Cronise v. Clark

4 Md. Ch. 403
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedJuly 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Md. Ch. 403 (Cronise v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cronise v. Clark, 4 Md. Ch. 403 (Md. Ct. App. 1849).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

This case is brought before the court upon a motion to dissolve the injunction, and has been argued by the counsel of the respective parties.

It appears that on the 29th of September, 1847, a mortgage was executed by Elizabeth B. Abbott and William H. Y. Cronise and Mary 0. Gr., his wife, to the defendants, Clark & Mankin, to secure to the latter the sum of nine thousand dollars, due them from the firm of William H. Y. Cronise & Co., of which firm the mortgagor, William, was a member.

The mortgaged premises consist of real estate and ground rents in the city of Baltimore, bank stock and moneys, secured on mortgage, and the condition of the mortgage was that the same should be void, provided the debt thereby intended to be secured should be paid in twelve equal installments, at stipulated periods.

[405]*405Several of the installments having fallen due and remaining unpaid, and the mortgage containing the assent and agreement of the mortgagors provided for in the act of 1883, ch. 181, a petition was filed in this court in July, 1848, by the mortgagees, praying that a decree might be passed for the sale of the mortgaged premises, in conformity with the provisions of that act, for the payment of the installments of the debts then due, with the interest thereon, and a decree passed accordingly on the 8th day of that month, appointing a trustee, with authority to sell in case the installments due, with the interest and costs, should not be paid by a day limited for that purpose. The day having passed, and the money not being paid, the trustee advertised the property for sale, when the present bill was exhibited by Mrs. Cronise alone, asking for and obtaining an injunction to restrain him upon the several grounds therein stated.

The first is, that at the time of executing the deed of mortgage, the complainant was under the age of twenty-one years, as was known to her husband and mother, the other mortgagors, and as sho believes, to Clark & Maukin the mortgagees ; and that she has never, at any time or in any manner, ratified or confirmed or acknowledged the validity thereof.

Clark k Mankin, the only defendants who have answered the bill, deny that at the date of the mortgage they had any knowledge, nor have they now, that the complainant was at that time under age, and put her to the proof of her alleged0 infancy. And they say, that long since the date of the mortgage, and when, the defendants believe and charge, the complainant was of full age, if, indeed, under age at the making of the mortgage, she ratified, sanctioned and confirmed the same.

It must, of course, be perfectly clear, that if Mrs. Cronise was under the ago of twenty-one years when she executed this mortgage, it could not be binding upon her, and that unless sho has, since she attained tire legal capacity to contract, ratified her act in such a way as to give it legal efficacy against her, if it is capable of such ratification, she may now insist upon her incapacity; the petition of the mortgagees, upon [406]*406which they obtained the decree, having been ex parte, and she having had no notice of it until recently.

Mrs. Cronise charges not only that she was a minor at the time she executed the mortgage, but that she has never, at any time since, ratified and confirmed, or acknowledged the validity thereof. With respect to the averment of the minority of the complainant, at the date of the execution of the mortgage, the answer neither admits nor denies it, and puts her to the proof; but they say she has, since she attained full age, sanctioned and confirmed it. The answer does not show how or in what manner she did so sanction and confirm it, and there is nothing upon the face of the instrument to enlighten us upon the subject.

It appears by the mortgage itself that it was given to secure to the mortgagees a debt due them from William H. Y. Cronise & Co., of which firm the husband of the complainant was a member, and therefore, it is insisted that it belongs to that class of contracts made by an infant which are considered void and incapable of confirmation.

The averment of infancy at the time of executing the mortgage is not denied, and although it is not admitted and proof called for, it must, for the purpose of this motion, be taken to be true, the rule being that on a motion to dissolve on bill and answer, so much of the bill as is not denied by the answer is taken for true, and it becomes, therefore, a question, assuming that so much of the answer as speaks of a confirmation of the deed is responsive, and that the form of the confirmation need not be shown, (a position which may, perhaps, well be doubted,) whether a deed of this description, executed by a minor, for the purpose of securing a debt due by another, is not absolutely void, and if void, incapable of confirmation.

In the case of Fridge vs. The State, use of Kirk, 3 G. & J., 103, the Court of Appeals decided that a release to her guardian, given by a female ward between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one years was void, upon the ground that such instruments are, in their nature and tendency, to the prejudice of infants, and opposed to sound policy. The court, in the [407]*407opinion delivered, say, “some contracts made by infants are binding, such as contracts for necessaries; some are void, and others voidable, only such as contracts that may be for the benefit of the infant. But a contract that a court can see and pronounce to be to the prejudice of the infant is void.” And1 the instrument in that case, the release spoken of, was adjudged to be absolutely void.

How, it seems to me to be most obvious that the deed in this's case is as evidently prejudicial to the infant as the release in ] the case decided by the Court of Appeals. This is the case of j an infant feme covert, joining in a mortgage of her reversionary j interests in real and personal estates, to secure debts due from her husband, or rather from a commercial firm, of which her \ husband was a partner, without any consideration whatever j moving to her. It is a contract from which she cannot pos- J sibly derive a benefit, and which the court cannot fail to see f and pronounce to be to her prejudice. It must, therefore, be regarded as merely void. and, incapable of confirmation, the rule being that contracts void at law are void in equity, and are, therefore, considered by the latter courts as well as the for-^ mer, incapable of being made good by any subsequent acts of the parties. Newland on Contracts, 496; Blessing vs. House, 3 G. & J., 290. My opinion, therefore, is, that assuming Mrs. Cronise to have been a minor at the time she executed the mortgage, as upon this motion it must be assumed, it is upon the principle in the case in 3 Gf. § J., void as to her, and in-1 capable of confirmation, and therefore, so far as her rights are] concerned, the injunction must stand.

With respect to William II. V. Cronise and Elizabeth B. Abbott, the case stands upon different grounds. They were competent to contract, and there is no averment or pretence that any fraud or imposition was practiced upon them or either of them. And moreover, they are not now here complaining of the decree passed by this court in July, 1848. If, therefore, there is in that decree anything of which they have a right to complain, relief cannot be afforded them upon this bill. Whether they or either of them have such estates in the prop

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Bluebook (online)
4 Md. Ch. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cronise-v-clark-mdch-1849.