Berry v. Foley

48 A. 146, 92 Md. 311, 1901 Md. LEXIS 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 A. 146 (Berry v. Foley) 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
Berry v. Foley, 48 A. 146, 92 Md. 311, 1901 Md. LEXIS 111 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Page, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In May, 1875, the appellee, as trustee under the last will and testament of Emily McTavish, being seized and possessed of certain property, with power to make such changes of investment and reinvestmentment, as should seem to him advantageous and proper, filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, in which it was represented, that in the exercise of his power and his discretion to make changes of investment, he had sold to a certain Henry Blake the lessee of the property, the lot of ground which is the subject of this proceeding, with the annuity or ground rent issuing thereon of $325, per annum for the principal of the rent capitalized at six per cent, that is for the sum of $5,416.67, and that it was a fair price and the best that could be obtained, the lot being then vacant and unimproved.

It was further represented, that when the lot was leased to Blake, the petitioner had “ agreed, in writing,” that the lessee- should have the privilege of buying out said rent, at any time within three years from the date of said lease,” and that the sale reported to the Court “ was made in pursuance of and in conformity to his said agreement.” The petitioner also set forth that the approval of’the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City had been given, as appeared by its order, a copy of which was filed with the petition; and thereupon prayed that the Court would confirm the sale thus reported, and direct an execution and delivery of a deed to Blake, “ upon the receipt by the petitioner, of the purchase-money.”

*320 After an order nisi, and the usual publication thereof, on June 9, 1875, the Circuit Court passed its order finally ratifying and confirming the sale.

On May 19, 1875, twelve days after the passage of the order nisi, Blake agreed to sell, and did sell the property to the appellant Berry; and executed his bond of conveyance that day, wherein the agreement between the parties was stated in substance as follows : The appellant was to give for the property $25,000, of which $10,500, was paid in cash, $5,416.67 was to be paid on the 9th of June, 1875, “ or as soon thereafter as a good deed in fee for the said property was made and delivered by said Blake to said Berry clear of all encumbrances and the residue thereof was payable at different periods thereafter.

In consideration thereof Blake was to “ grant, or cause and procure to be granted to the appellant the said premises in fee-simple,” clear of all incumbrances and further that until such deed was delivered or until default was made “ in the payment of the said sum of $5,416.67, the appellant was to be permitted to hold the property, &c.”

It may be observed in passing, that this agreement clearly shows, that both of the parties to it, contemplated that the appellant on complying with the obligations imposed upon him, should receive a title clear of the ground rent and of all other incumbrances ; the sum of $5,416.67 therein referred to being the amount that Blake had agreed with Foley should be the purchase price of the ground rent, upon the payment of which he was to be entitled to a deed in fee.

The sale by the trustee, at the date of the bond of conveyance, had been reported to the Circuit Court, ratified nisi, and the time for the final ratification would expire on the 9th of June. If it were ratified on that day, as in fact it was, the appellant ran no risk in agreeing to make the payment on that day, or “ as soon thereafter as a deed in fee was made and delivered,” for, in that event, Blake would be in position to enable him to make the conveyance clear of the rent.

The object of the parties in deferring the payment of the *321 $5,416.67 until the time of the final ratification of the sale, it is clear, was to put Blake in that position so that the appellant should receive a deed, conveying the property in fee. For some reasons, of which we have not been informed, notwithstanding the sale was finally ratified, neither Blake nor Berry paid the purchase-money to the appellee. The appellant paid, however, all the residue of the purchase-money to Blake that the bond called for. and upon the day of the last payment, that is to say, on September 23, 1876, in fulfillment of the bond of conveyance, Blake conveyed the property to the appellant, subject, however, to the ground rent, this deed particularly states, that Blake has a right “to buy out and extinguish” the rent on the payment of the sum of $5,416.67, and conveys to Berry all Blake’s interest, “ and especially the right to obtain a deed of the property released from the ground rent, &c.”

While, however, the appellee has not received this sum from either Blake or Beriy, the appellant has paid and the appellee has received a sum equal to the annual interest thereon, that is to say, $325, in semi-annual installments, from the time of his purchase of the property down to the filing of the petition in this case. On the 3rd of June, 1899, or twenty-six years after the final ratification of the sale of the property by the trustee, Foley, the appellant filed a petition in the said Circuit Court, wherein, after setting out the facts substantially as stated here, he claimed the right to be substituted as purchaser of the said ground rent of $325 per annum in the place of Blake, and to be entitled, upon the payment of $5,416.67 and all arrearages of interest, to a deed in fee-simple of the lot of ground, and prayed that it may be so ordered.

In his answer thereto, the appellee admits Blake’s right to redeem the ground rent, but charges that such right ought to have been exercised within three years of the date of the lease; that the sale to Blake was reported to and ratified by the Court, but that Blake subsequently “abandoned his intention of purchasing said rent and failed to comply with the terms of said agreement.” He denies that the appellant has *322 become entitled as assignee to be substituted in his place as purchaser, and charges that the appellant, having full knowledge of Blake’s right to purchase within three years, has paid the ground rent for twenty-four years, and never made any attempt to exercise the right of redemption. After testimony had been taken, the proceedings were submitted to the Court, who thereupon dismissed the petition, and from this decree the appellant has appealed.

There can be no question that the Court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter touching the confirmation of the sale under the provisions of the Acts of 1870, ch. 370, and of 1874, ch. 428. These provided that “ no sale of real estate made by any trustee by virtue of any power or appointment contained in any deed or. will, shall be valid unless the same shall be confirmed by the Court as in the case of sales made by trustees appointed by the Court.”

By virtue of these provisions, it was the duty of the trustee to report the contract of sale with Blake to the Court, which was invested with the same powers with respect to such sales, as it would have had if the sale had been made by a trustee appointed by the Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 146, 92 Md. 311, 1901 Md. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-foley-md-1901.