Doxen v. Wagner

121 A. 254, 142 Md. 441, 1923 Md. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 121 A. 254 (Doxen v. Wagner) 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
Doxen v. Wagner, 121 A. 254, 142 Md. 441, 1923 Md. LEXIS 45 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Oonrt.

On tie 8th day of September, 1919, the Farmers Go-operative Company of Harford Oonnty, then owning certain real estate in the village of Clmrchville in that county, executed a mortgage on it to George F. Berkley to secure the repayment of a loan of $4,500. In addition to that property the company also owned certain personal property. At a meeting' held on February 4, 1922, the stockholders of.the company were informed that it was in bad financial condition and was indebted to various creditors to the amount of $13,500, but that Martin E. Wagner had offered to buy all the property of the company and sufficient stock to control it for $12,500. This offer was accepted and it was agreed that, upon the payment of $10,000, the property of the company was to be turned over to Mr. Wagner, and that it was to be paid for in this way. He was to assume and pay the $4,500 mortgage, and to assume and pay the company’s note to the Farmers & Merchants Xational Bank of Bel Air for $4,500, and its note to Air. Joseph Ball for $1,000, and the remaining $2,500 was to be used in buying a sufficient number of shares of the capital stock of the company to1 control it. Wagner paid the $4,500 note to the bank and on March 4, 1922, gave Jacob A. Boxen, the secretary and treasurer of the company, a check drawn to the company’s order for $1,000 and directed him to apply it to the reduction of the Berkley mortgage. The check was deposited in bank to the company’s credit. Some time later several changes were made in the personnel of the company’s directors and officers, and among the other changes M. X. Stewart was selected as its secretary, and Wagner as its treasurer1, instead of Boxen. After1 these changes had been made, the company on May°31, 1922, con *444 veyed all of its property to Martin R. and Augusta M. Wagner. On June 1st, 1922, Berkley entered a credit on the mortgage for $500, which appears to have been paid in 1921, and assigned the balance by an assignment absolute on its face, but actually for collection, to Jacob A. Doxen, the appellant, who was a practicing attorney, and Doxen their advertised the property for sale under a power of sale contained in the mortgage. Thereupon the appellees, then holding title to the mortgaged property, deposited $3,500 with the clerk of the court and filed the hill of complaint in this case, in which they asked that the appellant, “Doxen-may by an order of your honors, be enjoined and strictly prohibited from selling, assigning or otherwise disposing of the aforesaid mortgage from the said Farmers Co-operative Company of Harford County, Inc., to the said George F. Berkley, dated the 8th day of September, 1919, and recorded among the Land Records of Harford County in Liber J. A. R. Ho. 165, folio. 262, or from proceeding further with the exercise of the power contained in said mortgage, or from selling or offering for sale said real estate therein described,” and upon that bill, affidavit and exhibits a restraining order was passed as prayed.

An answer was filedj testimony taken and, after a hearing, a decree was passed making the injunction perpetual and crediting the mortgagor with the payment of $1,000 on the mortgage. From that decree this appeal was taken.

The bill, order and decree all rest upon the theory that the $1,000 was paid to Doxen to be applied to the reduction of the mortgage and that, since he did not so apply it, and since he now holds the mortgage1, he must be charged with it as though it had been so applied without regard to the capacity in which he holds it. The defendants’ theory is (1) that the money was never paid to or received by Doxen, hut that it was paid in the form of a check drawn to the order of the Farmers Co-operative Company, which was handed to Doxen and by him deposited to that company’s credit, where it still *445 remains; (2) that Doxen at the time the money was paid was not the agent of the mortgagee authorized to receive it'for him. hut was the secretary and treasurer of the mortgagor, and that the company alone had the power to apply the payment to the mortgage; (3) that he at present holds the mortgage only as trustee for the real o-wnei" thereof and that his cestui que trust cannot he charged with a payment which he never received, even though Doxen had received the check at a time when ho did not represent ’Berkley. Since these contentions are in conflict, it becomes, necessary to examine in some detail the evidence hearing on them,

The ease is controlled by comparatively few fact's, and the evidence concerning them can be considered under two heads.: (1) Was the $1,000 payment made to the company, or, was. it made to Doxen, (a) as an individual, (&) as agent for Berkley, or (c) as agent for Wagner? (2) Were the appellees prejudiced by the fact that the payment was not applied in reduction of the mortgage ?

Taking up these questions in their order, the uncontradicted evidence shows, that the cheek was drawn to the order of the Farmers. Co-operative Company, and after the endorsement of that company had been stamped on the back, it was presented at the bank on which it was drawn and the company credited with the proceeds. There is no. evidence that Doxen personally ever in any way received any part thereof. It is also undisputed that when it was signed and delivered to Doxen, the check bore the following notation: “For on account of Churehville property.” Wagner contends that when he signed the cheek the name of the payee was blank, but the evidence is to the contrary. Both Doxen and Mrs. Mildred Bailey, the stenographer who prepared the cheek and who is wholly disinterested, testified positively that when Wagner signed it the check contained the name of the payee, and as against the uncorroborated testimony of Wagner this must be accepted as conclusive., for considered in the light of common experience it is incredible *446 that a business man of ordinary prudence would make a payment of $1,000' on account of a mortgage, which was a lien on property which he had agreed to purchase, by a check in which the name of the payee was not filled in. A check drawn to the order of the company, his vendor, would afford intrinsic evidence of a payment on account of his debt to the company; a check-drawn to- the order of Berkley, the mortgagee, would -show a payment on account of the mortgage; but a check drawn to the order of Doxen would in itself indicate neither of these things.

A more orderly, natural and prudent course was that adopted in this case, which was to make the check payable to the vendor, who was also the mortgagor. Doxen was not the mortgagor, but only-the secretary and treasurer of the company which owed the mortgage debt.

But even if we could assume that the appellee intended to make the payment to Doxen and not to the company, and that Doxen agreed to pay it on the mortgage; nevertheless, Berkley, who neither knew of nor authorized, nor ratified his acts, could not be made to' answer for any loss which they occasioned.

It is uncontradicted that the mortgage was 'assigned to Doxen only for the purpose of collection, and he therefore' holds it as trustee- for Berkley. The mortgage was bum fide and the assignment was made in good faith for the purpose stated. There is nothing illegal about such a transaction (Bouldin v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 A. 254, 142 Md. 441, 1923 Md. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doxen-v-wagner-md-1923.