Judges: Boyd, Briscoe, Urner, Stockbridge, Adkins
Filed Date: 1/10/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Although the only order for an appeal in this record is: "Mr. Clerk: Please enter an appeal from the decree in this case dated the twenty-eighth day of March, 1922, to the Court of Appeals of Maryland," we understand it was intended to be from each of the three decrees of that date, which are in the record, and involve the same question. The three cases were argued together below and in this Court, and were practically treated as one. There were three cases in the lower court between the same parties known as Case A, Case B and Case C. This is the fourth appeal (counting the three in this record as one) which has been before us in connection with the transaction which was the origin of this controversy. One is reported as Manhattan Land Corporation v.The New Baltimore Loan and Savings Association,
Clarence C. Tracey arranged with the Manhattan Land Corporation to purchase from it three lots of ground at Mt. Washington for $3,500, upon each of which he was to erect a house to cost $6,500. As Tracey did not have the money, he was to borrow $19,500 — securing one-third by a mortgage of his wife and himself on each property, and the Manhattan Corporation agreed to take a second mortgage for the $3,500 on the three properties. He did borrow the money from the New Baltimore Loan and Savings Association, and on the 22nd of November, 1919, he and his wife gave a mortgage on each of the three properties for $6,500, and on the same date gave a second mortgage to the Manhattan Corporation for the $3,500 — that corporation having the same day conveyed the lots to Tracey and his wife. On the 13th of July, 1920, the mortgagors having defaulted in the covenants and conditions in the three mortgages to the loan and savings association, separate foreclosure proceedings were instituted for the sale of the mortgaged premises. Sales were made by John H. Richardson, who was appointed trustee, and reports of them were filed. Exceptions were filed by the Manhattan Corporation, but they were overruled and the sales were ratified. An appeal was taken by the Manhattan Corporation from those orders, but were affirmed by this court in the case reported in
"It was claimed by the appellant that the entire amount of the loan secured by the mortgage from Tracey to the appellee never passed from the appellee. If such fact be true, it does not, upon the facts of this case, affect the right of the mortgagee to foreclose the mortgage, there being, as we have said, a default in the covenants and conditions therein contained; but it may be that such fact should be considered in the distribution of the proceeds of sale."
The sales of the properties did not realize enough to pay the first mortgages in full, if the loan and savings association was entitled to the amounts named in the mortgages, less any payments made on them. The lower court found that the appellant had only paid $11,700 in all to Tracey, set aside the audits which had been made allowing the appellant payment in full, and directed the auditor to only allow $3,900, with interest and proper costs in each of the three cases, and to distribute the balance over and above the said allowances to the Manhattan Corporation. It is from these decrees that the appeals were taken.
The motions to dismiss the appeals are based on the alleged reasons: "First, because the appellant has no such interest in the subject matter as would allow it to appeal; second, because no injury has resulted to the appellant from the decrees from which an appeal is attempted to be taken." But, as will *Page 215 be seen later, the appellant has an interest, certainly to the extent of $1,700, and may sustain injury beyond that sum, if the decrees stand. The motions will therefore be overruled.
We will not stop to determine whether section 2 of article 66 is applicable to the appellant, as that question was not raised, and as its charter is not in the record, we are not informed as to just what sort of an association it is. It would seem that that section does not affect the transaction between it and Tracey. The case of High Grade Brick Co. v. Amos,
Three checks were offered in evidence. They are dated July 6th, 1920, drawn on the American Bank, Baltimore, Md., by the appellant, each payable to the order of Clarence C. Tracey, for $2,600. Each one has inserted in it what we understand to refer to the house and lot for which it was given. There is endorsed on each of the checks, "C.C. Tracey," "pay to the order of New Baltimore Loan and Savings Association, Christian F. Richter." There were some other checks offered of prior payments. Richardson said they took what he called a "bond" in each of the cases. They are bonds without sureties on them. One of them is in the record and the other two are said to be the same. It refers to the mortgage of Mr. and Mrs. Tracey to the appellant for $6,500, that the mortgage had been declared to be in default; that Richter has required the appellant to pay the balance due for the erection of the buildings, and that the appellant has consented to make said payment provided Richter *Page 218 executes the bond and deposits with the appellant $2,600 as security for the performance of his obligation. The condition is that Richter shall hold the association harmless from any loss or damage it may suffer or sustain by reason of its making the payment. It then states that Richter "hereby deposits" with the association the sum of $2,600 to be held as collateral security under that indenture, with power and authority in the association to appropriate said sum or any portion of it towards the payment of any loss or damage sustained or suffered by said association by reason of the making of said payment as requested by Richter.
Those checks were not presented to the bank, but were turned over to Richardson, and he said he got them from Richter and carried them back and re-deposited them to his credit. He said that originally Tracey was credited by the association with $19,500, from which $11,700 had been withdrawn. After the endorsements on the checks and the execution of the bonds, Richter was credited on the books of the appellant with the $2,600 in each of the three cases. Richardson testified, "According to his (Tracey's) arrangement with me, that I was to have control of it and deposit it where I pleased. I had it entered in the building association" — referring to the $19,500, and he also said that no checks could be drawn out without his sanction, under the arrangement with Tracey. Mr. Rusk and Mr. Tracey differ with him as to some of the details, but there is no such difference as seriously affects the transaction. The fact is, and cannot be denied, that the Manhattan Corporation understood perfectly that it was taking a mortgage of $3,500 on the three lots subject to a mortgage of $6,500 to the loan and savings association on each of them. It was understood by all the parties that the money loaned by the appellant was to be expended on the lots purchased of the land corporation, as shown in
For some reasons, it might have been better to have deposited the $19,500 originally in some bank and not leave it with the appellant, but under the circumstances of this case, where all of the parties were informed as to the material matters, and the appellant, the Manhattan Corporation and the Traceys were acting together, and Mr. Richardson was to control the fund in so far as necessary to protect the parties, as we have already decided in 138 Md., we can see no reason why that cannot be done. This case is not like that of High Grade Brick Company v. Amos, supra,
but is more like Edelhoff v. Horner-Miller Mfg. Co.,
In the High Grade Brick Co. v. Amos case, on page 600, it was said by JUDGE SCHMUCKER, "Of course if the appellant *Page 220
had actual knowledge of the true transaction between the appellees and of their real relation to each other when it sold the bricks to Amos, it acted with its eyes open in making the sale and cannot now be heard to complain that the transaction was fraudulent as against it." In this case there can be no doubt that all of the parties had knowledge of what was being done, and while it is true that the appellant could not appeal simply for Richter's benefit, it had actually paid out $1,700 to him and had credited him with the $7,800 (including the $1,700), in such way that it is the money of Richter, subject to the agreement he made with appellant, to whom Tracey had assigned it by means of the transfer of the checks to him. There is nothing to suggest that the appellant did not have the money in the bank on which it had given the three checks for $2,600 each, and, as they were re-endorsed to the appellant, it would have been an idle and unnecessary form for it to take the checks to the bank and then deposit them to its own credit. But under the Negotiable Instruments Act that is not necessary, even if it could not in equity have been regarded as an assignment, outside of that act. The checks were negotiable under section 22 of article 13, as section 22 expressly provides that an unqualified order or promise to pay is unconditional within the meaning of that act, although coupled with "1. An indication of * * * a particular account to be debited with the amount; or, 2. A statement of the transaction which gives rise to the instrument." First DentonNat. Bank v. Kenney,
By section 138 of article 13, "A negotiable instrument is discharged * * * when the principal debtor becomes the holder of the instrument at or after maturity in his own right." Richter had required the appellant to pay the balance of the money which was due for the erection of the buildings, and the appellant had consented to make said payment, provided Richter executed the bond and deposited the $2,600 as security as shown above, and he did deposit the checks for that amount in each of the three cases. So, while it may be *Page 221 that Richter will be entitled to all of the $7,800 less the $1,700 already paid to him, which is not now before us, the appellant owed Tracey that amount according to the evidence, as a part of the mortgage, or at least some part of it, and hence the decree directly and seriously affected it. The evidence certainly tends to show, if it does not conclusively show, that Richter had completed the three houses and there was still due him that amount.
If there is any question between the appellant and Richter as to any part of the $7,800 being due the appellant (outside of the $1,700), that is a matter between them, which we are not called upon to determine in this case, as Richter is not a party to it; but the Manhattan Corporation is not entitled to it, so far as the record shows. It follows that the decrees must be reversed.
Motion to dismiss appeals overruled, and decree in each casereversed, with costs to the appellant and cause remanded forfurther proceedings in accordance with this opinion. *Page 222
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