Bilbrey v. Strahorn

138 A. 343, 153 Md. 491, 1927 Md. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 9, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 138 A. 343 (Bilbrey v. Strahorn) 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
Bilbrey v. Strahorn, 138 A. 343, 153 Md. 491, 1927 Md. LEXIS 66 (Md. 1927).

Opinions

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant is the purchaser of record of mortgaged property at a foreclosure sale made by an assignee of the mortgage for foreclosure under a power contained in it; and he has excepted to the ratification of the auditor’s account of distribution of the purchase money because, as he contends, he was improperly required to pay the assignee certain additional amounts in order to obtain a postponement of a resale which had been ordered and advertised, and a repayment of those amounts should be required in this proceeding and should be shown in this account. The trial court overruled the exceptions, and the appeal is from that action.

The mortgage was made by a Miss Mary W. F. Speers, on property in Anne Arundel County, and according to tho finding of the court at a previous stage of the proceedings, on her exceptions to the sale, and a statement by the appellant in a letter in the present record, it was bought in for her by him. Testimony on his behalf shows that, shortly before the time fixed for the resale, the purchaser’s rights were transferred to a corporation, the Atlas Realty Company ; but its name was not substituted in the report of sale.

*493 The purchase price at the original sale was $13,625; and Miss Speers excepted to the ratification of the sale, her exceptions were overruled, and she appealed to this Court, but the appeal was dismissed without hearing. The purchaser was unable to pay the money to complete the purchase, and later, upon petition of the assignee to the court, a’ resale was ordered and was advertised for December 30th, 1924. Shortly before that date, attorneys applied to the assignee for a substitution of the Atlas Realty Company as purchaser, and for ss postponement of the resale to give them a further opportunity to complete the first sale. The name of the corporation was not substituted, but arrangements for a postponement of the resale went forward, and the assignee furnished the attorneys a statement of certain expenses incurred, and of demands for payments for services in connection with the proceedings, and it was arranged, subject to the confirmation of the mortgagee, that upon a total payment of $5,000 the resale should be postponed. The mortgagee agreed to the postponement upon condition that interest be paid on the purchase price during the delay caused by Miss Speers’ exceptions. Appellant’s counsel reached the place of sale with the $5,000 only a few minutes before the time fixed for resale, and after some discussion paid the money and took two receipts for it; and the resale was postponed for eleven days. One receipt acknowledged payment of the total of $626, made up of auctioneer’s fees and advertising expenses, for the resale, and amounts for expenses on the first sale, and amounts for the assignee and attorney, Mr. Strahom, of $169.50 for one-half of commissions on the second sale, $250 as fee for services in the litigation on Miss Speers’ exceptions, and for services in connection with the resale, $50, or one-half of the fee specified in the mortgage. The second receipt was for $4,374, or the remainder of the sum of $5,000 paid on account of purchase price and interest. The appellant’s testimony is that his attorneys agreed to pay the items amounting to $626 and the interest under protest, and under duress, because of their need of the postponement of the sale, which was obtainable only on making those payments. The *494 testimony for the appellee denies that there was any protest • or disagreement. There was no provision in the mortgage for the payment of expenses on a sale which was advertised but not completed, and this fact, the appellee says, moved him to seek to cover some of the items, at least, by agreement before stopping the resale. The appellant later paid the remainder of the full purchase price and interest, as demanded, that is, paid the full purchase price over and above the interest and $626 demanded, and also paid a final extra amount of $14 for stamps which he contends was likewise paid under protest; and the first sale was completed. It is to1 the account distributing that full purchase price and interest that the exceptions are now filed.

The exceptant also filed a petition separately praying for an order for a refund of the amounts claimed, but no action appears to have been taken on the petition, the only order passed having been that overruling the exceptions, and the present appeal being solely from the overruling of exceptions to the auditor’s account.

The trial court concluded that, as the account was one for the distribution of purchase money only, and the purchaser was not concerned in that distribution and made no objection to it, except in so far as he objected to the charge of interest distributed, he could not have such relief as he prayed, by way of exceptions to that account. Whether his claim for a refund of amounts collected other than interest was well founded the trial court did not decide. The majority of this Court have come to the conclusion that the appellant had a well-founded claim for these amounts, and that a. refunding should have been ordered and an account of it stated in combination with the account of the distribution of the purchase money. Judge Adkins and the writer of the opinion for the Court have not shared in the conclusion.

In the opinion of the majority of the judges two principles which lead to this conclusion have been overlooked. The first sale had been duly reported to the' circuit court for ratification and for distribution of the proceeds, under section 9, of article 66, of the Code, and it is provided by that *495 statute that after a report of a foreclosure sale under a power “there shall be the same proceedings on such report as if the same were made by a trustee under a decree of said court.” And this Court in Patapsco Guano Co. v. Elder, 53 Md. 463, said: “The object of this provision of the Code was to confer upon courts the same jurisdiction, and to direct that the same proceedings should be had in sales made under a power in a mortgage, as if such sales had been made under a decree of the court.” Beetem v. Garrison, 129 Md. 664, 672. The Court is of opinion that, under this provision, all proceedings after the report of sale are proceedings by and under the authority of the court, so that in a resale the court becomes the vendor and the assignee ordered to make the resale becomes the agent or trustee of the court executing its orders. And in this connection, it is pointed out that section 239 of article 16 of the Code, under which the Court understands the resale to have been prayed for and ordered at the risk of the first purchaser, provides that the court “may direct the property purchased to be resold, at the risk of such purchaser, upon such terms as the court may direct.” This latter section refers in words only to sales by trustees appointed by the court in the first instance, but it has been held to apply to sales under powers as well. Middendorf v. Baltimore Refrigerating Co., 117 Md. 17, 24.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 A. 343, 153 Md. 491, 1927 Md. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilbrey-v-strahorn-md-1927.