Bauernschmidt v. Maryland Trust Co.

43 A. 790, 89 Md. 507, 1899 Md. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 43 A. 790 (Bauernschmidt v. Maryland Trust Co.) 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
Bauernschmidt v. Maryland Trust Co., 43 A. 790, 89 Md. 507, 1899 Md. LEXIS 47 (Md. 1899).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action on the case for deceit, brought by the plaintiff, John Bauernschmidt, against the defendants, The Maryland Trust Company and others, to recover damages for loss alleged to have been sustained by said plaintiff, by reason of a certain alleged false representation made by them. The suit was brought in the Superior Court of Baltimor City. In the first count of the declaration the allegation is, that the defendants, intending to deceive the plaintiff, issued and offered for sale certain coupon bonds of the Alta Telephone Company, which was incorporated under the laws of West Virginia, and represented to the plaintiff, and caused to be printed on each of said bonds the following words: “ It is hereby certified that this bond is one of a series of six hundred bonds for five hundred dollars each *509 for the security of which the within mortgage was executed.” And the plaintiff, as he alleges, relying on and believing the said representation of the defendants, was induced to invest the sum of thirteen thousand dollars in said bonds. The sum so invested, he alleges, he lost, because the bonds were worthless.

The second count is based upon an alleged conspiracy entered into by the defendants to defraud the plaintiff by making a false representation, to-wit: “That said bonds were secured by mortgage,” in order to induce him to purchase the bonds mentioned in the first count. To both counts of this declaration the defendants, or so many of them as appeared, pleaded the general issue.

The issues raised, therefore, by the pleading, are: First, were the bonds described in the declaration as purchased by the plaintiff, bonds belonging to the series mentioned in the certificate relied upon, and, second, were said bonds secured by mortgage ?

During the course of the trial there were twelve exceptions taken by the plaintiff to the exclusion of evidence, and one to the instruction of the learned Judge below, that upon the pleadings and evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

Under these circumstances it will be necessary to ascertain by an examination of the record what testimony was admitted and what was excluded.

The plaintiff offered in evidence the mortgage from the Alta Telephone Company to the defendant Trust Company, by which mortgage the bonds in question were secured. There was no objection to its regularity in any respect. The forty bonds were next offered, each bearing upon its back the certificate signed by the defendant Trust Company, as set forth in the first count of the narr. In order to show the insolvency of the Alta Telephone Company the plaintiff offered the original papers from the 'Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, together with a duly certified copy of the docket entries in the case of “Andrew G. Steelman, *510 plaintiff, against the Alta Telephone Company, defendant,” by which it appeared, among other things, that this company was largely indebted and had very small assets, that the holders of its bonds (not including the plaintiff) participated in the distribution of its assets — the main portion of which consisted of two pieces of leasehold property, located in Baltimore City, and included in said mortgage. None of the foregoing testimony, nor the formal proof of certain matters, such as the incorporation of the Alta Telephone Company, was objected to, and it was all admitted, including the proof of the law of West Virginia in regard to the organization of corporations, and the holding of meetings of stockholders for the election of directors.

At this stage of the case, however, the plaintiff called the witness Scott, secretary of the defendant Trust Company, and proposed to ask him whether he “ had any knowledge of what property the Alta Telephone Company had in 1896, after its formation?” But the Court refused to permit the question to be put to the witness. It is true, as suggested by the defendant’s counsel, that it does not appear by the record what the answer of the witness would have been, nor what the plaintiff expected to prove by the witness, yet, “ if the question was in itself proper and pertinent, it was quite unnecessary * * to state the purpose for which it was offered.” County Commissioners v. Gantt, 78 Md. 290. Was the question here objected to proper and pertinent ? We think clearly it was not. There is no averment in the narr. that the plaintiff was injured by any false representation in regard to the property owned by the Alta Telephone Company in 1896, or at any other time. For, as we have already pointed out, the representations relied on are the statements contained in the certificate signed by the Maryland Trust Company, as trustee, which we have transcribed in the former part of this opinion, that the bonds were secured by mortgage — and that each of them was one of the series of bonds thereby secured. It was not contended in this case, nor do we suppose it could be *511 successfully contended, that the certificate here relied on can be construed as constituting a warranty of the sufficiency of the mortgaged premises as security for the bonds mentioned in the mortgage. But unless the contention go to this extent, we do not see in what respect this knowledge of the defendant Trust Company or its officers is material. The certificate identifies the bonds on which it is placed, as one of the scries of bonds mentioned and described in the mortgage, and that it was secured by mortgage. The evidence offered by the plaintiff himself and admitted without objection, shows that upon its face this instrument was duly executed, and it further appears that it was in fact duly recorded before the plaintiff made his purchase of the bonds in question, and that no injury resulted to the plaintiff or to any other bondholder by any defect in the mortgage, or because of the alleged failure to record it before the bonds were issued.

What we have said applies to all the exceptions. None of the testimony offered and excluded tended to prove the allegations relied on in the declaration.

But in addition to what we have said it is clear, for other reasons, that the ruling complained of in the fourth exception is without error. The plaintiff was asked what Mr. Stineman, as agent of one of the defendants, said at the time the witness sold the bonds to plaintiff, and upon objection plaintiff’s counsel stated he would follow up this testimony by showing that Mr. Stineman bought the bonds from Atkinson, one of the defendants, and would follow it up by showing that Stineman made certain statements to the plaintiff on the faith of statements made by Bowdoin, an officer of the Trust Company. Now, in the first place, it does not appear from the record what this testimony was, which was to be followed up nor what statements were made by the witness to the plaintiff, nor on what statements made by Bowdoin, the statements made by the witness were alleged to be founded. This is entirely too vague to con *512 stitute a valid offer — even if it did not show upon its face that the testimony offered is mere hearsay.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 790, 89 Md. 507, 1899 Md. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauernschmidt-v-maryland-trust-co-md-1899.