Bunch v. Dick

Decision Date27 March 1980
Docket NumberNo. 84,84
Citation287 Md. 358,412 A.2d 405
PartiesE. Patricia BUNCH et al. v. Delbert R. DICK, Pers. Rep. of the Estate of Ernest Delbert Dick.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

George E. Krouse, Wheaton, for appellants.

William Blanton McDanald, Rockville, for appellee.

Argued before MURPHY, C. J., and SMITH, DIGGES, ELDRIDGE, ORTH, * COLE and DAVIDSON, JJ.

COLE, Judge.

In this case we are asked to decide whether an election by a surviving spouse to take a statutory share from the estate of a deceased spouse is effective where such election is filed after the death of the surviving spouse.

This dispute arose in the Orphans' Court for Montgomery County on exceptions filed by the daughters of Grace B. Dick to the first and final account of the estate of Ernest Delbert Dick. The orphans' court filed an order overruling the exception to the account from which an appeal was noted to the Court of Special Appeals. Prior to proceedings in that court this Court on its own motion issued a writ of certiorari to the Court of Special Appeals.

The facts are undisputed. Ernest Delbert Dick died on July 25, 1977 survived by his wife, Grace, and two sons from a previous marriage, R. Elden Dick and Delbert R. Dick, the personal representative. Ernest executed a will leaving a life estate in the family home to his widow and the residue of his estate to his son, Delbert. On September 9, 1977, the widow, Grace, signed a sworn document entitled "Election To Take Intestate Share." The final two sentences of the document provide as follows:

Therefore it is my desire to renounce the will and receive as soon as is practical a widow's share of my late husband's total estate.

I am placing my signature on this request, having it duly notarized and I am leaving it in the good hands of my daughters, E. Patricia Bunch and Marjorie B. Buehler, to execute should I be unable to do so myself.

Consonant with the concluding sentence, the document was entrusted to her daughter Marjorie Buehler. On September 29, 1977 Grace Bell Dick died. On that date the instrument was yet in the hands of the daughter and had not been filed. Subsequently, the writing was delivered to counsel who filed it on November 28, 1977.

The lower court concluded that "a timely exercise of the right of election to take an intestate share of her late husband's estate was not made by Grace Bell Dick." The effect of that ruling was to exclude the estate of Grace from participating in the estate of Ernest because Grace's original interest was a mere life estate which was extinguished upon her death.

The appellants, daughters of Grace, contend that an election to take a statutory share is valid where it is signed by the surviving spouse and acknowledged so long as it is filed within the statutory period 1 notwithstanding the intervening death of the surviving spouse. Appellants argue that the right of election is complete when the renunciation is reduced to writing and delivered to another person to perform the manual task of filing. The appellee, personal representative of the estate of Ernest, maintains that to be valid, a document purporting to be an election to take an intestate share must be filed prior to the death of the surviving spouse.

The answer to the question raised in this appeal is found in Maryland Code (1974) §§ 3-204 and 3-207 of the Estates and Trusts Article. Section 3-204 provides in pertinent part:

The right of election of the surviving spouse is personal to him. It is not transferable and cannot be exercised subsequent to his death.

Section 3-207(a) provides:

An election to take an intestate share of an estate of a decedent shall be in writing and signed by the surviving spouse or other person entitled to make the election pursuant to § 3-204, and shall be filed in the court in which the personal representative of the decedent was appointed.

It is clear that under § 3-207 three elements are required to occur before a valid election can be made. There must be a writing renouncing under the will, signed by the surviving spouse and filed in the court which appointed the personal representative of the decedent. Here, the parties agree that Grace executed a proper instrument and that she died prior to its being filed. The appellants contend that the act of filing is only ministerial and the failure to file during the lifetime of the surviving spouse should not invalidate Grace's election. However, our reading of the statute makes it clear...

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