Doub v. Barnes

1 Md. Ch. 127
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 Md. Ch. 127 (Doub v. Barnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doub v. Barnes, 1 Md. Ch. 127 (Md. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

The Chancellor. :

The Court of Appeals in their opinion upon the question before them, make a statement of the equity of the complainant’s bill, and the judgment of this court upon the matters now to be decided, must turn upon the conformity of the proof with the facts set forth in the bill, upon the existence of which, in the view of the appellate court, the complainant’s right to relief depends.

[130]*130Such must certainly be the case with regard to all the questions settled upon the former appeal.

The facts alleged, then, which constitute the complainant’s equity, are, 1st, That after the judgments were rendered against Barnes and the two Masons, they executed a conveyance to the trustees, Yost and Price, on the 11th of October, 1839, of all their real estate in Washington county, and a large personal estate, in trust, to pay their debts according to their legal priority — the said trustees being the attorneys of the judgment creditors. 2d, That the existence of said deed was made known to said judgment creditors shortly after its execution, and that they acquiesced in the assumption by the trustees of control over the property conveyed, and suspended all proceedings upon their judgments. 3d, That by acts indicative of their intention to look for payment of their claims to the proceeds of sales which should be made by the trustees, they gave credit to them, and enabled them to make more advantageous sales for the creditors than could otherwise be effected. 4th, That the complainant was persuaded to make payment, from a belief, well founded in the conduct of the creditors, that they would look to the trustees, and only to the trustees, for payment of their claims out of the proceeds of the sales to be made by them. The court, after thus stating the equity of the bill, proceed to show what sort of a case the plaintiff must prove, to entitle him to relief; and in doing so, say that, “if the judgment creditors assented to the deed of trust, and by their conduct induced the complainant, and others, to become the purchasers of the land bound by their judgments, and to believe that they would look to the trustees for the payment of their claims, and not to the liens created by their judgments, that such conduct would furnish a valid equitable defence. To allow the judgment creditors, after such a course of conduct to enforce their judgments against the purchasers, would be to permit them to perpetrate a fraud upon the purchasers. The obvious consequence of such a procedure on the part of the judgment creditors, would be to lull the purchasers into a false security, and to induce them to believe that a title would follow the payment of the purchase money. Upon [131]*131the state of facts alleged, it would not be necessary for the purchasers to see to the application of the purchase money; credit being given to the trustees, and they being known to be alone looked to for the payment of the judgments by the proceeds of sale.” And the court go on to say, that a defence, founded upon the circumstances stated, could only be made available in a court of equity upon the ground of fraud.

[Passing over the judgments of Lynch and Craft — the Court of Appeals having decided in their favor — the Chancellor continued:]

The attention of the court is now confined to the judgments which have been assigned to, and marked for the use of Margaret A. Mason, short copies of which are to be found in the complainant’s exhibit C, filed with his bill; and the question is, whether these judgment creditors, the parties who assigned to her, did assent to the deed of trust to Price and Yost, and by their conduct induce the complainant and others to become purchasers of the lands bound by the judgments, and to believe that they would look to the trustees for the payment of their claims, and not to the liens created by them ?

. In other words, that these judgment creditors, knowing and assenting to the terms of the deed, were willing to abandon wholly their liens on the lands conveyed by it, and to look exclusively to the trustees; and by their conduct, indicative of such willingness, the complainant and others were induced to purchase.

This, the Court of Appeals say, would constitute an equitable defence against the judgments ; as to permit them to be enforced under such circumstances would be to tolerate the perpetration of a fraud against the purchasers. Upon the bill which made this case, the complainant displayed an equity which entitled him to an injunction, which could only be dissolved by positive contradictory averments in the answer ; and as the answer of John Thompson Mason was founded upon hearsay, and not personal knowledge, it was not regarded as sufficient to remove the complainant’s equity; though, resting upon information derived from others, it contained denials of [132]*132the facts out of which the equity arose. Upon the motion to dissolve, credit could only be given to the answer in so far as it spoke of responsive matters, within the personal knowledge of the defendant; and unless so speaking, the equity of the bill was sworn away, the injunction could not be dissolved.

But the case is now before this court for final hearing, upon bill, answer and evidence; and, although an answer founded upon hearsay, though denying the complainant’s equity, is not to be treated as an answer resting upon personal knowledge, it is certainly sufficient to put the complainant upon the proof of the averments of his bill. And the question, therefore, is, has he succeeded in establishing by evidence those averments, upon which his title to the aid of this court depends.

With respect to the judgment at the suit of William McKim, it is admitted by the solicitor of the complainant, that he has made no defence, and therefore as to that, the injunction must be dissolved.

And with regard to the judgment at suit of Brooks and Hotchkiss, the only attempt to make out an equity against it, is the production of a receipt signed by D. G. Yost as their attorney, to the trustees for $200, in part payment of the judgment, on the 8th of July, 1840. This receipt of a part of the money from the trustees, and the delay and forbearance to enforce payment of the residue, is thought to afford a sufficient foundation for interfering, as against these parties, all those circumstances which, in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, would make it fraudulent to allow them now to proceed to enforce their liens against the land. I am not prepared to concur in this reasoning, and therefore as to this judgment, also, the injunction must be dissolved.

The argument before me was principally directed against the judgments at suit of John Trimble and John W. Brown, which appear to have been assigned, in the first place, to the Bank of Baltimore, and afterwards by the bank to Mrs. Mason, and the judgments at suit of Henry Tiffany, and William Tiffany and others; which were by them also assigned to her.

With reference to the judgments at suit of Trimble and [133]*133Brown, which passed to Mrs. Mason, through the Bank of Baltimore, much reliance is placed by the complainant’s solic-. itor, in his effort to show that to let them loose against the land purchased by him, would be to enable the holder of them to perpetrate a fraud — upon a correspondence between John M. Gordon of Baltimore, and Yost, one of the trustees — he,. Yost, being also the attorney of some of the judgment creditors.

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Md. Ch. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doub-v-barnes-mdch-1847.