Dawson v. Waltemeyer

46 A. 994, 91 Md. 328, 1900 Md. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 14, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 46 A. 994 (Dawson v. Waltemeyer) 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
Dawson v. Waltemeyer, 46 A. 994, 91 Md. 328, 1900 Md. LEXIS 45 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

*329 Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill, filed in this case by a judgment creditor of the appellant Dawson, charges that a certain deed from him to Robert Johnston, Jr., was made with intent to hinder, delay and defraud creditors of the grantor and should be set aside, and this appeal is taken from the decree of the lower Court declaring it void as against the appellee.

On the sixteenth day of May, 1897, the appellee, Viola Waltemeyer, obtained a verdict in the Baltimore City Court against the appellant Dawson, for one thousand dollars and costs. Up to that date and prior thereto, Dawson was seized and possessed of a certain farm situated in Talbot County. On the same day on which the verdict was rendered he made a deed to Anna B. Ferguson, in which the consideration named was the sum of four thousand dollars. Of this Mrs. Ferguson, Dawson had no knowledge except that she was a boarding-house keeper in Philadelphia, and the mother of the wife of his son, John W. Dawson, Jr.

The record does not inform us of the circumstances that preceded or accompanied the making of this deed ; a copy of it is not filed, and it does not appear where it was executed or acknowledged. It was in the hands of a lawyer in the City of Baltimore on the next day after the verdict was rendered, and was forwarded by him to the Clerk of Talbot County Court, with directions, to record it “ as soon as possible and mail to ” Mrs. Ferguson, in Philadelphia. On the 18th a motion was made in the case in the Baltimore Court for a new trial and in arrest of judgment. Whether this had anything to do with this disposition of the deed to Ferguson we cannot positively say, but it is certainly suggestive that on the same day, the same lawyer who had forwarded the deed to the Clerk, telegraphed him not to record it but to deliver it to another lawyer. On the next day, the 19th, the same lawyer wrote thanking the Clerk for his promptness and added that “ the new deed will be forwarded in a few days.”

There never was, however, a “ new deed ” to Mrs. Fer *330 guson executed. She paid no part of the consideration called for in her deed, and there is no evidence she had ever been consulted about the matter or knew anything about it. When the deed left the hands of the Clerk it disappears from the proceedings and we hear no more of it.

But it seems Mr. Dawson was not idle ; “ sometime in May” he is in Philadelphia at the house of Mrs. Ferguson. There, as he testifies, he .met for the first time, Mr. Johnston. How Johnston came to be there is not fully explained, but the intimation is that it so happened through the agency of Dawson’s son. He was a total stranger to Dawson himself, who did not, and yet does not know where Johnston lived or what his occupation was. Nor was Johnston apparently any better informed as to the property he was to purchase. He had never been in Talbot County. The exact date of this meeting must have been either on the 19th or 20th of May. On the 18th of May, the Ferguson deed was returned by the Clerk of Talbot County, and it cannot be assumed that any sale could have been made to Johnston until some disposition had been made of the Ferguson deed. And on the 21st of May, the deed to Johnston was executed in the City of Baltimore. So that the' exact date of the meeting must have been either on the 19th or 20th of May.

If Dawson received four thousand dollars in cash from Johnston, it must have been paid on the occasion of that meeting in Philadelphia. So that we have this peculiar situation. On the 18th, the Ferguson deed was returned to the lawyer in-Easton. On the 19th or 20th, Dawson must have left Easton, met with Johnston in Philadelphia, and received the four thousand dollars, and then proceeded to Baltimore and executed the deed. The acknowledgement shows that Dawson and wife were there on the 21st of May. That Johnston should have such a sum of money “in paper,” under these circumstances, and should be willing to entrust it to a total stranger for a farm which he had never seen, situated in a county where he had never been, *331 in advance of a deed giving him a title, or other contract in writing, is, to say the least, a most extraordinary business proceeding. Dawson says he put the money in his pocket and did not afterwards deposit in bank nor invest it, and still holds the identical money, except a portion which he has spent.

Under all these circumstances that we should be called upon to believe that Mrs. Ferguson was a real purchaser, that Dawson should have met Johnston at Mrs. Ferguson’s at the exact time he did, that Johnston should have purchased a farm which he had never seen, situated in a county where he had never been ; and further, that on that apparently casual meeting, Johnston should have had in his pocket four thousand dollars “ in paper ” and should then and there have paid it over to Dawson, without a written contract and in confidence that the deed would thereafter be executed, is, in connection with other circumstances of the case, a strain upon our credulity.

The subsequent dealing with Johnston’s deed is extremely suggestive. Notwithstanding the deed was executed on the 2 ist of May, it was not sent for record until the fourth of June, and is then transmitted by the same lawyer who had sent the Ferguson deed. In his letter of transmission, his directions are imperative, he enjoins the clerk to “ record (it) out of place ” that the original may be “ sent me quite promptly.” Why such haste P If there was any special reason for it Johnston must have known it, because the lawyer writes in the same letter, that he desires it to be recorded “ out of place,” as “ he is requested by client to have same sent him as soon as possible.” The reason for the haste, however, is apparent, when we are informed that upon the very day when this direction “ to record out of date” was given, to wit, the 4th of June, 1898,the motions in arrest and for new trial in the Baltimore Court were overruled and judgment on the verdict was entered.

Up to this day, there was no particular reason why the deed (if it were designed to defraud the appellee) should be *332 filed for record. If the motions were granted by the Court, it would never become necessary. But when the judgment was entered, a new situation arose, and in order to acquire precedence of its lien, it became necessary that the deed should be on file in the record office of Talbot County, before an execution could be issued and received by the Clerk of that county.

It is a significant fact that Johnston, who up to this time had taken no notice of the matter, should now deem it necessary to empower his vendor, John W. Dawson, to manage the property for him. But even then Johnston does not seem to have evinced much interest in his new possessions, for he malees no inquiries about it, fails to visit it, and does not notify the tenant until after this suit had been begun, and leaves the control of it entirely in the hands of Dawson.

Indeed a full consideration of the entire testimony leaves no inconsiderable doubt in our minds as to the actual existence of Johnston. No one has ever seen him, except the appellant Dawson and his son.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A. 994, 91 Md. 328, 1900 Md. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-waltemeyer-md-1900.