compromise of the whole claim, which at that time was assumed to have no hope of payment at all. Fledderman v. Fledderman, 112 Md. 226, 248, 76 A. 85; Miller v. Dorsey, 9 Md. 317; Pole v. Simmons, 49 Md. 14, 20. A claim once passed without contest may subsequently be resisted. Bogart v. Wills, 158 Md. 393, 406, 148 A. 585. And a newly arisen condition of solvency was one to be dealt with anew. Compare Bowers v. Hammond, 139 Mass. 360, 31 N. E. 729. And as for ratification of a compromise by the attorney, the court fails to find that there was one which could be ratified.

There was, indeed, no reason for accepting an enlarged claim. It was originally one on simple contract, in quality substantially the same as a chain of promissory notes, and without any right at all to a preference.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.2d 122, 179 Md. 229, 1941 Md. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turk-v-grossman-md-1941.