Dircks v. Logsdon

59 Md. 173, 1882 Md. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 59 Md. 173 (Dircks v. Logsdon) 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
Dircks v. Logsdon, 59 Md. 173, 1882 Md. LEXIS 79 (Md. 1882).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from an order overruling exceptions to, and ratifying, a sale made under a power in a mortgage. It appears that on the 26th of March, 1874, John B. Smissing mortgaged sixty acres of land near Cumberland, to Hathan Wilson, to secure a debt of $850. The appellee, Henry Logsdon, claiming to be assignee of this mortgage under an assignment from Wilson, dated the 29th of May, 1879, sold the land on the 5th of February, 1881, and purchased the same himself for $775. Smissing had executed a subsequent mortgage of this, and other parcels of land, to Humbird to secure the sum of $1400, and at the sale under this mortgage, which took place on the 27th of May, 1879, Logsdon also became the purchaser, but this sale was afterwards, on exceptions thereto, set aside. Paul Dircks, the appellant, had purchased for $25 the equity of redemption in all the property, on the 7th of September, 1878, at sheriff's sale, under a judgment against Smissing, subsequent to both mortgages. These facts are gathered from the record and the admissions of counsel on both sides at bar. The exceptions to the present sale, several in number, were filed by Dircks.

1st. The first, and the one mainly relied on in argument, is to the effect that Logsdon was not the assignee of the mortgage, but that the same was discharged by his payment in full, to Wilson, of the mortgage debt, before [176]*176the pretended assignment was executed. It appears, that on the 29th of May, 1879, two days after he became the purchaser of the property at the. sale under the Humbird mortgage, Logsdon went to Wilson to get his prior mortgage on this portion of the land. .He paid to Wilson $630, the full amount, principal and interest, then due on the mortgage, and something was then written on the original mortgage which was signed hy Wilson, and the instrument was then delivered to Logsdon. The latter in his testimony states that after what was thus written and signed, and which he calls an “assignment,” he took the mortgage to Mr. Widener to see if it was in legal form, and Widener said it was not, that it was not under seal and would not do ; that witness then asked him if he could correct it, and he said he could, and did so hy scratching out what was there written, and writing the formal assignment as it now appears on the paper ; that witness then, on the same day, took the mortgage again to Wilson; told him what had been done, and Wilson then signed the formal assignment. Widener says he wrote the assignment hut has no recollection as to the erasure. The original instrument has been submitted to us for inspection, and while it is evident there has been an erasure we yet find it impossible to ascertain what the writing thus erased actually was. We are satisfied however, not only from the testimony of Logsdon, but also from that of Miss Ellen Eeaga, who was present at the time, that it was not a formal release of the mortgage. The most that can be made out of her testimony is that her grandfather, Wilson, when the money was paid to him, signed a receipt upon the mortgage to the effect that he had received from Logsdon the full amount of the mortgage debt. This is most probably what actually occurred, and it is the most favorable view of the case, for the appellant, that the testimony and the paper itself will warrant us in taking. Such a receipt is mere evidence of the payment of the money and has no [177]*177other force or effect. The question then is did the payment of this money, under the circumstances of the case, operate a discharge, or extinguishment of the lien of the mortgage ? If it did, the subsequent assignment, whether made on the same day or afterwards, cannot avail against Dircks, who was then the owner of the equity of redemption, and if it did not, the assignment is clearly valid. As a general rule payment of an incumbrance by a party whose duty or obligation it is, by contract or otherwise, to pay, extinguishes it, but whether this effect follows in other cases depends upon the intention of the parties, and as to the question of intent in such cases the interest of the party making the payment has a strong, if not controlling influence. Walker vs. Stone, 20 Md., 195; Brawner vs. Watkins, et al., 28 Md., 217 ; Brown vs. Lapham, 3 Cush., 551. In Walker vs. Stone this Court adopted the opinion of the Judge of the Circuit Court who said: “It is settled in numerous cases that a payment made to a mortgagee by a third party who is under no obligation by contract to pay the debt, will not operate as a satisfaction of it, unless it be manifestly the intention or interest of the party making the payment that it should so operate.” Row in this case Logsdon was no party to the mortgage, and was under no duty or obligation to have it paid, and cancelled. It is also clear from his testimony that his intention when he paid the money, was to obtain an assignment of the mortgage and not to have it extinguished as a lien upon the land. Such also was manifestly his interest at the time he made the payment. It is true he had just purchased at the sale under the Humbird mortgage, and if his title had been perfected by a ratification of that sale, it would have made no difference to him whether he obtained an assignment or a release of this prior incumbrance. But that sale was liable to be set aside by the Court, and it is fair to presume that he knew that his title under it depended upon its being ratified. Code, Art. 64, [178]*178secs. 9, 10. It would have been sheer folly for him to have risked the loss of his money on such a contingency, when he could have secured absolute protection simply by taking an assignment of the mortgage. We are therefore of opinion the payment of the money, under the circumstances of this case, did not amount to a discharge of the mortgage, but entitled the appellee to the assignment which he subsequently obtained.

2nd. The next exception is founded on inadequacy of price. The law is too well settled in this State to admit of' discussion that such a sale cannot be set aside for mere inadequacy of price, unless it be so gross and inordinate as to indicate some mistake or unfairness in the sale for which the purchaser is responsible, or misconduct or fraud in the trustee or party selling. Johnson vs. Dorsey, 7 Gill, 200; Loeber & Herring vs. Eckes, 55 Md., 1. On the part of the exceptant four witnesses were examined on this subject, and of these, two say, that in their opinion, the land is worth $1800, and the other two say it is worth $1500, but not one of them, (though’ they were all asked the question,) says he was ready and willing to buy the land, or to bid for it on a re-sale. The appellant testified that the land was worth $1800, while the appellee says he thinks it ought to bring $1200 or $1300. In view of this, testimony, and what has been decided in the numerous. Maryland decisions upon this subject, we are unable to say there is any such inadequacy of price made out as to justify us in vacating the sale upon that ground alone.

3rd. But the same authorities declare that where it appears that there is any other just cause to doubt the propriety of the sale, it is a consideration proper to be viewed in connection with it, that the sale has been made at a reduced price. In this case, however, we are constrained to say we find no ground whatever to doubt the fairness of the sale.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Md. 173, 1882 Md. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dircks-v-logsdon-md-1882.