Yakel v. Yakel

53 A. 914, 96 Md. 240, 1903 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 A. 914 (Yakel v. Yakel) 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
Yakel v. Yakel, 53 A. 914, 96 Md. 240, 1903 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

The appellant and the appellees qualified as executors of the last will and testament of Louis Yakel on the fourth, day of March, 1902, in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, They returned an inventory of the personal estate which with cash received amounted to $79,292.93, and on the nth of June the appellees stated an account in which they charged the three executors with the above amount, received credit for various sums aggregating $26,181.32, and distributed the balance to John A. Yakel, trustee under the will, excepting some items- amounting to about $1,000 which were distributed to the widow and to John A. Yakel, trustee for two infants. On the 1 oth of July, the appellant filed á petition in the Orphans’ Court alleging that he had declined “to sign or probate” the said account inasmuch as the time had not expired within which creditors of the testator could file their claims against the estate, that John A. Yakel probated said account as the *242 act of the three without notice to him, and without any opportunity for him to be heard, and that the Court improvidently passed an order approving it and directing distribution to be made thereunder. The prayer of the petition is that the order of June nth be rescinded. It is also .alleged that John A. Yakel and the appellant executed a joint bond for the faithful performance of their duties and that they united as sureties on the bond of Margaret Yakel.

The appellees filed separate answers — that of Margaret Yakel, however, adopting the one filed by John A. Yakel. The latter alleges that the active management of the estate had been left to him, that full administration of it had been completed, as far as the same could be in that Court, and that there was urgent necessity existing for the transfer of the personal estate to him as trustee so that the estate might be under one jurisdiction — Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, having assumed jurisdiction of the entire trust estate under the will of Louis Yakel. It also charges that the account was submitted to the appellant and approved by him and that he was requested by John A. and Margaret Yakel to accompany them to the Orphans’ Court on the nth day of June, and he gave as an excuse and reason for declining to join in the passing of the account the fact that six months had not expired since the grant of letters, but that was a sham or subterfuge, as he knew that all claims against the estate had been settled except that of the Fidelity and Deposit Company for $95,000. It then states that this claim of the Fidelity and Deposit Company was a mortgage against the “Yakel Building,” a part of the trust estate. It is admitted that bonds were executed by the executors as alleged in the petition. John A. Yakel alleges that certain motives which he sets out influenced the appellant to take the position he did with reference to the account, but they do not in any way reflect upon the question before us and need not be further referred to.

The Orphans’ Court set the matter for hearing on the 18th day of July. At that time the parties and their attorneys appeared and the petitioner sought to offer testimony in sup *243 port of his allegations, but the Court declined to hear it and dismissed the petition. The order states that the petition is “dismissed without prejudice” and that the costs be paid by George Yakel. The appellees have made a motion to dismiss the appeal, but it must be overruled. They rely on the cases of Megary v. Shipley, 72 Md. 33, and Lefever v. Lefever, 6 Md. 472, but it is clear they are not applicable. In the former case the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore County on the 18th of June, 1889, rescinded a previous order passed by it on an ex parte petition, and on the 16th of September an appeal was prayed which was withdrawn on the 24th of that month. On the latter day a petition was filed by which it was sought to rescind the order of the 18th of June and on October 9th, 1889, the Court dismissed that petition. This Court said that “ if there was any error in that order, of which the appellant could complain, he should have taken a timely appeal, and had the error corrected,” and that the purpose of the petition was a rescission or revocation of the order of the 18th of June, which “ was simply to obtain a rehearing of the subject-matter of that order, and thereby to restore the right of appeal that had been lost by delay.” In Lefever v. Lefever, the Orphans’ Court appointed the appellee guardian on the 2nd of May, 1854, and on the 5th of that month the infant filed his petition praying that his mother might be permitted to serve as guardian. The Court said “The precise and only point properly presented on the present appeal is the propriety of the Court’s action, not in appointing Mr. Lefever, but in refusing to remove him.” In both of those cases the parties were duly brought into Court and of couuse they could not bring up for review orders which had been previously passed by filing petitions to rescind, or to indirectly affect them, but they should have appealed from the original orders. In this case the order of June 1 ith was ex parte and the petition to have it rescinded was filed within thirty days from its date. The principle announced in Redman v. Chance, 32 Md. 42, is therefore applicable. It was there held that when the appointment of a guardian was made without notice to the father or mother (if *244 there be no father) the party aggrieved was not confined to an appeal directly from the order making the appointment, but could by petition or other proceeding in the Orphans’ Court impeach the regularity and validity of the appointment, but it must be filed within thirty days after actual knowledge of the order making the appointment. It is true that in that case there was a statute requiring notice, but the Court said “This general principle has been repeatedly recognized in Courts of law and equity, where parties have been allowed, by an independent proceeding, to impeach judgments and decrees rendered without notice.”

Nor can the fact that this petition was dismissed “without prejudice” justify the dismissal of the appeal. Ordinarily an order dismissing a bill or petition is not considered final, and hence cannot be reviewed, but this petition and answer properly submitted a question to the Court that should have been passed on. Such facts as are necessary to entitle the appellant to relief were alleged in the petition and admitted in the answer, and if. he filed another petition he could only repeat, in substance, the same facts and if he was entitled to relief on those facts he was prejudiced by having the petition dismissed and the mere addition of the words “ without prejudice ” cannot under those circumstances prevent him from prosecuting his appeal. The general rule applicable to bills in equity is thus stated in 6 Ency. of Pl. and Pr., 996, “A dismissal of a bill in equity without prejudice will not be reviewed unless the error is very clear,” — thus implying that when it is very clear it will be reviewed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 914, 96 Md. 240, 1903 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yakel-v-yakel-md-1903.