Warfield v. Valentine

101 A. 543, 130 Md. 587, 1917 Md. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 A. 543 (Warfield v. Valentine) 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
Warfield v. Valentine, 101 A. 543, 130 Md. 587, 1917 Md. LEXIS 160 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the second appeal in this case. On November 1st, 1915, a bill of complaint was filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County by the appellant against Thomas H. Emory for specific performance of an alleged contract by which Emory sold to the plaintiff two farms or tracts of land in Baltimore County, containing in the aggregate seven hundred and seventy-five acres of land, more or less. John R. Valentine was made a party defendant in the bill because of the purchase by him of the property through an agent of Emory with the view, as alleged in the bill, of defrauding the plaintiff, and because of an alleged understanding between Valentine and the plaintiff that if either of them purchased the property “the other should be considered as having a share or interest in the same.” The bill prayed, (1) for the specific enforcement of the alleged contract between the plaintiff and Emory; (2) or, in the event the Court should refuse that relief, that a decree be passed declaring that Valentine purchased the property in trust for himself and the plaintiff, and (3) that Emory and Valentine, and their servants, agents, etc., be enjoined until the further order of the Court from taking any steps to carry out the contract of sale between them. An order restraining and enjoining the defendants as prayed in the bill was passed by the Court on the day the bill was filed, and thereafter the defendants filed their answer admitting the contract of sale between the defendants, but denying the other averments upon which the plaintiff relied fox relief.

*590 Tbe proceedings in tbe case from the filing of tbe bill to tbe date of the order for tbe present appeal are set out in tbe record of tbe former appeals of Theodore W. Forbes and Osborne I. Yellott, administrators pendente lite, and John R. Valentine, ante, page 397.

On tbe 6th of September, 1916, Theodore W. Forbes and Osborne I. Yellott, administrators pendente lite, filed a petition in tbe case alleging that Thomas IT. Emory bad died at Saranac Lake, New York, on tbe 15th of August, 1916, leaving a paper writing purporting to be bis last will and testament; that before tbe will was admitted to1 probate by the Orphans' Court of Baltimore County a caveat thereto was filed by .an uncle and two aunts of tbe deceased as bis heirs at law and next of kin, and that tbe Orphans' Court of Baltimore County bad appointed tbe petitioners administrators pendente lite, with authority to intervene in this case, and praying the Court to pass an order making them parties defendant. On the same day tbe Court below passed an order making them parties defendant in tbe case, “provided that a copy of this order shall be served upon tbe plaintiff or one of his counsel of record and also upon John R. Val entine or bis counsel of record on or before tbe 12th day of September, 1916.” A copy of tbe order was accordingly served on counsel of record for tbe plaintiff and on counsel for tbe de^ fendant Valentine, on tbe 6th of September, 1916.

On the'8th of September, 1916, the plaintiff filed .a petition against tbe administrators pendente lite and John R. Avalentóne, in which, after stating that Thomas H. Emory had died, and that a caveat bad been filed to tbe paper purporting to be bis last will and testament, he alleged that it 'was necessary in order to preserve tbe property that tbe farm be operated; that Forbes and Yellott should not be permitted to assume tbe control and management of tbe same, and that some competent and disinterested person should be appointed receiver to take charge of it; and thereupon tbe Court appointed the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of *591 Baltimore receiver to take possession of and to manage and •operate the farm “until it shall have been determined who- is entitled to the ownership thereof.”

On the 21st of October, 1916, the Court below passed an ■order setting for hearing, on the 28th of October, 1916, a motion of the defendants to dissolve the injunction theretofore granted, and requiring a copy of the order to be served on the plaintiff on that day. On the 26th of October, 1916, the plaintiff filed a petition alleging' that the order of September 6th, 1916, making the1 administrators pendente Hie parties defendant, was passed “upon the ex parle application” of the said Forbes and Yollott; that “pending the determination of the controversy concerning said supposed will, it is impossible to determine who will be the holders- of the legal title to said real estate from whom a conveyance must be made to your petitioner in the event that this Court shall decree the relief prayed in the bill of complaint, and therefore until the determination of said controversy it is also impossible for this Court to ascertain who are sufficient parties defendant in the room and stead of said decedent”; that the plaintiff was not notified of the passage of the order •of the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore County authorizing the administrators pendente lite to intervene in this case, “nor of the filing of any application or petition therefor, nor was he ■notified of the-application of said Yellott and Forbes to bo made parties- hereto, nor of the passage- of the order aforesaid making them parties until after the same had been passed”; that he had no opportunity to be heard in reference thereto, and that he “is advised that the passage of said ■order by this Court was improvident and inadvertent.” The petition prayed for the “rescission” of the order of September 6th, 1916, and that the administrators pendente lite be dismissed as parties defendant. The Court passed an order setting the petition for hearing on the 28th of October, 1916, and on that day, and wffiile the* petition of the plaintiff for ,a “rescission” of the order of September 6th, 1916, making *592 the administrators pendente Hie parties, and the motion to dissolve the injunction were still pending in the Court below, the plaintiff filed his order for the present appeal from the order of September 6th, 1916, and the order setting the motion to dissolve the injunction for hearing.

In the case of Baldwin v. Mitchell, 86 Md. 379, Judge Page, speaking, for this Court, said: “There are no provisions in our statutes defining the powers of” an administrator pendente Hie, “or establishing particular and exceptional rules for the discharge of his duties, as in the case of an administrator ad colligendum (Code 1888, Art. 93) secs. 61 to 64. The intention of our law, therefore, seems to be clear, that he must be subject to the same general rules as control general administrators. Within twelve months from the date of his letters, he must render his first account, and, if necessary, an additional account every six months thereafter. If his letters be revoked before the twelve months expire, he must then exhibit his account without delay, and hand over to the executor or new administrator all the property of the decedent in his hands. He may sue for the recovery of the assets and be sued for debts due from the decedent ; and if such suits are still pending when his letters are revoked, the new administrator may prosecute or defend them— sec. 69.

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Related

Baldwin v. Hopkins
191 A. 565 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 A. 543, 130 Md. 587, 1917 Md. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warfield-v-valentine-md-1917.