Marx v. Reinecke

Decision Date04 December 1924
Docket Number17.
Citation127 A. 480,146 Md. 603
PartiesMARX v. REINECKE.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Motion for Modification of Opinion Overruled February 12, 1925.

Appeal from Orphans' Court, Baltimore County.

"To be officially reported."

Proceeding by Elizabeth Reinecke against Charles Marx, executor, and Charles Marx, individually. From orders requiring defendant to turn over assets of estate, defendant appeals. Orders affirmed, and order of Court of Appeals suspending attachment rescinded.

Argued before BOND, C.J., and PATTISON, ADKINS, OFFUTT, and PARKE JJ.

John S Strahorn, of Annapolis, and G. Clem Graetzel, of Baltimore (Frank Driscoll, of Baltimore, on the brief), for appellant.

William P. Cole, Jr., of Towson (Lawrence E. Ensor, of Towson, on the brief), for appellee.

BOND C.J.

This is the third appeal on this particular controversy. The decisions on the two previous appeals are reported in 142 Md 342, 120 A. 876, and 145 Md. 311, 125 A. 541. The first appeal was from rulings of the circuit court for Anne Arundel county on the trial of an issue which had originated in the orphans' court of Baltimore county on a complaint that Charles Marx, as executor of the estate of John Marx, Sr. deceased, was concealing and failing to account for additional assets of the estate, and a petition that he be required to account for them then. The verdict of the jury was against the executor. He contended on the trial that the question of right to the assets in controversy had been previously determined in his favor, and the administration finally closed afterwards by the passing of his final account. The appeal from the decision against him--that is, the first appeal--was dismissed because of delay in transmission of the record.

The second appeal was from orders passed by the orphans' court in pursuance of the decision on the issue sent to the circuit court. On August 29, 1923, an order was passed declaring that the assets were wrongfully withheld by the executor, as the jury had found, and on September 11, 1923, an order nisi was passed directing the necessary accounting by the executor and providing for his removal if he should fail to make it. Marx filed an answer repeating his contention that the question of additional concealed assets had been determined in his favor at an earlier time during the course of his administration; and in due course, on September 27, 1923, the orphans' court passed an order which made final in all respects the order nisi of September 11, 1923, removed Marx as executor, and appointed in his place Lawrence E. Ensor. On October 18, 1923, Marx filed a petition for a rescission of the orders of August 29, 1923, September 11, 1923, and September 27, 1923, and that petition was refused on the same day. These several orders were the subjects of the second appeal, and it was decided by this court then that the orphans' court, notwithstanding the final accounting by the executor, still had jurisdiction to require an accounting of additional assets, if there were any, and to send to the circuit court for trial an issue on the existence of additional assets in the hands of the executor; and, further, that if at the time of an application for such an issue there was in force an order determining that the particular fund in controversy belonged to the executor, he should have availed himself of that fact by resisting the sending of the issue and appealing from the order allowing it if his resistance was unsuccessful--which the appellant failed to do--and that he could not avail himself of it after the issue had been allowed to go to the circuit court for trial.

After the decision on this second appeal, which was announced on February 29, 1924, the orphans' court, on the petition of Lawrence E. Ensor, the administrator, on March 18, 1924 ordered Marx to deliver over all property of the decedent still in his hands, with books and papers, to his successor, and authorized the administrator to employ counsel and bring suit on the executor's bond if he failed to comply with...

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