Wickes v. Wickes

56 A. 1017, 98 Md. 307, 1904 Md. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 56 A. 1017 (Wickes v. Wickes) 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
Wickes v. Wickes, 56 A. 1017, 98 Md. 307, 1904 Md. LEXIS 27 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case the controversy has respect to real estate which was sold under a decree of the Circuit Court for Kent County. The record brings up four appeals. Three of these are from the action of the Court in regard to certain questions which, in the course of proceedings had pending the ratification of the sale, were submitted to it for adjudication as being within the provisions of sec. 183 of Art. 16 of the Code; and the fourth is from the order of the Court overruling exceptions filed to the ratification of the sale by Willie Wickes, appellant in No. 10 of the Appeals, dismissing a petition in'which she asked leave to amend her answer to the bill of complaint and for other relief; and finally ratifying the sale as reported.

The controversy in the case arose from a claim of title to the property solid, set up by the said appellant in No. 10 of the Appeals, after sale made and pending ratification of the same. This claim is that the property sold is the subject of an estate tail general and that said estate is now vested in the said Willie Wickes by inheritance in regular course of descent from the first tenant in tail, and rests on the following facts. Samuel Wickes of Kent County who died in the year 1732 was seized in fee-simple of the property in controversy, and by his will of date September the 5th, 1729, devised it as follows: “Item, I give, devise and bequeath unto my son Samuel Wickes all that tract or parcel of land and plantation with all the other appurtenances thereto belonging, containing by *317 estimation 370 acres more or less, called or commonly known by the name of ‘Wickliffe’ it being the land and plantation whereon I now dwell in the Eastern Neck Island, in the county of Kent, to him and the heirs of his body lawfully begotten forever, and if in case it should please God my son Samuel shall happen to die without such lawful heirs as aforesaid, the aforesaid lands to descend to the next heir of blood according to law forever.”

Samuel Wickes, son of the above-named testator, and devisee in the foregoing devise held the land in question until he died in 1767 and by his will devised it as follows: “2nd. I give and bequeath unto my son Samuel Wickes, my dwelling plantation and all the land adjoining thereto to him and the heirs of his body lawfully begotten forever, and in case my son Samuel should die without such issue then to the next surviving heir and heirs of their body lawfully begotten forever.” Samuel Wickes named aS devisee in the last-mentioned devise was the oldest son and the common law heir of the Samuel who was the devisee in the first-mentioned devise. He entered upon and was possessed of the land mentioned during his life; and is supposed to have survived until after the passage of the Act to Direct Descents of 1786, ch. 45, and until after that Act went into effect, by its terms, as to estates tail, on the first of January, 1788.

At his death his oldest son, William Wickes, entered upon and held the said land until his death which occurred sometime before the year 1852. William Wickes left an only son, James P. Wickes, and two daughters. James P. Wickes entered upon and held the land during his life but apparently supposing that it was a fee-simple inheritance descending to all of his father’s children in equal shares he took deeds from his sisters—each deed expressing that it conveyed an “undivided third part” of the land in question as “being the same lands which descended from the late William Wickes” to his “children and heirs at law.” Both deeds were made for a money consideration which in one was “three thousand dollars” and in the other "two thousand and five hundred dollars.” *318 James P. Wickes died intestate in the year 1869 leaving a widow and eight children. Of these children William H. Wickes was the oldest son, who with the widow, his mother, and the other children, except a married daughter, continued to reside upon and occupy the property in question. The widow and children of James P. Wickes seem to have regarded the property as he had, as descending as a fee-simple inheritance ; and accordingly there was an arrangement among them by which William H. Wickes became tenant of the farm paying rent therefor to his mother and brothers and sisters; and it was testified that he continued “to farm the farm as tenant until his death which took place on May 15th, 1871.” William H. Wickes left an only child who is the Willie Wickes heretofore mentioned as the appellant in Appeal No. 10 in this record ; and who was born on the 2nd day of May, 1871, thirteen days prior to the death of her father, at Chestertown, Kent County, where her parents then were.

Such is the source of title and such the course of descent through which the appellant, Willie Wickes, claims to be vested with an estate tail general in the property in controversy.

The Act of 1782, chapter 23 (Code, Art. 21, sec. 24), provided that “any person seized of an estate tail in possession, or remainder, in any lands * * * may grant, sell and convey the same in the same manner and by the same form of conveyance as if he were seized of an estate in fee-simple” and that such conveyance should be good "against all persons whom the grantor might debar by any mode of common recovery or by any ways or means whatsoever.” The Act of 1786, chapter 45, to direct descents in Maryland (Code, Art. 46) provided that if any person seized of lands in this State as of a fee-tail general should die intestate thereof such lands should “descend in fee-simple” but provided that the Act should not be construed “to alter or in any manner change the course of descent as heretofore used and established, so as to affect the case of any entail or limitation in tail whatever, *319 made, created and in being before the first day of January, 1788, but the same shall, during the continuance of the estate in tail or limitation in tail, and until the same may be legally destroyed or barred, descend according to the course of descent heretofore used and established.”

According to the claim here set up of title in tail to the property in question the estate tail was in existence prior to January 1st, 1788 and was therefore within the exception provided in the Act of 1786. It is not pretended that any person seized of said estate attempted to grant, sell or convey the same by any form of conveyance under the provisions of the Act of 1782, chapter 23; or to bar it in any mode recognized as effective for that purpose as the law stood prior to that Act. Now if we assume upon the facts recited that the appellant, Willie Wickes, became, as she claims she did, upon the death of her father, entitled as tenant in tail to the land in controversy and to possess herself thereof as of an estate tail general, the record presents the further inquiry whether from the disclosures thereof such title has since become barred and defeated.

As appropriate to this inquiry the further facts disclosed by the record are that on the 15th of October, 1872, a bill was filed by the adult children of James P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 A. 1017, 98 Md. 307, 1904 Md. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickes-v-wickes-md-1904.