Watkins v. Barnes

102 A.2d 295, 203 Md. 518, 1954 Md. LEXIS 345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1954
Docket[No. 57, October Term, 1953.]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 102 A.2d 295 (Watkins v. Barnes) 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
Watkins v. Barnes, 102 A.2d 295, 203 Md. 518, 1954 Md. LEXIS 345 (Md. 1954).

Opinion

*520 Delaplaine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Philip C. Watkins, a farmer and bank director in Montgomery County, is appealing here from an order of the Orphans’ Court of Frederick County revoking the probate of the will of Adele H. Kreh, deceased, and the letters of administration cum testamento annexo which the Court had granted to him on her estate.

On Sunday morning, December 7, 1952, Mrs. Kreh and her husband, Arthur T. Kreh, were found dead in their apartment in Frederick by Mrs. Edward M. Lasseter, one of Kreh’s nieces. Mrs. Lasseter called the coroner and then phoned the news of the tragedy to appellant, Mrs. Kreh’s first cousin once removed, who resides near Germantown, Appellant came to Frederick on the same day, and on the following day he made the funeral arrangements.

On December 15 Mrs. Kreh’s will was found in a safe deposit box in a Frederick bank, and it was delivered to Harry D. Radcliff, Register of Wills for Frederick County. By this will Mrs. Kreh left her whole estate to her husband and appointed him executor. Later that day appellant, accompanied by W. Jerome Offutt, his attorney, applied for letters of administration C.. T. A. In accordance with the regular procedure, appellant submitted to the Register of Wills an information report, which stated that Mrs. Kreh died on December 7, 1952, and that he, as her first cousin once removed, was her next of kin. He then filed an application for letters of administration C. T. A. on Mrs. Kreh’s estate.

On December 16 the Orphans’ Court admitted the will to probate and granted letters to appellant with the direction that he give bond to the State of Maryland in the sum of $1,000. He thereupon proceeded to administer upon the estate. He put Mrs. Kreh’s jewelry in a safe deposit box, gave notice to creditors, and filed the inventories in the estate.

On February 2, 1953, Bessie A. Barnes and Beulah B. Weaver, residents of the City of Washington, and *521 Theodore Barnes, Jr., of Miami Beach, Florida, and Julian F. Barnes, of Southern Pines, North Carolina, petitioned the Court to revoke the letters granted to appellant and to give such other and further relief as the nature of the case may require. They alleged in their petition that they were Mrs. Kreh’s first cousins of the half blood, and were her next of kin; that the Court had granted the letters upon appellant’s misrepresentation that he was her only next of kin; and that no notice had been given them and they had no knowledge of the grant of letters until January 5, 1958.

Appellant admitted that he had misinformed the Court by representing himself to be Mrs. Kreh’s next of kin, but he claimed that he had made the false statement innocently. He acknowledged that petitioners, as Mrs. Kreh’s first cousins of the half blood, were her next of kin.

The Maryland Testamentary Act gives priority to first cousins of the half blood over first cousins once removed in the following section in the order of distribution: “After children, descendants, father, mother, brothers and sisters of the deceased, the child or children, grandchild or grandchildren or brothers and sisters of the deceased and their descendants, all collateral relations in equal degree shall take, and no representation amongst such collateral shall be allowed, and there shall be no distinction between the whole and half blood.” Code 1951, art. 93, sec. 140.

The Act also gives priority to first cousins of the half blood over first cousins once removed in the right to administer upon an estate. Secs. 25, 27.

It is the law in Maryland that when a will is exhibited to the Orphans’ Court for probate, and it appears that reasonable notice of the time of exhibiting it has been given to such of the next of kin as might conveniently be served therewith, and no caveat has been filed against it, the Court shall proceed to probate it. But where none of the next of kin attend, and it appears that no notice has been given, the Court may either direct sum *522 mons to the next of kin, or some one or more of them, to appear to show cause why the will should not be probated, or direct such notice to be given in the newspapers or otherwise as the Court may think proper, and if no objection is made or caveat entered, the Court may take the probate, but if objection is’ made, the Court shall determine according to the testimony produced on both sides. Code 1951, art. 93, secs. 374, 375.

Thus, where no notice has been given and none of the next of kin appear, the Court is not required to notify all of the next of kin, but only one or more of them, and the notice may be given either by summons or newspaper publication or in any other way the Court may think proper. Pilert v. Pielert, 202 Md. 406, 96 A. 2d 498. However, Sections 374 and 375 of Article 93 are mandatory. They contain the conditions precedent that must be fulfilled before a will can be admitted to probate. If the Court admits a will to probate without complying with the statutory requirements, the probate is invalid. Travers v. Lavender, 197 Md. 652.

In this case the Orphans’ Court admitted the will to probate without directing a notice of any kind to be given to any of the next of kin, and none of the next of kin appeared at or before the time of probate. It is thus indisputable that the action of the Court in probating the will and granting the letters was not in accordance with the law.

It has long been established that an Orphans’ Court has the power to revoke an order for the probate of a will, or for the issuance of letters of administration, passed by it improperly upon material misrepresentation, however innocently made. The right to administer justice would be seriously impaired if the Orphans’ Court possessed no power to revoke a probate or letters which it had previously granted upon a mistaken state of facts. Dalrymple v. Gamble, 66 Md. 298, 305, 7 A. 683, 8 A. 466; Mitchell v. McCormick, 143 Md. 328, 332, 122 A. 245; Silverwood v. Farnan, 180 Md. 15, 22, 22 A. 2d 444; Northwestern Fuel Co. v. Brock, 139 U. S. 216, *523 11 S. Ct. 523, 524, 35 L. Ed. 151.

Appellant argued, however, that in this case the Orphans’ Court abused its discretion. He stressed the fact that he had long been intimate with the testatrix, and that he made the arrangements for her funeral, whereas petitioners had not been intimate with her and none of them attended her funeral. He claimed that the spirit of the testimentary law is not carried out if the Court allows an estate in a case like this to remain unadministered until a genealogist makes a study of the family tree. His argument might have merit (1) if there were no misrepresentation and the family relationships were so complicated or so obscure that the services of a genealogist were necessary, or (2) if it were impossible to notify any of the next of kin in any way.

It is true that it is the policy of the Testamentary Act to promote the prompt probate of wills and the speedy administration and settlement of estates. Barrett v. Clark,

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Bluebook (online)
102 A.2d 295, 203 Md. 518, 1954 Md. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-barnes-md-1954.