Boynton v. Remson

104 A. 527, 133 Md. 101, 1918 Md. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 A. 527 (Boynton v. Remson) 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
Boynton v. Remson, 104 A. 527, 133 Md. 101, 1918 Md. LEXIS 118 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The farm of Charles E. Bemson, containing about three hundred acres of land and situated near Annapolis was subject in 1915 to a mortgage for $25,000. Interest on the mortgage debt and taxes on the property being in arrears to the amount of about $1,500. Mr. Bemson borrowed the money to meet those charges from Mr. G. Clifton Sunder-land, of Annapolis. In order to obtain the sum required Mr. Bemson gave his promissory note to Mr. Sunderland for $2,500 secured by a second mortgage on the farm, and the note and mortgage were used by Mr. Sunderland as collateral security for a loan to himself of the same amount from the Annapolis Banking and Trust Company, the proceeds of which he deposited to Mr. Bemson’s credit in that institution. As previously agreed, Mr. Bemson at once paid $1,000 out of the fund to Mr. Sunderland for providing the sum of $1,500' thus left available for the use to which it was intended to be applied. Mr. Sunderland paid one-half of the $1,000 bonus to Mr. George T. Melvin, who as President of the Annapolis Banking and Trust Company had received and submitted to the Board of Directors the application for the loan, and had individually agreed, for an equal share of the bonus, to bear an equal part in financing the purchase of the *103 property in case a foreclosure became necessary. These transactions were completed on December 1st, 1915. On the same day a check for $1,500, signed by Mr. Bemson, was mailed from the hank to the representative of the first mortgagee, to he used for the payment of interest and taxes, hut it was returned to the hank with the statement that it would not he accepted. The check thereafter remained at the hank subject to Mr. Bemson’s disposal. It was not until March 2nd, 1917, however, that he had the check canceled and made other use of the fund against which it was drawn.

After declining to receive the check referred to the first mortgagee made an effort to exercise the power of sale in his mortgage, hut this was restrained by preliminary injunction, and the mortgage was shortly afterwards paid out of the proceeds of a new mortgage loan of $30,000 which Mr. Bemson obtained from Mr. J. Henry Strohmyer, of Baltimore, by paying therefor a commission or bonus of $3,000 in addition to $895 interest in advance for six months. A further mortgage loan of $8,559.40, for which Mr. Bemson appears to have paid a bonus of $1,000 to the lender, was then procured from; Mrs. Etta L. Boynton, of the Oity of Washington. The proceeds of this loan were applied to the payment of judgments and taxes amounting to over $5,300, unsecured debts of about $200, an attorney’s fee of $750 and other expenses incident to the two mortgage transactions just mentioned, both of which were conducted for Mr. Bemson by his counsel, Mr. Frederick B. Bhodes. As a result of the payment of the $25,000 mortgage, and the existing judgment indebtedness, out of the funds realized from the Strohmyer and Boynton loans, the Sunderland mortgage became the first lien on the Bemson farm. The two subsequent mortgage loans were effected by Mr. Bhodes in the belief that a release of the Sunderland mortgage could be obtained on tne ground that the object for which it was. given had failed and the fund it produced for Mr. Bemson, had not as yet been utilized for any purpose. Efforts were accordingly made by Mr: Bhodes, as counsel for Mr. Bemson, to accomplish that result, but *104 while an understanding was reached with Mr. Ridgely P. Melvin, as attorney for Mr. Sunderland and the hank, that the mortgage would be released upon terms which appear to have been quite moderate, yet the sum agreed upon was not paid, and eventually, as already stated, the $1,500 fund derived from the mortgage loan was appropriated by Mr. Rem-son to his own use. All of the mortgages had then matured and were in default. An extension of time on the S'trohmyer mortgage was secured, but proceedings were begun for the exercise of the power of sale in the Boynton mortgage by Mr. Rhodes, as attorney therein named for that purpose, his professional relations with Mr. Bemison having previously terminated. In the advertisement of the sale thus undertaken no reference was made to the 'Sunderland mortgage, but it was stated that the property would be sold subject to a prior mortgage of $30,000. The sale was advertised to be held at the Court House door in Annapolis at 12 o’clock M. on April 3rd, 1917. When Mr. Sunderland learned of this proceeding he consulted his counsel, Mr. Ridgely P. Melvin, who represented also .the bank, which held the Sdnderland mortgage by assignment as collateral security for the $2,500 loan, and, with the consent of Mr. Remson, it was determined to exercise the power of sale in that mortgage so as to anticipate the Boynston sale by which the first mortgage was apparently to be ignored. The Sunderland mortgage was thereupon assigned by the bank to Mr. Melvin as its attorney, who, after filing his bond as required by law, advertised the mortgaged property for sale at the 'Court House door in Annapolis on April 3rd, 1917, at 10:30 o’clock A. M. A suit was brought by Mrs. Boynton to restrain the sale under the first mortgage on the ground that it was invalid, but at a hearing on bill and answer, shortly before the day of the sale, a preliminary injunction was refused. At the Sunderland sale the property was sold for $40,000, and at the Boynton sale an hour and a half later it was bought by the same purchaser for $11,000, subject, in terms, to the $30,000 mortgage held by Mr. Strohmyer. Announcement was made at the Sunderland sale, by *105 an attorney for Mrs. Boynton, that a purchaser at that sale would not obtain a good title, while at the Boynton sale it was publicly stated by Mr. Melvin, representing the first mortgagee, that the property had already been sold.

Exceptions to both sales were filed by Mr. Remsen on the ground that, because of the confusion arising from the conflicting sales and announcements to which we have referred, his property was sold in both instances at a substantial sacrifice of its real value. Mrs. Boynton excepted to the ratification of the first mortgage sale upon grounds which will be presently stated and considered. Mr. Melvin, as assignee of the Sunderland mortgage, excepted to the Boynton sale, but the question raised by his exceptions need not be determined. The purchaser also tiled exceptions seeking a decision upon the validity of the first mortgage and the ratification of the sale under which it might be found that he would obtain a good title. Testimony was taken in support of the various exceptions, and by agreement- the same evidence was treated as being available in the injunction suit relating to the Sunderland mortgage, that case and the exceptions to the sales being brought to final hearing at the same time.

The grounds of objection urged against the sale under the Sunderland mortgage, apart from the question as to the adequacy of the price, are that the consideration mentioned in the mortgage is usurious and fictitious, and that the third mortgage loan was made upon the assurance by tbe mortgagor that he had received no part of the loan secured by the first mortgage and that it- would he released.

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Bluebook (online)
104 A. 527, 133 Md. 101, 1918 Md. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boynton-v-remson-md-1918.