Davis v. Mutual Realty Ass'n

4 Balt. C. Rep. 277
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 277 (Davis v. Mutual Realty Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Mutual Realty Ass'n, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 277 (Md. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

STEIN, J.

The plaintiffs seek to have rescinded the contract of sale and exchange hereinafter named; and to have the mortgage hereinafter named to Mrs. Lloyd from the corporate defendant decreed to he subject to their rights in the mortgaged property.

The testimony is undisputed, shows; That, by a writing, under the hands and seals of parties thereto, dated August 4th, 1921, the corporate defendant, for the sum of $6,825, sold to the plaintiffs, who bought from it, two unimproved fee-simple lots in Baltimore County, Maryland, known as Nos. 8 and 9, Section S, in North Paradise; upon which lots the corporation agreed “to erect within three months a dwelling, known as Virginia in the Alladdin Company Catalogue.” In which contract the parties also agreed that the above sum of $6,825 should be paid as follows, viz:

$6,000 for which the corporation has accepted the property No. 3322 Edmondson avenue, subject to a ground rent of seventy-two dollars; and that the plaintiffs shall remain in the said 3322 Edmondson avenue “until the completion of house to he erected on North Paradise,” expense to be adjusted to date that home is vacated as above set forth. The other terms of the contract do not bear upon the question at issue here. The testimony also shows that on August 5, 1921, one day after the date of the above contract, the plaintiffs assigned to the corporate defendant the Edmondson avenue property then subject to two mortgages; upon which about twenty-six hundred dollars were due; that five days after this assignment, the corporation mortgaged that property to Mrs. Lloyd, the other defendant, to secure the repayment of the sum of twenty-six hundred dollars and interest; then paid her therefor, a bonus of one hundred dollars ; thereafter paid her another bonus of fifty dollars; which sums were the only ones paid to her for or on account of that mortgage; and on which mortgage no interest was paid.

The testimony also shows, that because of financial difiiculties existing when the above contract was made, the corporate defendant did very little, if any work towards erecting the house on the above two lots; and for sometime before this suit was brought, had abandoned all effort to continue in and [278]*278complete such erection. When they learned this, the plaintiffs attempted to have the corporation finish the house; in so doing, learned of its execution of the mortgage to Mrs. Lloyd; whereupon they promptly, i. e., on April 10th, 1922, eight months after the date of the contract and five months after the expiration time limited therein for the erection of the house, filed this bill to have the above-mentioned contract rescinded and the mortgage to Mrs. Lloyd declared to be subject to their rights under the above named contract.

In her answer, Mrs. Lloyd sets up the validity of her mortgage, and denies all knowledge of the above-named 'contract between the plaintiffs and the corporate defendant.

While, in their bill, the plaintiffs charged the mortgage was fraudulent, they did not attempt to prove that charge. The evidence shows there was no fraud, but that Mrs. Lloyd advanced the $2,600 in cash, to be secured by the mortgage; deducted therefrom her bonus of one hundred dollars; that neither she, nor the counsel then representing her, who was vice-president of the defendant corporation, knew either of the above-named contract between it and the plaintiffs, or that the plaintiffs lived in the house at the date of her mortgage. The negotiations, which resulted in the making of the above-named contract, were conducted by the corporation, solely through its secretary and treasurer, who was its managing officer and signed the contract.

After their failure to prove fraud, without amending their bill, and without objection, the plaintiffs produced testimony, showing that for a long time before, and ever since the date of the above contract, they had continually lived in the Edmondson avenue house as their home; that they did not know of Mrs. Lloyd’s mortgage until long after its execution; that as soon as they knew of it, promptly filed this bill. Mrs. Lloyd, the mortgagee, swore she never saw either the plaintiffs or the Edmondson avenue house; that she did not want the mortgage, because a junior lien; but took it solely upon the assurance of her counsel, that it was all right. Her counsel, the vice-president of the corporation, swore he saw the house only from the outside; he did not go inside; did not see either of the plaintiffs, and when the mortgage was made did not have any knowledge, either of the above-named contract with the corporate defendant, or that the plaintiffs were occupying the house, or had any rights therein.

Upon this state of facts, the question here is:

Was the plaintiffs’ possession at the date of her mortgage, constructive notice to Mrs. Lloyd, the mortgagee, of their rights under the above-named contract of sale?

The plaintiffs contend their possession was such notice to Mrs. Lloyd, because she could not rely solely upon the Land Records, but that it was her duty to inspect the premises before she took the mortgage, “which proposition has been embodied in our law since Lord Thurlow’s time.” Fetter's Equity, Sec. 57, Note 22, Folio 85, and which the Supreme Court recognizes in Simmons Creek Coal Company vs. Doran, 142 U. S. 417-433, in the following language :

“Again actual and unequivocal possession is notice, because it is incum.bent on one who is about to purchase real estate to ascertain by whom and in what right it is held or occupied, and the neglect of the duty is one of the defaults which unexplained is equivalent to notice.”

This doctrine has been recognized and applied by our Court of Appeals in a long line of cases among the earliest of which is:

Hardy vs. Summers 10 G. & J., 310-324; among more recent of which is that of Dinneen vs. The Corporation, 114 Md. 595.

On the other hand, counsel for Mrs. Lloyd concedes this to be the general doctrine, but says that such doctrine does not apply where the vendor remains in possession after deed; and that as Mrs. Lloyd did not have actual notice of the plaintiffs’ contract with the corporate defendant, their possession “after deed” did not give her constructive notice of their rights under the contract with the corporate defendant.

The issue thus sharply defined presents unusual difficulties, because of the great conflict of authorities among courts of last resort, and, of authors as to which of the above is the correct doctrine.

This conflict is best illustrated in 39 Cyc., p. 1753, note 35, p. 1754, note 37, which sets out the conflicting doctrines [279]*279anti contains references to the decisions of the courts of last resort of the various States in which the question arose; from which it appears that: this question was passed on by the courts of last resort in twenty-six States; fourteen which held “that the possession of a grantor after deed, unless long- continued was not notice,” but such possession was subordinate to the title conveyed; while such courts of twelve States held “that such possession is presumptive evidence that the grantor still retains an interest in the premises and is sufficient to put a purchaser on inquiry.”

27 R. C. L., Sec. 491-492, pp. 727-728, 13 L. R. A., U. S. 115 to 120.

There is the same sharp conflict between authors: some mention the conflict of authority without discussion, i.

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

Related

Simmons Creek Coal Co. v. Doran
142 U.S. 417 (Supreme Court, 1892)
Gill v. Hardin
48 Ark. 409 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1886)
Turman v. Bell
15 S.W. 886 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1891)
Ringgold v. Bryan
3 Md. Ch. 488 (Maryland Chancery Ct, 1850)
Wright v. Wright
5 Ind. 389 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1854)
Koon v. Tramel
32 N.W. 243 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1887)
Trulin v. Plested
178 Iowa 220 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1916)
Duncan v. Maryland Savings Institution
10 G. & J. 299 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1838)
Magruder v. Peter
11 G. & J. 217 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1840)
Hoffman v. Gosnell
24 A. 28 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1892)
Weitzner v. Thingstad
56 N.W. 817 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-mutual-realty-assn-mdcirctctbalt-1924.