Patapsco Female Institute v. Rock Hill College
Patapsco Female Institute v. Rock Hill College
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case has been in this Court on a former appeal, and is found reported in 47 Md., 1. The bill was filed by Rock Hill College against the administrators of James Stratton, deceased, and the Board of County School Commissioners of Howard County, to compel the administrators of the deceased to pay over to the college the surplus of the intestate’s personal estate, after final administration, under sec. 136 of Art. 93 of the Code. The defendants demurred to the bill, and the demurrer was sustained by the Circuit Court, but, upon appeal to this Court, that decision was reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings. After the cause had been remanded to the Circuit Court, the Patapsco Female Institute, an incorporated educational institution, located in Howard County, intervened under leave of the Court, and set up claim to the fund’adverse to both Rock Hill College and the Board of County School Commissioners. The administrators withdrew the demurrer to the bill, so far as they were concerned, and answered; but the Board of County School Commissioners stood upon the demurrer. In that State of proceedings, the case was submitted to the Circuit Court for Howard, Country for final decree. And that Court, after hearing the arguments of counsel, determined that the Patapsco Female Institute was not a college within the meaning of the particular section of the Code directing the distribution of the fund, and decreed that the fund in the hands of the administrators be paid over to Rock Hill College. From this decree the Patapsco
The provision of the statute under which the conflicting claims are made, is that contained in section 136 of Art. 93 of the Code, in regard to the distribution of an intestate’s personal estate, as that section stood before it was modified by the Act of 1876, ch. 295. It provides that, upon failure of relations within a certain degree, “the whole surplus shall belong to the State, and shall be paid to the college, if any, in the county where the deceased shall die, or if none, to any school in the county to which the public aid by law may be extended, and if none, to the county where the property of the intestate shall lie.” The material part of this sec. 136, as it stood before it was modified by the Act of 1876, ch. 295, was codified from the Act of 1802, ch. 101, sec. 11.
The bill alleged that Rock Hill College was the only college in Howard County, and the demurrer, upon which the former decision was rendered, admitted the truth of that fact. The subsequent proceedings have not shown that admission to have been erroneous or at all inconsistent with the actual fact. That Rock Hill - College has the faculties and fulfils the definition of a college, we have no doubt. The Act of 1865, ch. 10, under which it was incorporated, expressly declares that the institution shall have power “to confer the degrees of A. B. and A. M., and such other degrees as are now by law conferred by the colleges of this State;” also “to purchase or take and hold, by deed or otherwise, any property, real, personal and mixed, the annual income of which, exclusive of libraries and philosophical and chemical and other apparatus intended for and in use of the college, shall not have an actual annual value of more than ten thousand dollars,” etc. And as we entirely agree with the Court below that the Patapsco Female Institute has no claim to being a college, we must take it as conceded that there is no other college than Rock Hill College in Howard County.
When the case was first heard on demurrer in the Circuit Court, one of the grounds upon which the claim of the college was resisted was, that the institution was not embraced by the terms of the statute, because it did not receive aid from the State; that no college could claim unless it was in the receipt of State bounty. But the Court, while denying the right of the college upon the ground that the statute had been recently changed and the fund differently appropriated, was explicit in holding that the college would have been entitled but for the repealing Acts of 1876. This Court held, upon appeal, that the Acts of 1876, did not affect the rights that had previously attached, and consequently those Acts could not control the disposition of the fund. But in the argument of the case in this Court, on that appeal, the question of the right of the college to take, apart from the supposed operation of the Acts of 1876, was not in the slightest degree controverted, nor, from any thing that was said, even doubted. It was not until the cause was remanded that the question was again revived, and, in regard to this question, the Circuit Court decided as it had decided in the first instance; and we think that decision entirely correct.
The correctness of the construction adopted would seem to be plain from the ordinary reading of the terms employed in the statute. The fund is directed to be paid to the college, if any, in the county where the deceased shall die, or if none, to any school in the county to which the
Agreeing’ with the Court below we affirm its decree.
Decree affirm.ed.
Reference
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