Chew v. Tome

48 A. 701, 93 Md. 244, 1901 Md. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 14, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 48 A. 701 (Chew v. Tome) 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
Chew v. Tome, 48 A. 701, 93 Md. 244, 1901 Md. LEXIS 27 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the equity side of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County; and brings up for review the action of the Court in overruling exceptions filed to a sale made under certain proceedings • in execution of a power of sale contained in a mortgage, and ratifying said sale.

The record shows that on the 23rd of August, 1898, by virtue of a power of sale contained in a mortgage from one Martha J. Wightman to Jacob Tome, dated the 16th of July, 1895, Peter E. Tome, the attorney named therein, sold at public sale the mortgaged property and reported Philemon W. Chew, the appellant in this case, as the purchaser thereof at the price of $7,000. Before the time limited in the order nisi for the ratification of the sale, the purchaser so reported filed his petition in the cause asking to be made a party thereto for the purpose of excepting to such ratification. Having, been accordingly, by order of Court, made a party, he filed exceptions, stating as the grounds thereof that “the title to said property is not good;” that “the record-title to said property is not good; that “the title to said property is derived through a deed of trust from. George R. W.' Marshall to Erastus M. Chapin and Philip A. Darnielle, trustees, dated August 24th, 1878, and recorded among the land records of Prince George’s County * ■ * and a sale thereunder by said trustees without their filing with the clerk of the Court in which said deed of trust was recorded a bond conditioned for the faithful performance of the trust by said deed reposed in said trustees;” that the bond mentioned in the exception just set out, given by the trustees therein named, was not “a bond with sureties ;” and that large parts of the “said property remained unreleased of record from the opera *249 tion of a deed of trust dated February 12th, 1892, and recorded among” the land records of the county. Nothing further appears in the record in regard to the ground of exception last mentioned and it therefore, requires no notice.

Alleged defect of title is the only ground of exception urged by the purchaser, the appellant here, to the ratification of the sale in question. In passing upon these exceptions it is not necessary for the Court to pass definitely upon the title to the property involved in this controversy and pronounce such title either good or bad ; but only to find whether it is free from reasonable doubt, and not open to such question as “ought to induce a prudent man to pause and hesitate” about taking it. This doctrine announced in the text-books and supported by authorities, has been fully recognized and adopted by this Court in the case of Gill v. Wells, 59 Md. 492. The clearness and force with which it was there expounded and illustrated renders unnecessary here more than a reference to that case. We may make, however, as peculiarly apt here, a quotation which there appears from the case of Dobbs v. Norcross, 24 N. J. Eq., 327, in which it is said: “Every purchaser of land has a right to demand-a title which shall put him in all reasonable security, and which shall protect him from anxiety, lest annoying, if not successful, suits be brought against him, and probably take from him or his representatives land upon which money was invested. He should have a title which shall enable him not only to hold his land, but to hold it in peace ; and if he wishes to sell it, to be reasonably sure that no flaw or doubt will come up to disturb its marketable value.” In the case of Gill v. Wells, supra, the purchaser was defendant in. a suit for specific performance of a contract of sale of land, but in reason and justice there can be no difference between the measure of protection which the Courts will afford to a purchaser under such a contract, and one who comes before the Court in the circumstances in which the appellant here comes. As a further proposition bearing upon this case, and one that needs only to be stated, a purchaser is entitled to get what has been sold to him and what he has agreed to pur *250 chase. Now the record here contains, in the place of testimony taken, an agreement as to the facts upon which arise the questions made by the exceptions which the purchaser has filed, and which are here being considered ; and it appears therefrom “that a good record-title to the property in these proceedings mentioned was offered and sold.” This was, therefore, one of the express terms upon which the appellant became the purchaser of the property in question ; and without which, it is but reasonable to believe, he would not have purchased, or if at all, not at the price named in the’report of sale. We will now examine the state of the title to which the appellant objects as it appears from the record.

The appellees have not offered, nor attempted to show, any other than a record-title to the property sold under the mortgage proceedings to the appellant. -The record shows that the fee-simple title to the property in qu'estion prior to 1861 became vested in one John P. Marshall. The first thing that appears of record in reference to the property after John P. Marshall became so possessed of it is a deed of trust from one Geo. R. W. Marshall to Erastus M. Chapin and Philip A. Darnielle of the District of Columbia given to secure a loan to said Márshall from one Thomas Weaver, and authorizing the trustees named to sell the property in default of payment of the money loaned as in the said-deed provided. This deed was dated 24th of August, 1878; and in June; i879,the property embraced therein, a part of’which was the’ property in question, was sold by the trustees by virtue of the powers vested in them by the deed. The sale so made was reported to and ratified by the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County. Before proceeding to make this sale the trustees named in the deed of trust filed a bond, which was approved by the clerk of the Circuit Court, conditioned that the said trustees “shall well and truly keep and perform all and each of the covenants by him entered into in said contract” and signed by them with one surety.

The deed of trust made reference to the land here in question as being “the same lot of land of which John P. Ma'rshall *251 died seized and possessed and which at his death descended to George R. W. Marshall.” The grantor in the deed of trust, George R. W. Marshall, was a brother of the John P. Marshall to whom reference was made; and they had a sister, Susan AB. Marshall, who died unmarried and without issue prior to the execution of this deed, leaving George R. W. Marshall her only heir at law and also the only heir at law of John P. Marshall if he died intestate, unmarried and without issue. The title to the property in question" which the appellant would take upon the ratification of the sale under which he purchased in this case comes m a course of devolution from George R. W. Marshall and depends as á record-title upon the title that he had. To establish the title claimed by him as heir of John P. Marshall an essential fact to be known is that the latter died intestate and leaving no children. It appears from the record that the death of John P. Marshall is not a known or ascertained fact. It has not been made a matter of adjudication by any tribunal whose province it was to ascertain and adjudge it;' and it is not established by any direct evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 701, 93 Md. 244, 1901 Md. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chew-v-tome-md-1901.