Wehrhane v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

42 A. 930, 89 Md. 179, 1899 Md. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 42 A. 930 (Wehrhane v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) 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
Wehrhane v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 42 A. 930, 89 Md. 179, 1899 Md. LEXIS 15 (Md. 1899).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Adelheid Wehrhane, by her last will and testament, probated January 25th, 1892, directed that after the payment of her debts, all the residue of her estate should be divided into three equal parts, and for the purpose of effecting such division empowered her executors to sell and convey any part or all of her estate. One of these three equal parts she gave absolutely to her son Charles Wehrhane, and another part absolutely to her son William H. Wehrhane. The remaining third part'she gave to The Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore to be held and managed by said corporation, upon the following trusts : “To apply the net income therefrom to the support and maintenance of my son Adolphus E. Wehrhane during the term of his natural life, or, in its discretion, to pay over to him personally the said income, from time to time as it shall have accrued, but in no event shall said property, so held in trust, *181 nor shall the income therefrom be liable for any claims or demands of any person or persons, claiming the same as creditors, or otherwise, of the said Adolphus E. Wehrhane, other than such claims as the said corporation shall agree to pay out of said income.” The corporation was further directed, “from and immediately after the death of Adolphus E. Wehrhane,” to divide the trust property, and any balance of accrued income remaining in its possession after the payments therefrom of any claims against him which it should have agreed to pay, into two equal portions, and to pay over and transfer free from said trust one of said portions to each of her two sons, Charles and William H. Wehrhane; or to such person or persons as they, if then deceased, should respectively have designated by deed, will, or any writing, in the nature of a testamentary disposition, or, in the absence of such designation, to their respective heirs-at-law.

The executors administered the estate in due course of law, and paid over to the Trust Co. $11,150.51, being the one-third of the residue of said estate, and 'the Trust Co. has ever since duly administered its trust and accounted for all the income.

On April 29th, 1892, Charles Wehrhane and William H. Wehrhane executed a deed to the Trust Co., extending the trust under the will of their mother, so as to embrace the natural life of Emily S. Wehrhane, wife of Adolphus E. Wehrhane, and she has since died.

William H. Wehrhane died October 23, 1895, and by his will, probated February 10, 1896, after giving a few legacies, gave ail the residue of his estate, including his interest in the trust-estate of Adolphus E. Wehrhane, to his friend, J. B. Noel Wyatt. Some contention having been made by Adolphus E. Wehrhane as to the validity of William H. Wehrhane’s will, and a caveat having been threatened by him, an agreement was made between him and J. B. Noel Wyatt, for the division between them of the whole estate of William H. Wehrhane — including his interest in said trust- *182 estate, which agreement was carried into effect by the parties, so far as they could do so, by a distribution of said estate made by the administrators December 23, 1896, and including the interest of William H. Wehrhane, in said trust-estate; and on the same day the administrators of William H. Wehrhane, in pursuance of an order of the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, transferred to Adolphus E. Wehrhane all the interest of William H. Wehi'hane in said trust-estate.

On a bill filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City by the appellant, px-aying the Coux-t to assume jurisdiction of the trust and to direct the Trust Co. to pay over to him one-half of said trust-fund, Charles Wehrhane assented to any deci'ee that might be passed, and the Trust Co. united in the prayer to assume jurisdiction, but declined to pay over one-half the trust-fund, unless the will wex-e fix'st construed, and the right of the appellant thereto determined. By consent a decree was passed assuming jurisdiction of the trust and decreeing, pro forma, that so much of the bill as prayed for payment to appellant of one-half the trust-fund be dismissed; and it is from the pro forma part of this decx-ee that the appeal is taken. In the view which we have taken of this case, it will not be necessaxy to follow the ai'gument of counsel in detail, or to consider many of the authorities cited by them. Unless the trust created by the will has been extinguished as to one-half the fund, and the appellant has acquired an absolute estate therein, he cannot succeed in this appeal. His contention is that William HWehrhane took, under his mother’s will, a fee-simple in remainder in one-half of this trust-estate, which vested immediately in possession, though its enjoyment was postponed until the expiration of the precedent life-estate, and that by virtue of his devise and bequest to Wyatt, and of Wyatt’s assignment and transfer, and that of Wm. H. Wehxdiane’s administrator to the appellant, this remainder has vested in him, and the life-estate and remainder having been united in one pei'son, the life-estate has been merged in the remain *183 der, the trust which characterized the life-estate has been extinguished, and the fee-simple has become absolute in the appellant; but after careful consideration we are satisfied there has been no merger.

Merger has been defined as “ the annihilation by act of law of the less in the greater of two vested estates, meeting, without any intervening estate, in the same person in the same right.” 3 Greenleaf’s Cruise, Title 39, sec. 1 and 2. As a general rule this may be accepted as an accurate definition, but the rule is not inflexible in equity; whether a merger does or does not take place, depending upon the intention of the parties, and a variety of other circumstances. Kent says : “ Merger is not favored in equity, and is never allowed unless for special reasons, and to promote the intention of the party.” 4 Kent Commentaries, 102, m. p.

The Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in Gibson v. Crehore, 3 Pick. 452, says, “mergers are odious in equity.” The law on this head is nowhere better stated than by Washburn in his work on real property, who says : “ But there is after all a principle recognized by Courts of Equity which controls their decision in all questions of merger of the eqiiitable in the legal estate, and that is, that if it is necessary for the purposes of justice, or to effect the intent of the donor, that the two estates should be kept distinct, there will be no merger, merely by their coming together in one person.” 2 Washburn on R. P., 203 (1st ed.) 1863. To sustain this text, he cites among others two cases to which brief attention will be directed. In Earle v. Washburn, 7 Allen, 95, trustees who held land for the uses of a religious society, with authority to convey to it whenever they deemed it judicious, subsequently conveyed the land to the society, which on the same day executed a mortgage to a third person to aid in building on the land, and immediately reconveyed the equity of redemption to the trustees to be held on the same trust.

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Bluebook (online)
42 A. 930, 89 Md. 179, 1899 Md. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wehrhane-v-safe-deposit-trust-co-md-1899.