Cacy v. Slay

96 A. 690, 127 Md. 493, 1 A.L.R. 764, 1916 Md. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 A. 690 (Cacy v. Slay) 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
Cacy v. Slay, 96 A. 690, 127 Md. 493, 1 A.L.R. 764, 1916 Md. LEXIS 25 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A bill in equity was filed in this case by the appellant against the executors of Richard D. Hynson, deceased, and Edwin L. Maslin. It alleges that the appellant executed a mortgage to Edwin L. Maslin on May 17, 1889, to secure the sum of $600.00, for which five promissory notes were given, one for the principal, payable two years after date, and the other four being interest notes, one of which was payable every six months. The mortgage was on two farms in Kent County and one in Queen Anne’s County. The bill further alleges that the loan was secured through Richard D. Hynson, who was at the time the appellant’s attorney and drew the mortgage; that, the plaintiff paid the loan to said Hynson, who was also attorney for Maslin, and he believed that the mortgage had been released by said Hynson, who told him that he would see’that it was released, and who had received every dollar of the principal and interest secured by the mortgage; that in the early part of 1914, he attempted to get a loan on the farm in Queen Anne’s County, when he was informed by the attorney examining the title that the Maslin mortgage remained a lien of record on said farm, and although twenty-one years old and paid by the appellant to- Mr. Hynson, a loan was refused until the record was cleared of *495 said mortgage; that he saw Maslin who said he did not remember the occurrence, and informed the appellant he would have to consult his attorney before he could tell him anything more about it, but he had been paid in full by Richard D. Hynson, and subsequently informed the appellant’s attorney that he had made an assignment of the mortgage to Mr. Hynson and he could not remember any of the particulars concerning it; that he was advised by his attorney that he would have to apply to the administrators of Richard H. Hynson, who died in 1907, and ask them to release the mortgage; that he saw William M. Slay, one of the administrators, and was informed by him that they would not release the mortgage; that he was in ignorance of any claim made by said Hynson in his lifetime, or by his administrators until informed by Mr. Slay that they claimed the debt was due; that he denies any and all indebtedness claimed by the administrators, but avers that if there ever was any such indebtedness due by him to said Hynson, it had been fully satisfied and discharged by payment to said Hynson in his lifetime; that if said Hynson or his administrators had any cause of action against him for any of the indebtedness claimed to be due under the mortgage, which he does not admit, such cause of action or suit did accrue or arise over twenty years before the filing of the bill and he prays the benefit of the statute of limitations; that said Hynson never made any demand upon him in his life time for any part of the debt or interest from the time it was paid until his death in 1907, and none of the defendants as administrators made any claim or demand upon him until the refusal of said Slay to release the mortgage, who stated that the estate would claim that it was a just debt due by appellant.

The bill prays: (1) That the mortgage lien be removed “as a blot” from his title to the farm in Queen Anne’s County, and from the lands in Kent County; (2) that a decree be passed ordering and directing the administrators to execute a valid release; (3) that in the event of their refusal to release the mortgage a trustee be appointed to release said *496 mortgage lien of record in Queen Anne’s County, and (4) for general relief. The answer denies most of the material allegations of the bill, including the alleged payment of the mortgage.

The appellant was called as a witness in his own behalf, and exceptions were filed to most of the questions in chief asked him, on the ground that he was incompetent under the statute to testify. He is, under section 3 of Article 35 of the Code, incompetent to testify “to any transaction had with, or statement made by, the testator, intestate, ancestor, or party so incompetent to testify, either personally tor through an agent since dead, lunatic or insane, unless called to, testify by the opposite party,” etc. There can, therefore, bo no doubt that most of his evidence — practically all of it that is material — must be excluded. It is said by the appellant’s solicitors that he can testify as to admissions by Mr. Maslin, as he is still living, but the difficulty about that is that the bill alleges that Mr. Maslin had told appellant’s attorney that he had assigned the mortgage to Mr. Hynson. If that be correct, and there is nothing to show that it is not, the administrators of Hynson can not be bound by statements or admissions made by Maslin after he assigned the mortgage. Why the appellant did not call him as a witness is not shown, but he was not called, and if he knows any facts material to the case, the Court is left in the dark as to his knowledge. The plaintiff’s evidence as to what occurred between him and Mr. Slay throws but little light on the question, although he was competent to testify as to that. Mr. Slay is not incompetent as a witness because he is one of the administrators of Mr. Hynson, as the appellant contends. At one time such was the statute, subject to certain exceptions, but that has long since been changed. The difficulty is that Mr. Slay has no personal knowledge of the original transaction, and he does not know whether or not the mortgage was in fact paid. He did testify that he as administrator had this mortgage in his possession for some time, but can not now find it and does not know what became of it. Then his testi *497 mony as to what he found in Mr. Hynson’s check hook, in answer to the general interrogatory, was not excepted to and has some relevancy to the matter in issue. He said: “And perhaps I had as well give the literal copy of Mr. Hynson’s check-book stub, which is as follows: Man. 23, 1893. To Chas. T. Westeott, for Maslin mortgage, $600.00, and interest paid by Miss Julia Cacy, $18 — $618.00.’ ” That looks .as if Mr. Hynson made out his check to Mr. Westeott for that mortgage, but whether the check was delivered and paid, or, if it was, why he paid Mr. Westeott for it, or whether Mr. Hynson was taking an assignment of the mortgage or paying it off, we are not informed. Mr. Westeott may have been acting as attorney for someone in receiving it, and Mr. Hynson may have been so acting in paying it. Apparently, Miss Julia Cacy had at least $18.00 in it.

The difficulty is that we have no evidence before us to show that the appellant ever paid the mortgage, for when his testimony on that subject is excluded, as it must be, there is nothing to sustain his bill in that respect. Mr. Hynson died June, 1907 — fourteen years after the transaction above referred to, when his check book shows he made out a check to Mr. Westeott, and only seven years before this bill was filed. If that memorandum is accepted as evidence to show that Mr. Hynson obtained the mortgage, it is also evidence of the fact that it was not paid up to that time, although nearly two years overdue. But there is nothing to show that the' appellant did not make some payment or payments on the interest or principal within twenty years before the bill was filed. So far as we know, he might have done so shortly before the death of Mr. Hynson. As was said in Brown v. Hardcastle, 63 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 690, 127 Md. 493, 1 A.L.R. 764, 1916 Md. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cacy-v-slay-md-1916.