Johnston v. Willis
Johnston v. Willis
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This' is an -appeal from a. decision and order -of the Orphans’ Court for Talbot County, and, under the- views -hereinafter expressed, the -only 'question to be determined is the legal right of the -appellant, individually e-r' -as executor or tihistee under a prior will of Mae Bingham Manders, deceased, to- file a caveat to- a subsequent will of said decedent.''
On November- 8-th, 1923, Mae Bingham Manders, hereinafter called the testatrix, executed a paper writing purporting to be her last will and testament, in which, after making three .bequests, she devised and bequeathed all the rest and residue of her- estate to the -appellant, M. Tilghm-an Johnston, in trust for her husband during his life, and then' absolutely to her husband’s sisters. On November 9th, 1923, a codicil was added, directing the trustee to- pay -such part of the income as he might deem proper to the mother-in-law and ; father-in-law of -the testatrix during their lifetime, and continuing the trust as 1-ong -a© any of the three beneficiaries remained alive.
The trustee was “to collect the rents1, issues and profits” o-f the estate, and he or his successors in the trust were authorized “to make any change in ithe -trust fund which he or -they may deem judicious, and to- that end to- sell and convey -any property belonging to- sa,id trust, either real -or personal, the proceeds thereof to be reinvested in good and well-secured investments, which shall go and remain in 'the same trus'-L” The appellant was also named as executor.
On April 17th, 192J, the testatrix executed another paper writing purporting to be her last will and testament, in *239 which, after making one. bequest of $2,000 to her mother-in-law, s'he gave and devised all the rest and residue of her property to her husband absolutely, and named J. MeKenny Willis, one'of the appellees, as executor. The testatrix died on May 2nd, 1924, and ion May 6th, 1924, each of the' above ■mentioned paper writings was offered for probate, as her last will and testament, in the Orphans’, Court for Talbot 'County.
On May 23rd, 1924, the appellant, as executor and trustee under the alleged will of November 8th, 1923, filed a caveat to the probate of the alleged will of April 17th, 1924, and on June 17th, 1924, the appellees, who were respectively the executor named in the subsequent, will, the husband, and the mother-in-law of the testatrix, filed a petition alleging, among other things, that -the appellant did not 'have the right “in his capacity as executor and trustee under the former will” to maintain the caveat proceedings. The appellant'answered the petition of the appellees, asserting in his answer that he did have the right to maintain the caveat proceedings, issue was joined, testimony taken before the orphans’ court, ■and on July 22, 1924, the court rendered the following "decision dismissing the caveat:
“The court finds that M. T'ilghman Johnston has not the legal right to caveat the last will and testament of Mae Bingham Manders on the ground that' he is not an heir to her estate, and has not such interest in her estate as would entitle him to caveat the said will, and we therefore dismiss his petition and caveat.”
From this decision and order M. Tilghman Johnston has appealed to this Court. At the hearing before the orphans’ court a number of exceptions were taken by both sides to the introduction of evidence, 'and some of the evidence admitted was, in our opinion, immaterial and irrelevant to the only issue before the court, namely, the right of the appellant to maintain the caveat proceedings. Safe D. & T. Co. of Baltimore v. Devilbiss, 128 Md. 182; Meyer v. Henderson, 88 Md. 589; Reilly v. Dougherty, 60 Md. 276. However, little *240 stress was laid oil the rulings on evidence in either the briefs or 'argument, and, a,s it would serve uo useful purpose to go over them in detail, we will not discuss them further than to say' that ■ in- none of them do we find .any reversible error. This brings us to a consideration of the real issue.
The ‘ appellant dearly had no right as ¡an individual to maintain the caveat proceedings. His right in this capacity was. discussed and denied in the .appellee’s brief, hut no claim to.such a right was made- in either the brief ¡or argument of the .appellant, nor could such a claim be successfully made. The .appellant, so far as the record shows, was not related in any. wq.y to the testatrix, nor did he have,- as an individual, any. -interest whatever in her property, and it is the settled IftW-of this State “that a stranger or one having, no interest ipH[he -property of a testator has no right to caveat his will. Interest -in the property is the very foundation of the right to caveat.” Brewer v. Barrett. 58 Md. 587; Safe D. & T. Co. of Baltimore v. Devilbiss, supra. Nor did he have such a right by virtue of being named in the prior will as executor. Helfrich v. Yockel, 143 Md. 371. In this last-mentioned case, speaking through Judge Pattison, this Oonrt said: “The .right conferred upon ¡the appellant by the will, as first executed, and withdrawn from him by the codicil, to.serve as executor, and to receive commissions for his services as executor when rendered by him, cannot, we think, be regarded as an interest in the property and- estate of the testator entitling'him to caveat the codicil.”
The question of the appellant’s right, in his capacity of trustee under the prior will, to maintain the caveat proceedings, presents more difficulty.
There is no statute in Maryland describing or specifying the persons who may caveat wills, hut this Court has passed upou the question in a number of eases, and the general rule deducible from thes'e decisious 'is that any person having an interest in the property of the testator in the event the will is' annulled has the right to caveat his will. Safe D. & T. Co. of Baltimore v. Devilbiss, supra; Home for Aged v. Bantz, *241 106 Md. 147; Helfrich v. Yockel, supra; Brewer v. Barrett, supra; Munnikhuysen v. Magraw, 57 Md. 172. And the right exists whether the interest of the caveator arises from his relationship to the decedent, .as in the ease of an heir, or is acquired under the provisions of a prior will, as in the case of a legatee or devisee under a prior will. In re Estate of Mary J. de Garmendia, 146 Md. 47. And the. same rule exists, by virtue of statutes or decisions, in practically all the other states. See authorities collected in the notes in L. R. A.. 1918 A., 447 et seq., and Ann. Cases 1917 C, 906 et seq. See also 40 Cyc. 1241 et seq.; Joseph on Contest of Wills, 5; Alexander's Commentaries on Wills, vol. 3, page 2036; Schouler on Wills, vol. 2, page 846.
It appeai-s, then, that a legatee or devisee under a prior will has, and an executor has not, iu Maryland, sufficient interest iu the testator’s property to caveat a subsequent will which lessens or destroys that interest. In which class shall a trustee under a prior will be placed 1 There is, according to the weight of authority, a clear distinction between a trustee, as that term is usually understood in the law, .and an executor or -administrator. 11 R. C. L., par. 4, page 21; 23 C. J. 1170-1171; In re Hibbler's Estate, 78 N. J. Eq. 217, affirmed in 79 N. J. Eq. 230. “An administrator is sometimes spoken of as holding the estate in his hands in trust. Wrongdoers are sometimes held to be trustees in order to effect equity in particular casos, and so an office is spoken of as a trust. * * * But an administrator cannot be considered a trustee in the sense in which the words are ordinarily used.” Conway v. Arminger, 11 R. I. 116, 117. In the case of In re Hawley, 104 N. Y. 261, the Court, in distinguishing between them, said: “To constitute a testamentary trustee it is necessary that some express trust be created by the will. Merely calling an executor or guardian a trustee does uiot make him such. Every executor and every guardian is, in a general sense, a trustee, for he deals with the property of others confided to his care; but he is not a trustee in the sense in which that term is used in courte 'of equity and in the *242 statutes.” And in Cornwall v. Todd, 38 Conn. 443, 444, it was held that the word ‘trustee,’ as used in statutes requiring personal property in the hands of a trustee to be assessed in the town in which such trustee resides, does mot include an executor or administrator as such, during settlement of the estate, and before distribution. See also In re Anderson’s Estate, 5 N. Y. Leg. Obs. 302, 303; Leonard v. Haworth, 171 Mass. 496; Words and Phrases, vol. 8, page 7132. We have found no case in Maryland, or elsewhere, in which the right of a trustee under a prior will to caveat a subsequent will has been specifically passed upon, hut our predecessors in the case of Munnikhuysen v. Magraw, supra, discussed in some measure the rights which a testamentary trustee has regarding his •testator’s will. In 'that case the orphans’ court had set'aside tire- testator’s wil‘1, and the appellant some time later filed a petition asking that the will he probated and established. In passing upon his right to maintain ■ the petition the Court said:
“If it be true that this appellant has no other interest than as creditor of the alleged testatrix; we are of the opinion he has no such interest in the question, whether the will was good or had, as entitles him to controvert tñe action of the orphans’ court about it. He must have some interest under the will to give him standing in court, to contest or defend it. Hoffer v. Stonestreet, 6 Md. 303. It is true that he has pressed his right to' have the or der of the orphans’ court set aside in his petition ;amd in his brief in this Court, especially on the ground' of his being a creditor of the estate; 'and he has laid little'stress on the fact that by the will, as he has set it out' in his petition, large property, real and personal,, was left to him in trust for Emily H. Magraw. He does not allege in hite petition that he has renounced that trust. He does not state that he has renounced the executorship. He does not state whether he has or has not renounced the trust. He distinctly asserts it as created by the will. If he has not renounced it, he 'has such an interest as to justify his interference in. this wav, * * *; for the title to the property real *243 and personal, so- devised and bequeathed.'to- him in. trust, is ■ in him.” It is true, as stated, in the appellees’ brief, that the -trustee in the above case was seeking to establish his testator’s will, but the court certainly intimated that his interest as trustee was sufficient to either “contest or defend,” and the reason given was because “the title to- the property;, real and personal, so devised -and bequeathed to him in trust, is in him.” • .
• In Stewarts Estate, 107 Iowa 118, cited with approval by this Court in Helfrich v. Yockel, supra, the court, in holding that an executor under a prior will could not caveat a subsequent -will, said, inter alia, “It is claimed, however, by apn pellants, that an executor has, by virtue of bis office, a prop-erty interest in the personal estate. Any such interest is a mere naked trust upon which no such right as that here claimed 'can be predicated. An executor, as such, unlike a trustee, whose office is created by the will (italics ours), is clothed with no discretion. His duties and authority, fixed by law, make him hut a channel through which the property passes to those entitled by the terms of the instrument.”
These authorities establish the difference which exists between a trustee, clothed with the title 'and charged with the mlaniagement and control of the trust property, on the one hand, and an executor with his limited rights and duties on the other, and the chief .element of that 'difference is that the interest of the trustee in the trust property is held to be of a decidedly more substantial nature than is the interest •of an executor in the property of his decedent.
In addition to the above, this Court, in the case of Munnikhuysen v. Magraw, supra, and the Iowa court, in Stewart’s Estate, supra, both strongly intimated that a trustee under a prior will would have sufficient interest in the testator’s property to caveat a subsequent will which deprived him of that interest.
La the case at bar the prior will of the testatrix gave the appellant the legal title to all the estate of the testatrix, except $2,000. He was to collect the rents, issues and profits, *244 and manage and control -the property; he was 'authorized, in his discretion, to sell all or 'any piart of ilt, and to invest and reinvest the proceeds of any such sales1; and he was further directed to determine the proportions in which the income from tire trust estate was to he divided between the three beneficiaries of the trust,. Aside from complete ownership, it is difficult to imagine a case in which a person could have more sweeping power's, wider discretion, or a greater interest, than was given the appellant by the will of November 8th, 1923, and the codicil of November 9th, 1923, and, in our opinion, the interest thus given was sufficient to give the ap^ pellant the prima facia right to caveat the subsequent will of April I7lth, 19'24. The order of the orphans’ oonrt dismissing his caveat will accordingly he reversed.
Order reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion, costs to be paid from the estate.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- M. TILGHMAN JOHNSTON, Individually and as Executor and Trustee, vs. J. McKENNY WILLIS, Executor, Et Al.
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