Veterans' Administration v. Hudson

179 A. 836, 169 Md. 141, 1935 Md. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 19, 1935
Docket[No. 26, April Term, 1935.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 179 A. 836 (Veterans' Administration v. Hudson) 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
Veterans' Administration v. Hudson, 179 A. 836, 169 Md. 141, 1935 Md. LEXIS 88 (Md. 1935).

Opinion

Shehan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Wicomico County in equity, overruling exceptions to the final ratification of a report and account of G. Willis Hudson, committee of the person and estate of McKnight T. Hudson, a disabled soldier, to whom compensation had been allowed and paid to said committee for his use. The Veterans’ Administration, formerly called United States Veterans’ Bureau, by virtue of power vested in it by the acts of Congress and rules and regulations passed in pursuance thereof, is possessed of extensive powers, supervision, and control with regard to the care, compensation, and property of disabled soldiers.

*143 The United States Veterans’ Bureau filed the exceptions above referred to and is the appellant herein, and the estate of McKnight T. Hudson, an incompetent, and G. Willis Hudson, committee of the personal estate of McKnight T. Hudson, are appellees. The Veterans’ Administration is the successor in name and authority to the United States Veterans’ Bureau, and for convenience the appellant will hereafter be so designated.

Various sums of money were paid into the hands of G. Willis Hudson, who, on the 7th day of August, 1925, had been appointed committee by the Circuit Court for Wicomico County in equity, to manage the property and estate and to assume the control and guardianship of McKnight T. Hudson. Out of these sums of money so received by the committee, who in effect was a trustee for said fund and guardian of the incompetent, investments were made, among them being a loan of $2,500 made by the said committee to himself individually, and secured by a mortgage of said G. Willis Hudson and wife, dated September 24th, 1928, on certain real estate belonging to him.

On August 14th, 1930, G. Willis Hudson, committee of McKnight T. Hudson, filed a report and petition in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County in equity, showing receipts, disbursements, and loans, the principal item of which is $2,500 which was loaned by the said committee to himself individually, and secured by the aforesaid mortgage of August 4th, 1930. The chancellor passed an order upon said “report and accounting” from August 31st, 1928, to August 31st, 1930, whereby the same was accepted and confirmed unless cause to the contrary be shown on or before September 15th, 1930. For some reason which the record does not disclose, and while this order to show cause was outstanding, there was a petition filed on August 26th, 1930, by G. Willis Hudson, committee, praying the court “to approve the act of your said committee in making said mortgage investment,” and on the same day the petition was filed, without notice *144 to any one in interest, the court passed an order in which the said loan “was approved and confirmed.” On the 11th day of September, 1930, and within the time allowed for showing cause why the said report of the committee should not be finally ratified and confirmed, the appellants, by John Baylor, Regional Attorney, filed exceptions and objections to the final ratification of the report and accounting, and, among the causes therefor, specifically set forth the following reason: “The item of disbursement of twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500.00) entered as money loaned G. Willis Hudson on the mortgage on real estate in Delmar, Maryland, dated September 24th, 1928, and recorded among the Land Records of Wicomico County, Maryland, in Liber I. D. T. No. 156, folio 245, are deemed inequitable, in that the transactions involved an improper use of trust funds by a fiduciary.”

Summarizing the facts, in order to make clear the situation, it will be observed that, with the interlocutory order on the report and accounting of August 14th, 1930, in force, wherein the time for filing objections and exceptions as therein designated did not expire until September 15th, 1930, the court passed the order of August 26th, 1930, without notice to any one in interest, approving and confirming the very investment named in the account and subsequently objected to in the exceptions filed on September 11th, 1930, and not until November 23rd, 1934, more than four years after the exceptions to the final ratification of the report and accounting were filed, and withouf notice that the said exceptions would be considered and finally disposed of by the court, were these exceptions overruled, and on the same day the accounting was “accepted and approved as to all funds received and disbursements and investments made for the period of the accounting.” The investment of $2,500 was made within that period and was set forth in the accounting, and therefore was again approved by the Circuit Court for Wicomico County in equity. In its order of November 23rd, 1934, overruling the exceptions, the court stated *145 that no protest had been filed to the account. This is manifestly an error, in view of the exceptions to the report and account filed on September 11th, 1930. In overruling the exceptions the chancellor said: “That while the mortgage from the said G. Willis Hudson and Marie T. Hudson, his wife, to the said G. Willis Hudson, committee of McKnight Hudson, would under ordinary circumstances be improper and irregular, but likewise reaching the conclusion that the said mortgage against said property is enforceable and that the said lien upon said property securing said indebtedness is valid and enforceable, and likewise considering that the said G. Willis Hudson is the only and sole heir at law of the said McKnight Hudson, and further reaching the conclusion that the said G. Willis Hudson by having failed to include in his previous reports any allowance for commissions did not necessarily thereby waive commissions, and that if not heretofore actually waived, an allowance therefor in said report would not necessarily be improper.”

The reasons assigned by the chancellor for his action in overruling the exceptions to the final ratification of the report and accounting of the committee, and finally accepting and ratifying the same, are not in accordance with the law. Under the authorities in this state an investment of this kind should neither directly nor indirectly be ratified as a valid exercise of the powers vested in this committee or trustee. The appeal in this case was taken on December 26th, 1934, and is “from the order of the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, Maryland, dated November 23rd, 1934, overruling the exceptions to the final ratification of the committee’s report filed on August 14th, 1930, and finally ratifying said report.” The record shows that the order overruling the exceptions was passed November 23rd, 1934, and a separate order accepting and approving the said report was filed the same day. Whether this appeal is from the order accepting and approving the report and account, as well as from the order overruling the exceptions, is not entirely *146 clear, but this is not of great importance, because if the order overruling the exceptions is reversed, the report and accounting must stand for further consideration and action by the court, and the order accepting and approving the report and accounting is thereby abrogated. Apparently there are three questions presented in this appeal :

1. Whether the loan of $2,500 should have been ratified and approved by the court as a valid act upon the part of the committee and trustee.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
179 A. 836, 169 Md. 141, 1935 Md. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veterans-administration-v-hudson-md-1935.