Cromwell v. Sharon Building & Loan Ass'n

152 A.2d 548, 220 Md. 317, 1959 Md. LEXIS 510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1959
Docket[No. 272, September Term, 1958.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 152 A.2d 548 (Cromwell v. Sharon Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Cromwell v. Sharon Building & Loan Ass'n, 152 A.2d 548, 220 Md. 317, 1959 Md. LEXIS 510 (Md. 1959).

Opinion

Prescott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Ida Cromwell, an elderly and illiterate Negro woman, her two daughters and eight grandchildren decided, in 1956, to place new shingles on the roof of her small home and to make certain repairs to the porch. It turned out to be a fateful and unfortunate undertaking for them. Ida contracted with a company, Home Modernizers, now out of business, to do the work. The shingles on the roof were to cost $695; the repairs to the porch $1125. In order to pay for the same, two loans were made, both being financed by the Baltimore Federal Savings and Loan Association (Baltimore Federal). Neither the record nor the briefs make clear the details of the financing, but Ida and her daughters gave a promissory note to Home Modernizers for the sum of $1523.18, dated August 20, 1956, which was discounted by Baltimore Federal, with recourse against the Home Modernizers. Merhle Sacks, the operator of Home Modernizers, approached Albert F. Reisfeld, an attorney, a real estate operator, and the owner of the Strand Company, which he operated as a brokerage concern, in regard to obtaining a loan to be secured by mortgage on the Cromwell property in order to pay off the note held by Baltimore Federal. The Strand Company got a commitment from *320 the appellee, Sharon Building & Loan Association, Inc., (Sharon), to make such a loan in the amount of $1650, and obtained from Ida Cromwell, a written agreement to pay Strand 5% of the .loan as a brokerage fee and guaranty fee for guaranteeing the payment of $400 of the loan. Sharon was represented at the settlement by William Reisfeld, an attorney, who was the father of Albert Reisfeld, the owner of the Strand Company. Two men, probably Merhle Sacks and a helper, picked up Ida Cromwell and took her to the office of William Reisfeld to effectuate a settlement.

Ida testified she had never seen the men before; she had no idea why she was going to Baltimore; she signed two papers without knowing what they were or why she was signing them; she could not read them and she did not ask that they be read or explained to her. On the contrary, William Reisfeld, in his deposition, stated that the papers were fully explained to her before she signed them.

At the settlement on September 8, 1956, Sharon gave its check for the sum of $1650 to Ida, who, in turn, indorsed the same. William Reisfeld deposited the check in his account and made disbursement. He disbursed $82.50 to Strand Company in accordance with Ida’s agreement with that company, $47.50 as an entrance fee, $15 as a president’s fee and $15 as an inspection fee to Sharon; and, after payment of other costs and taxes, he paid the balance of $1315.05 to Baltimore Federal in payment of the note held by it. There was a small additional amount due Baltimore Federal to make payment in full, which was absorbed by Home Modernizers.

The mortgage given by Ida to Sharon was payable in monthly installments, which were made until the middle of 1957 when she became in arrears and foreclosure proceedings were filed, but, upon her raising and paying $200, were discontinued. The monthly payments were resumed and continued until February, 1958, when, again, they halted, due this time to the fact, as stated by Ida, she had “runned out of money.”

Foreclosure proceedings were again instituted and this time carried to a conclusion. After the sale, the appellant here filed exceptions to its ratification, which were overruled and the *321 sale finally ratified and confirmed, no appeal being taken from that order.

The appendix fails to show what was a reasonable and proper charge for repairing the roof and the porch, but the chancellor does state, in colloquy with counsel, that Home Modernizers “has done her out of a lot of money.”

This is an original suit, entirely independent of the foreclosure proceedings above mentioned, to annul and set aside the mortgage on the grounds that its execution was induced by misrepresentation, fraud, undue influence and mistake.

The appellant urges that an equity court should vacate this “unfair and unconscionable mortgage where one of the parties is incapable of understanding its contents. 1 ” It is, of course, true that under proper circumstances equity courts will annul instruments because of the unfair and unconscionable methods used in obtaining their execution. In the case at bar, the plaintiff has failed to show any word or action of the appellee that was unfair or unconscionable. If there were such conduct, it was by others than the appellee, insofar as disclosed by the record. Relief has been prayed on the ground that the mortgage was obtained through “fraud, undue influence and mistake”; yet, when the testimony was taken, it disclosed none of the three. The appellant’s incredible version of the execution of the mortgage was that she was asked by two unknown men to go to Baltimore to sign some papers; she consented and went there, where she signed two papers (she actually signed, at least, four) ; that she did not know what she was signing, or why, and had no idea as to what the papers related; and that she could not read, no one read them to her and she did not request that they be read. It is difficult to conclude that she was entirely frank and fair with the court when she gave this statement; she did not testify explicitly to any fraud, undue influence, misrepresentation or deceit on the part of the appellee or any of its agents. The situation at the *322 time of the execution of the mortgage disclosed to her the necessity of inquiry and investigation if she did not understand the nature and details of the business at hand. The information was available and obtainable by a simple inquiry or a request that the instruments be read. Under circumstances of this nature, knowledge of a fact, or the context of an instrument, is imputed to a party, although lacking in education and business affairs, who would have acquired actual knowledge of the fact or of the contents of the instrument, if she had made the inquiries that it was reasonable for her to have made, and, therefore, negligent for her not to have made. Golden v. Kovner Bldg. & Loan Ass’n, 156 Md. 167, 173, 143 A. 708.

We come now to the question of the mental capacity of the appellant. She does not claim that she lacked mental capacity by being bereft of reason due to lunacy or insanity, but that due to ignorance she failed to have sufficient mental capacity to “understand the terms of the mortgage.” There have been many cases in Maryland wherein this Court has been requested to cancel deeds due to the mental incapacity of the grantor. Quite naturally, in some cases they have been set aside, and, in others they have not. A reading of these cases establishes a rather simple rule. Literacy is not a prerequisite for the owner of land to have full dispositive power thereover. The necessary mental capacity of the grantor in a deed is that he be able to understand and comprehend its nature and natural consequences, the property with which it deals, and to act with judgment and understanding in respect to it. And the crucial time concerning such capacity is the time of the execution of the deed. Mead v. Gilbert, 170 Md. 592, 603, 185 A. 668; Wise v. Swartzwelder, 54 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
152 A.2d 548, 220 Md. 317, 1959 Md. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cromwell-v-sharon-building-loan-assn-md-1959.