Dize v. Beacham

32 A. 243, 81 Md. 603
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 19, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 A. 243 (Dize v. Beacham) 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
Dize v. Beacham, 32 A. 243, 81 Md. 603 (Md. 1895).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

The proof, together with the agreed statement of facts in this case shows, that on the 18th day of June, 1891, John A. Evans, owner of the schooner “ Moore & Brady,” executed a mortgage thereon to Struven & Wacker, and on the same day the said Evans and one Benjamin F. Evans, executed a similar mortgage on the schooner “ Mary A. Kirwan.” Both of these mortgages were intended to secure the payment of a note of John A. Evans for the sum of $1,050.00, and were duly recorded in the Custom House at Crisfield, the home port of both vessels. Benjamin F. Evans owed no portion of this debt, nor was he a party to the note. On the 18th January, 1893, John S. Beacham & Bro. filed their claim for a lien on the “ Mary A. Kirwan” for work done and materials provided, to the amount of $822; and on the 24th day of March, 1894, John H. Adams & Sons filed a similar claim for a lien on the same vessel, to secure the payment of $245.07. On the nth day of May, 1894, John A. Evans executed a bill of sale to the appellant for one-half of the “ Moore & Brady.” Struven & Wacker, under the powers contained in the mort[605]*605gages, have sold both of the vessels, and the proceedings having been consolidated, the contest now between the parties is as to the distribution of the proceeds. The appellant in his petition alleges, that sometime in July, 1890, he “ purchased or agreed to purchase,” of John A. Evans, one undivided half part of the Moore & Brady, for the sum of nine hundred dollars, and that in the September or October following, having no bill of sale, entered into possession of the vessel “as master .and half-owner;” that he was by virtue of his purchase entitled to receive one-half of the net earnings, and, by agreement with John A. Evans, one hundred dollars for his services as master. That he remained in possession up to the day of the sale made by the mortgagees, and thereby became entitled, for his share of the earnings, to the sum of seven hundred and thirty dollars, which he paid to John A. Evans, and on the 11th May, 1894, demanded and received a bill of sale for his interest. That he did not owe any part of the mortgage debt, and had no knowledge of it until September, 1894, and, therefore, having paid for the one-half of “Moore & Brady,” purchased as stated, he claims he is entitled to the order of the Court directing, first, that Struven & Wacker be required to exhaust the proceeds of the “Mary A. Kirwan,” in payment of the mortgage debt, before taking any part of the one-half of the “Moore & Brady” belonging to him; and second, that the mortgagees shall abstain, under any circumstances, from appropriating any part of the one-half of the proceeds of the “Moore & Brady” belonging to him.

The doctrine of marshalling assets may be stated as follows : “That when one person has a clear right to resort to two funds, and another person has a right to resort to one only of these two funds, the latter may say that, as between himself and the double creditor, that the double creditor shall be put to exhaust the security upon which the single creditor has no claim,” per Lord Westbury in Dolphin v. Aylward, L. R. 4 H. L. 489. As between the mortgage debt of Struven & Wacker, and the lien claim of Beacham [606]*606& Bro., and that of Adams & Son, if the proceeds of the sale of the “Kirwan” are insufficient to pay all, this rule would require Struven & Wacker to first exhaust the proceeds of the sale of the “Moore & Brady,” so that the lienors, who have a claim on the “Kirwan” alone, could have payment out of the proceeds of the sale of that vessel. Nor could this right be affected by a conveyance made after these liens were filed. The language of this Court in Hamilton v. Schwchr, 34 Md. 119, a case not unlike this in respect to the point we are now considering, is directly applicable. It was there said: “These liens, at the time they attached, carried with them as incidents the right of the parties respectively to such equities as would render them available and productive. Of these was the equitable right of the holders of the machines’ lien to have marshalled the fund arising from these lots, if it was necessary to pay both their debt, and that secured by the first mortgage. This equity existed before the second mortgage to Hamilton was made, and cannot be affected or destroyed by the conveyance to him.” Applying these principles in this case, it the right of the appellant to the relief he prays for could be rested only upon the existence of his bill of sale, which was executed after the liens of Beacham & Bro., and of Adams & Sons respectively attached, it is clear he could set up no claim to have these funds marshalled in any way that would enure to their prejudice.

It is contended, however, by the appellant, that under the parol contract with Evans, followed by his possession of the vessel, he had a title be”fore these lien claims attached. If this be so, and the lienors had notice of the claim of the appellant, or by reason of his possession are chargeable with such notice, the case would present a different aspect ; for, in applying the rules for marshalling funds, the maxim, qui prior est in tempore potior est in jure has peculiar force. Robeson's Appeal, 117 Pa. St. 628 ; Hastings case, 10 Watts, 305 ; N. Y. L. Ins. Co. v. Vanderbilt, 12 Abbot’s Prac. 460; 2 Beach Mod. Eq. Jur., sec. 785.

[607]*607But whatever may be the character of the right of the appellant to the vessel under his parol contract with Evans, it still can confer no right to priority as against these lienors unless the latter had notice of it, either express or implied. For if they have expended work and material on the “Kirwan” when they were ignorant in fact and not chargeable with knowledge of a secret equity between the appellant and Evans by which their right to marshalling as against Struven & Wacker would be rendered unavailing to them, it would be against eveiy principle of equity to allow the appellant to come in now and deprive them of that right. Now, assuming for the present that the appellant did purchase and thereby acquire title to the “Moore & Brady” in July, 1890, can we find from the proof in the cause that Beacham & Bro. or Adams & Sons either had actual notice or must be charged with notice thereof? It is not pretended they had actual notice, but it is insisted that it is inferrible from the fact that the appellant was in possession of the vessel. Did the mere possession, such as the prooi shows, charge them with notice? It is doubtless true that in respect to movable property of a kind such as is usually transmitted by mere delivery, possession and actual custody of the property, may and does furnish notice of absolute ownership. Wade on Notice, sec. 306. But when the property is of a kind usually protected by title papers and the actual visible possession is not inconsistent with the ownership of another who has the record title, the rule ought to be like the one applicable to cases where the party is in the occupancy of land. Wade on Notice, sec. 67. In such cases the possession which is sufficient to put a person on inquiry, and which will be equivalent to actual notice of rights and equities in persons other than those who have a title upon record, must be actual, open, visible, not equivocal, occasional or for a special purpose, and inconsistent with the title of the apparent owner by the record. Brown v. Volkening, 64 N. Y. 82 ; Spraeghts v. Hawley,

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Bluebook (online)
32 A. 243, 81 Md. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dize-v-beacham-md-1895.