Demuth v. Old Town Bank

37 A. 266, 85 Md. 315, 1897 Md. LEXIS 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 31, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 37 A. 266 (Demuth v. Old Town Bank) 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
Demuth v. Old Town Bank, 37 A. 266, 85 Md. 315, 1897 Md. LEXIS 72 (Md. 1897).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a case of exceedingly great hardship, and we have diligently, but in vain, sought for some tenable ground upon which the appellants could be relieved from the loss [320]*320that an affirmance of the decree appealed from will necessarily subject them to. But hard cases, it has often been said, almost always make bad law; and hence it is, in the end, far better that the established rules of law should be strictly applied, even though in particular instances serious loss may be thereby inflicted on some individuals, than that by subtle distinctions invented and resorted to solely to escape such consequences, long settled and firmly fixed doctrines should be shaken, questioned, confused or doubted. Lovejoy v. Irelan, 17 Md. 527. It is often difficult to resist the influence which a palpable hardship is calculated to exert; but a rigid adherence to fundamental principles at all times and a stern insensibility to the results which an unvarying enforcement of those principles- may occasionally entail, are the surest, if not the only, means by which stability and certainty in the administration of the law may be secured. It is for the Legislature by appropriate enactments and not for the Courts by metaphysical refinements to provide a remedy against the happening of hardships which may result from the consistent application of established legal principles.

Now, the facts before us are these: Samuel D. Price was in 1888 the owner of some leasehold property in Baltimore City. This- on January the twenty-eighth, 1888, he assigned to Henry C. Fowler, an employee of his, for an alleged, but in fact, for a simulated consideration of fifteen hundred dollars. On the same day and as a part of the same transaction, Fowler executed and delivered to Price a mortgage on the same property to secure the payment of one thousand dollars, stated to be the balance of purchase money due by Fowler to Price; and Fowler also signed and delivered a promissory note of even date payable to Price in one year, for the principal sum of one thousand dollars, and two other promissory notes, each for the sum of thirty dollars, payable in six and twelve months, for the interest. These three notes are described in the mortgage. The deed.arid the mortgage were .promptly placed- On.record. [321]*321Simultaneously with the execution of the deed, the mortgage and the notes, Fowler also executed and delivered to Price a deed reconveying and reassigning to him the identical leasehold property. This deed was not placed on record until November the twelfth, 1891. The sale by Price to Fowler was not an actual sale at all. It was a mere device to which Price, who was a builder, resorted to raise money without himself executing a mortgage on his property. To all appearances, however, so far as the public records disclosed, it was a perfectly regular and bona fide transaction. On January the thirty-first, 1888, Price borrowed from the Old Town Bank of Baltimore, the sum of one thousand two hundred dollars, and indorsed to the bank as collateral the one thousand dollar mortgage note of Fowler, and another note with which we have no concern. Price’s note to the bank was repeatedly renewed, and when each renewal was made Fowler’s note to Price was repledged. There can be no doubt about the entire good faith of the bank in this transaction. The bank continued to hold the note which on its face showed that it was secured by a mortgage of even date, and on October the thirty-first, 1895, after Price had become insolvent, and shortly before he died, the bank filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City a petition praying for a decree directing a sale of the mortgaged premises, and under the terms of the mortgage the usual decree was forthwith signed. Within a month thereafter the appellants came into the case, and by petition asked that the decree be set aside. They base the relief which they seek upon these facts : In November, 1891, the appellants desiring to purchase the property in question had the title examined, and it being then discovered that Price held the mortgage thereon from Fowler, negotiations were opened, not with Fowler — the apparent owner — but with Price, who informed the appellants and their counsel that the mortgage had been paid and that he held a deed from Fowler assigning the property back to him. He thereupon produced the deed of assignment con[322]*322temporaneous in date with the mortgage and with the deed from Price to Fowler; and he exhibited three promissory-notes purporting to be the three mortgage notes described in the mortgage from Fowler to him — the one note for one thousand dollars, and the other two, each for thirty dollars. Without making any inquiry of Fowler, the appellants concluded the purchase with Price ; and Price, on November twelfth, 1891, released on the public records the mortgage of January the twenty-eighth, 1888, and then placed on record the deed of assignment from Fowler to himself dated, as stated, on January the twenty-eighth, 1888, and delivered to the appellants a deed dated November the twelfth, 1891, assigning to them the same property. Thereupon the appellants paid him thirteen hundred dollars — the amount of the purchase money. The appellants had no knowledge of the outstanding note in the hands of the bank, and they believed that the one thousand dollar note exhibited by Price and stated by him to be the identical note secured by the mortgage was in fact the mortgage note. The evidence, however, clearly shows that Fowler signed two one thousand dollar notes on the same day, and the one retained by Price' and subsequently exhibited to the appellants as the genuine mortgage note was not in fact the note secured by and described in the mortgage at all; and that the note indorsed to the bank and forming the basis of the decree was in reality the mortgage note. About this the evidence leaves no room for doubt. The appellants claim that they are bona fide purchasers of the property from Price for value, and are, as such, entitled to hold it against the claim of the Old Town Bank. They undoubtedly paid their money for the property to Price, who shamefully deceived and misled them ; but whether these facts under the circumstances are sufficient to defeat the rights acquired by the bank is the question brought before us. The Court below dismissed the petition asking for a rescisión of the decree, and from the order of dismissal which permits the decree of October the thirty-first, 1895, [323]*323directing a sale of the property to stand, this appeal was take'n.

Now it cannot be doubted that prior to the adoption of the Act of 1892, ch. 392 (which, however, has no application to this case), the law of Maryland was, and still is, except in so far as modified by the statute just named, that the indorsement or assignment of a promissory note secured by a mortgage gives to a bona fide holder of such note the benefit of the lien of the mortgage as fully as though he had been named as the actual mortgagee; and this, too,, though the' public records furnish no evidence of the indorsement or transfer and delivery of the note. The transfer or indorsement of the note, which is the principal, carries the mortgage, which is the incident, and effectually clothes the bona fide holder of the note with the lien of the mortgage itself. Clark v. Levering, 1 Md. Ch. Dec. 178; Ohio L. Ins. Co. v. Ross and Winn, 2 Md. Ch. Dec. 26; Byles v. Tome, 39 Md. 463; Boyd v. Parker & Co., 43 Md. 199; McCracken v. German F. Ins. Co., 43 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A. 266, 85 Md. 315, 1897 Md. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demuth-v-old-town-bank-md-1897.