Baltimore High Grade Brick Co. v. Amos

52 A. 582, 95 Md. 571, 1902 Md. LEXIS 174
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 52 A. 582 (Baltimore High Grade Brick Co. v. Amos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore High Grade Brick Co. v. Amos, 52 A. 582, 95 Md. 571, 1902 Md. LEXIS 174 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed by the appellant against the appellees to recover the sum of $13,682.85, being the price of certain bricks sold by it to the appellee, Amos, and used in the erection of buildings on forty-nine leasehold lots of ground in Baltimore city.

The bill as amended sought to subject to the payment of the plaintiff’s claim both the fee-simple and leasehold estate in the lots of ground, and to that end to set aside the leases of the lots and three mortgages thereon from the appellee Devilbiss to the appellees Spalding and Singer, and the assignment by Singer of his interest in the mortgages to the appellee *583 Savage, and also to have Spalding, Singer and Amos all declared to be personally liable for the plaintiff’s claim.

Those of the charges contained in the bill, which it is necessary for the purposes of this opinion to notice, are first, that Amos was the true owner of the leasehold estate in the lots and that Devilbiss in whose name the title stood had no interest in them, but held them solely for the benefit of Amos; secondly, that Spalding and Singer the owners of the fee in the lots and Amos the true owner of the leasehold were jointly interested as partners in the erection of the houses and were the persons for whose benefit the bricks had been purchased and used ; thirdly, that the three mortgages on the leasehold from Devilbiss to Spalding and Singer were fictitious and fraudulent and without consideration, but were executed in pursuance of a fraudulent scheme on the part of Spalding, Singer, Amos and Devilbiss to procure the lots to be improved in value by the erection of the houses thereon at the expense of the appellant and other creditors who furnished materials for building the houses; fourthly, that Savage the assignee of Singer had such actual and legal knowledge of the true nature of the mortgages as to make his title subject to the equities of the appellant.

The appellees Spalding, Singer and Savage all answer denying the charges of the bill so far as made against them respectively and asserting that the mortgages were bona fide and not fictitious or fraudulent and were made for the consideration therein set forth. Amos and Devilbiss also answer but they both admit that the former was the true owner of the leasehold in the lots and that the latter held the title thereto merely as an accommodation and for the benefit of the former. Devilbiss goes further and asserts in his answer that he was entirely ignorant of the contents and character of the leases, mortgages, agreements and other papers, relating to the lots or the erection of the houses thereon, which were from time to time signed by him, and that he signed them merely as a matter of accommodation to Amos, who was his employer, upon the assurance of Amos made through his foreman Sion *584 aker that no trouble would arise from such signing. He further averred that he had no interest whatever in the title to the lots or in the erection of the houses thereon other than that he had been employed to work on the houses at daily wages as a carpenter, and that so far as he was concerned the recitals of the three mortgages were fictitious and untrue.

The appellant called all of the appellees as its witnesses except Spalding who went upon the stand as a witness for the appellees, so that we have before us the versions of the transaction given by the various participants in it. The testimony, with the exhibits produced in evidence, fills nearly five hundred pages of the record, and we cannot in this opinion do more than state the conclusions at which we have arrived after carefully examining it, with a brief reference to some of the more material parts of the evidence upon which they are based. We find the substantial facts of the case to be as follows:

Spalding and Singer owned as tenants in common a large lot of vacant ground at the corner of Twenty-second street and the York turnpike on the outskirts of the improved portion of Baltimore City. For the purpose of marketing this property to advantage they divided it into forty-nine small lots about fifteen feet wide, upon each of which they placed a ground rent of from $120 to $150 per annum, and entered into a bonus building operation with Amos to improve the leasehold estate in each of the lots by the erection of a dwelling thereon.

As an inducement to him to undertake the improvement of leaseholds charged with such heavy rents they agreed to donate to him as a bonus a certain sum of money for each house, amounting in all to $40,000, to be paid in seven instalments as the work on the houses progressed. They also agreed to advance further sums toward the payment for materials to be used in the construction of the houses, amounting in all to $35,800. The $40,000 bonus was to be an out and out contribution by Spalding and Singer toward the erection of the houses and was not to be returned to them, but *585 the $35,800 was to be in the nature of a loan to be secured by mortgages upon the houses. Amos was unwilling to become lessee of the forty-nine lots because of the personal liability he would have to assume under the covenants in the leases for the payment of the rents, and so it was agreed that the leases creating the rents might be made to Devilbiss who had consented to act as lessee and was not financially responsible.

There was nothing new or unusual in having the leases in a bonus building operation made to one who is a figure head instead of to the real lessee, in order to enable the latter to avoid, the continuing responsibility for the payment of the rent which the law imposes on the lessee under his covenants. The evidence shows that has long been customary in bonus building in Baltimore City and it is a practice which might naturally be expected to arise out of the state of facts incident to such transactions. If in the present case after the leases had been made to Devilbiss he had assigned the leasehold to Amos before Amos began to build the houses thereon and contract debts for that purpose, the professed purpose of using Devilbiss as the formal lessee would have been fully accomplished, and the arrangement would not have injuriously affected the rights of any third parties.

At the time when this building operation was undertaken the mechanic’s lien law was still in force in Baltimore City and it became important for the parties to the operation to devise or arrange some plan by which mortgages, to secure the, $35,800 to be advanced tow'ard the purchase of building materials, could if possible be placed upon the property in such manner as to become an immediate lien and thus take precedence of any liens of mechanics and material men which might otherwise attach to the property before the monny was advanced. Prior to the passage of the Act of 1882, ch. 471, a mortgage could have been put upon the lots, before the commencement of the buildings, to secure advances of money thereafter to be made to the builder and its lien would have attached to the property from the date of its execution, but since the passage of that Act the case has been different.

*586 Sec. 2 of Art.

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 582, 95 Md. 571, 1902 Md. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-high-grade-brick-co-v-amos-md-1902.