Blanch v. Collison

199 A. 466, 174 Md. 427, 1938 Md. LEXIS 283
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 18, 1938
Docket[No. 3, April Term, 1938.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 199 A. 466 (Blanch v. Collison) 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
Blanch v. Collison, 199 A. 466, 174 Md. 427, 1938 Md. LEXIS 283 (Md. 1938).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal here is from a decree of the chancellor which sustained the demurrer to an amended bill of complaint, and dismissed the suit, with costs to the defendants.

A certain Richard W. Ward owned some years ago a parcel of land of sixty square perches in Anne Arundel County, and became indebted to Nicholas G. Collison in the sum of $100. To secure the indebtedness, Ward executed a mortgage whereby he conveyed the land to Collison by deed dated May 22nd, 1899, and duly recorded. Later, and after the maturity of the mortgage debt, Ward, who was then inter-married with Sarah E. Ward, executed a deed, dated July 30th, 1904, which purported to convey the land to his wife, Sarah E. Ward. The deed was recorded. On December 29th, 1905, Richard W. Ward and Sarah E. Ward, his wife, are alleged to have executed a second mortgage on the same land to Nicholas G. Collison to secure an extension for two years of the payment of the original debt, *430 which had been reduced to $85, and for which a second note of even date therewith for $85 and payable to Collison two years after date was given by the husband. The mortgage was recorded. During the year 1906, Richard W. Ward and Sarah E. Ward, his wife, who were negroes, moved from Anne Arundel County, where they had been living, to Baltimore City. Before they left, it is alleged that they entered into an agreement with Collison whereby he undertook to act as the agent of the mortgagors for the purpose of managing the mortgaged premises and other property, and of collecting the rents and applying any collections to the credit of the then existing mortgage debt. The bill of complaint further charges that Nicholas G. Collison did collect the rents and profits from 1906 until the time of his death on May 30th, 1908, and that the amounts, so charged to have been received, were in excess of the principal and interest due on the mortgage debt, but the mortgage and the debt secured were not released. It will be observed that the agreement set up charges that the receipts were to be applied on the “then existing mortgage debts,” and that the later allegations are in reference to a single mortgage debt, without any attempt to identify which mortgage debt is meant. The conflicting nature of these statements introduces an element of uncertainty and indefiniteness, which are inconsistent with good pleading.

Nicholas G. Collison died testate, and letters testamentary were granted on June 9th, 1908, by the Orphans’ Court of Anne Arundel County to David W. Collison, his son and executor. The further allegations are that David W. Collison, in his representative capacity, instituted foreclosure proceedings in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County under the power contained in the first mortgage deed, but that the mortgage note filed with the statement of the mortgage claim is the note of $85, dated December 20th, 1905, for which the second mortgage deed was given. Again, there is indefiniteness with respect to the matter of the mortgage debts, *431 which arises from the facts that there is no averment nor disclosure of the amount of the debt claimed and as set forth in the statement of the mortgage claim, and that there is no inconsistency in filing the evidence of a second mortgage debt under a second mortgage lien on the same land which is being foreclosed by virtue of a power of sale contained in the first mortgage deed. After the application of the proceeds of sale to the payment of the first mortgage lien, the lien of the second mortgage or other subsequent mortgage liens would be enforced according to their respective priorities against the residue, if any, of the proceeds. Code, art. 66, sec. 12.

The chancellor treated both mortgages as being for the same indebtedness, which by the time of the execution of the second mortgage had been reduced from its original amount of $100 to $85. The allegations of the bill leave the matter factually ambiguous, since it appears from the recitals in the second mortgage that the mortgagee had agreed to extend the payment of the first mortgage for a period of two years in consideration of the execution of the note for $85 and of the mortgage to secure the payment of this second note. The bill of complaint should not have left the matter so doubtful, although this vice is not vital, as it does not control the decision. 19 R. C. L. sec. 235, p. 452; 41 C. J. sec. 203, p. 387.

Without further comment on the indefinite quality of the bill of complaint, the statement of its averments will be resumed. It is set forth that, under the foreclosure proceedings mentioned, which were had pursuant to the power of sale contained in the mortgage deed, the land in question was sold at public auction to David W. Collison, the highest bidder, for the sum of $75; and the sale so made was reported and filed in the cause and an order nisi was passed, but the sale has never been ratified, and after the report nothing further appears to have been done in the equity cause. Rieman v. Wagner, 74 Md. 478-480, 22 A. 72; Stoll v. Smith, 129 Md. 164, 98 A. 530; Code, art. 66, secs. 9, 13.

*432 Since the death of Nicholas G. Collison in 1908, it is charged that David W. Collison has collected the income, rents, and profits of the land, which, it is said, have aggregated the sum of $1,700 in that time; and that, in addition, David W. Collison has been paid the sum of $8-00, as insurance for the destruction by fire, on March 13th, 1934, of a frame dwelling on said property.

Richard W. Ward died intestate on December 1st, 1934, and his widow, Sarah E. Ward, attempted to convey said land unto their daughter, Lula A. Blanch, by deed dated December 10th, 1935, and, on March 25th, 1936, the widow and mother died intestate. On April 20th, 1937, the daughter, Lula A. Blanch, was appointed by the Orphans’ Court of Anne Arundel County the administratrix of both her father and her mother.

The bill of complaint concludes with the statement that Richard W. Ward could neither read nor write, and that his wife, Sarah E. Ward, could read and write but little, and that neither understood anything about business or business affairs. In the absence of any allegation which charges either duress, mistake, deceit, misrepresentation, or any form of fraud, these last allegations are immaterial on demurrer. Nor, under the averments made, is the further statement that neither of the mortgagors was personally notified nor had knowledge of the mortgage foreclosure' proceedings of any legal consequence. Each of the mortgages contained the power of foreclosure on default of the mortgagors in any of the covenants of the mortgage deeds, and no notice is contemplated and required other than the proceedings begun and conducted in conformity with the terms of the mortgage and the statute. Code, art. 66, secs. 6-14; Cockey v. Cole, 28 Md. 276, 282; 19 R. C. L., sec. 419, p. 603; Dyer v. Shurtleff, 112 Mass. 165.

Again, both mortgages were on record and were unreleased, and the records of the Circuit -Court for Anne Arundel County showed the foreclosure proceedings under the earlier mortgage deed to have been conducted and carried to the point of a sale made and reported,

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Bluebook (online)
199 A. 466, 174 Md. 427, 1938 Md. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanch-v-collison-md-1938.