Chertkoff v. Lyon

4 Balt. C. Rep. 825
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 825 (Chertkoff v. Lyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chertkoff v. Lyon, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 825 (Md. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

FRANK, J.

This case,was tried before the Court without a jury.

On December 28th, 1923, the defendants conveyed certain property on Etting street in Baltimore City to the plaintiff, and took in part payment therefor a purchase money mortgage in the amount of $3,000, dated December [826]*82628th, 1923, and recorded in S. C. L. Liber 4127, folio 156. This mortgage contained the usual fire insurance clause. On the same day, the plaintiff conveyed the property to Messrs. Eox and Schwartz, subject to the purchase money mortgage, the latter assuming performance of all the covenants of the mortgage. Thereafter, Messrs. Fox and Schwartz executed a second mortgage upon the said property to Ida Fax. Fox and Schwartz subsequently conveyed the property, subject to the mortgages, to John B. Broom, who did not, however, in the deed to him formally assume responsibility for the payment of the mortgages.

Upon the conveyance of the property to Fox and Schwartz policies of fire insurance, containing the standard mortgagee clause, were by them taken out and delivered to the defendants herein as mortgagees. When these policies expired some three years later, Broom, who was then the owner of the property, secured and delivered to defendants new policies which contained the standard mortgagee clause in favor of the defendants herein and of said Ida Fax, second mortgagee.

On June 17th, 1927, while Broom was the owner and in possession of the said premises a fire occurred. Nobody connected with this ease seems to have known of the fire at or near the time of its occurrence, except Broom and the attorney for .Mrs, Fax who had placed the policy with the fire insurance company. The loss was adjusted and Broom obtained from the insurance company a draft for $500, payable to the order of himself, the defendants herein as first mortgagees, and Ida Fax, as second mortgagee. Upon the direction of Mrs. Fax’s attorney, Broom took the draft to Bobert II. Lyon, who was acting for all the defendants herein and, upon being questioned by him, Broom assured him, as Mr. Lyon stated on the witness stand, that all repairs had been made and that the property had been restored to a condition better than that before the fire. Broom denied making this statement to Mr. Lyon, but admitted that he did say to him that, prior to the fire, he, Broom, had made improvements to the property at a cost in excess of $500. The repairs were in fact never made and the property remained in its damaged condition.

Mr. Lyon, having satisfied himself in this way, but in no other way, that the repairs to the property had been made, on behalaf of all of the defendants, endorsed the draft, told Broom that it was necessary to get the endorsement likewise of Mrs. Fax, and turned the draft over to Broom. He testified that, had he not believed that the repairs had already been made, he would not have so endorsed or delivered the draft. Broom took the draft to Mrs. Fax’s attorney and delivered it to him. The attorney gave to Broom his own check for $328.50, retaining $171.50 of the amount of the draft in payment of overdue mortgage notes under the second mortgage, with interest, and $15 Court costs, together aggregating that amount. Broom used the $32S thus turned over to him for his own purposes, including, as he testified, the payment of some of the bills for repairs made to the property prior to the fire.

Throughout this whole period, the defendants had insisted on the liability of the plaintiff under the purchase money mortgage and had notified him of numerous defaults, all of which apparently were made good by some one else that the plaintiff, until the last default, presently to be referred to. The plaintiff had invariably sent the notices received by him to Fox and Schwartz.

Finally, Broom defaulted and the defendants notified the plaintiff that he would have to pay their mortgage debt, or there would be a foreclosure of the first mortgage. Instead of making payment of the mortgage, the plaintiff preferred to purchase it, and have it assigned to his nominee, for his account and benefit, and, accordingly, he paid the principal and interest and received an assignment, without recourse, of the principal mortgage note, an interest note and the mortgage itself, all in the name of his nominee. At the time of the assignment, he asked for the insurance policies and these were assigned to him, without, however, any statement being made to him as to the fire above referred to, the settlement therefor or the turning over to Broom of the settlement draft as above recited.

The plaintiff thereupon procured the foreclosure of the purchase money mortgage, had to buy the property in [827]*827himself at the foreclosure sale and incurred a substantial loss upon the whole transaction. Shortly after he procured and paid for the assignment of the mortgage, as above described, he learned for the first time of the fire and of tile payment of the $500, as above described.

The plaintiff brings this action against the defendants upon the common count for money lmd and received and upon special counts setting forth the. obligation of the defendants to account to and to allow him for the sum of $500.

Any mistake of parlies, growing out out the fact that the assignment of the mortgage was made to another person than the plaintiff, was expressly waived by stipulation of the parties. The plaintiff’s rights to recover herein is based upon a rule of law, which is well stated in two citations made by Chief Judge Boyd in Ms opinion in the case of Seidewitz vs. Sun Life Insurance Co., 144 Md. 508, 514, as follows: “In Tiffany on Heal Property (2nd Ed.) 2458, Sec. 617, Mr. Tiffany, after slating the law if there is no provision in the mortgage requiring the mortgagor to insure the premises, says, ‘If, however, the mortgagee insures the property on account of the mortgagor, or by his request, or at his expense, because the latter fails to comply with his covenant to insure, the proceeds of the policy must be applied on the mortgage debt.’ In 19 R. C. L. 405, par. 184, the writer, after referring to where the mortgagee insures his separate interest at his own expense and for his own benefit, says: ‘However, a different rule obtains if the insurance has been effected at the request or by the authority of the mortgagor and at his expense, or under circumstances that would make him chargeable with the premium. In that case he is entitled to the benefit of the proceeds thereof, and to have them applied in extinguishment of his debt, although this doctrine may be altered by provisions of the policy itself, providing for subrogation of the insurance company to the rights of the mortgagee and showing that only the interest of the mortgagee was designed to be insured.’ ”

In the note in 11 A. L. R. 1297, it is stated that “the mere fact that the mortgagor has paid or is liable for the insurance premium has been held sufficient to require the proceeds of an insurance policy taken out by the mortgagee to be applied as a payment on the mortgage, where there is no stipulation in the policy for subrogation in favor of the insurance company of the rights of the mortgagee upon payment of the policy” and Pendleton vs. Elliott (1887), 67 Mich. 496, is quoted as authority for the statement that the mortgagor’s “right in this respect does not depend upon the fact that he has paid for the insurance, nor whether the mortgagee procured the insurance intending to look to the mortgagor for reimbursement of the premium; but it depends upon whether he is liable to the mortgagor therefor under any agreement express or implied.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Seidewitz v. Sun Life Insurance Co. of America
125 A. 78 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1924)
Frontier Mortgage Corp. v. Heft
125 A. 772 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1924)
Wm. Skinner & Sons' Ship-Building & Dry-Dock Co. v. Houghton
48 A. 85 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1900)
Heinz v. Twenty-Sixth German-American Building Ass'n
51 A. 951 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1902)
Callahan v. Linthicum
43 Md. 97 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1875)
Pendleton v. Elliott
35 N.W. 97 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chertkoff-v-lyon-mdsuperctbalt-1928.