Dryfoos v. Hostetter

302 A.2d 28, 268 Md. 396
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 26, 1973
Docket[No. 210, September Term, 1972.]
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 302 A.2d 28 (Dryfoos v. Hostetter) 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
Dryfoos v. Hostetter, 302 A.2d 28, 268 Md. 396 (Md. 1973).

Opinion

Singley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On 20 April 1967, J. Virgil Hostetter and Lois G. *398 Hostetter, his wife (the Hostetters) sold certain unimproved property in Prince George’s County to Henry Dryfoos, III and Pauline Webb Dryfoos, his wife (the Dryfooses). Of the total purchase price, $40,000.00 was deferred, the note received by the Hostetters representing that amount being secured by a purchase money deed of trust to Paul M. Nussbaum and Herbert W. Reichelt, trustees.

The deed of trust from the Dryfooses to Nussbaum and Reichelt, as trustees, contained the following provision, the significance of which will be later discussed:

“IT BEING EXPRESSLY UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED that upon the recordation of any bona fide construction loan or loans secured on the hereafter described property, the Lien of this Instrument shall become subordinate to such construction loan or loans and to any and all advances made thereunder, whether such advances are pursuant to a firm commitment or voluntarily made.”

On 14 February 1969, the Dryfooses sold the same property to B. A., Inc. (B. A.) for $80,000.00, including, however, the purchase money debt of $40,000.00 owed the Hostetters to which the property remained subject. Of the remainder of the purchase price, $18,000.00 was deferred, represented by a note payable to the Dryfooses secured by a deed of trust from B. A. to Edwin Collier and Francis A. Shaffer, as trustees.

At this brief instant, the Hostetters were secured by the senior encumbrance on the property; the Dryfooses, by the junior.

On the day the transaction was closed, B. A. gave Suburban Home Investment Corporation (Suburban) a note for $50,000.00. The note given Suburban was secured by a deed of trust from B. A. to G. Patricia Colicchio and Charles E. Mitchell, as trustees. Only $22,000.00 appears to have been paid in cash to the Dry *399 fooses from the loan proceeds, the $18,000.00 Dryfoos trust and the $40,000.00 Hostetter trust rounding out the balance of the $80,000.00 contract price.

It would seem that while the Suburban loan was in the face amount of $50,000.00, B. A.’s note was sold by Suburban to Fellowship Investment Associates (Fellowship) for $42,500.00, subject, however, to a commission of $4,200.00 paid by B. A. to Suburban, and the deduction of $1,875.00 as prepaid interest, but here the record becomes cloudy. It appears to be conceded, however, that Berks Title Insurance Company, as agent for B. A., received only $30,625.00 of the $50,000.00 which B. A. had borrowed, and that even this sum was paid it by Fellowship, and not by Suburban. The balance of something over $5,000.00 was disbursed by Suburban to B. A’s president, or on his order.

Two difficulties underlay the whole transaction. The first was that Nussbaum, trustee under the deed of trust securing the obligation to the Hostetters, several days preceding the closing, had joined with his fellow trustee, Reichelt, with Hostetter’s approval, in the execution of an agreement which had the effect of subordinating the Hostetter obligation to the Suburban loan, primarily because Mr. Hostetter had been advised by his counsel that the Hostetter trust provided for subordination to a construction loan, and Hostetter was under the impression that Suburban was making such a loan.

Unhappily, however, the subordination agreement which Nussbaum and Reichelt signed on 10 February 1969 specifically subordinated the lien of the Hostetter deed of trust to that of a deed of trust to be executed. The agreement contained no reference to the provision that the lien of the Hostetter trust was only to be subordinated to a construction loan, nor any representation that a lender was, in fact, making a construction loan. The form of subordination agreement submitted to Nussbaum and Reichelt for signature contained the name of a different borrower and disclosed neither the date of *400 the deed of trust (which had not yet been prepared) nor the correct name of the borrower. This was later corrected by interlineation and insertion.

The second difficulty stemmed from the fact that by Ch. 718 of the Laws of 1968, effective 1 July 1968, the General Assembly had enacted what is now Maryland Code (1957, 1966 Repl. Vol., 1971 Cum. Supp.) Art. 21, § 30 (b) which required that the party secured by a purchase money deed of trust, if not the seller of the property, make an affidavit that the funds borrowed had been disbursed at the time the deed of trust was executed. The deed of trust from B. A. to Suburban, executed 14 February 1969, bore no affidavit of disbursement.

In July 1970, the Dryfooses having defaulted under their deed of trust, the Hostetters, Nussbaum and Reichelt filed an amended bill in equity in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County against B. A., Colicchio, Mitchell, Suburban, Fellowship and the Dryfooses, seeking to have Fellowship enjoined from foreclosing the deed of trust securing its note; asking that the subordination agreement be set aside and that the priority of the deed of trust securing the Hostetter obligation be reestablished. 1 The Dryfooses answered, agreeing to a grant of the claimed relief. Suburban and Fellowship filed answers generally denying the allegations of the bill.

Suburban and Fellowship countered with a third-party claim against Berks Title Insurance Company, alleging that Berks guaranteed that Suburban and any successor in interest would be secured by a first lien on the property, and that Berks would be liable to Suburban or Fellowship for any loss which they might suffer. On 19 October 1971, this claim was dismissed before the case came on for trial, without prejudice.

Ultimately, the court, having determined that the Suburban trust was a purchase money trust; that the *401 absence of the affidavit of disbursement was inadvertent, and was therefore corrected by the curative act, Code (1957, 1966 Repl. Vol., 1971 Cum. Supp.) Art. 21, § 99, and that there was no evidence that a fraud had been worked on the Hostetters, entered an order on 28 July 1972 holding that the Suburban trust was valid and that the Hostetter trust was subordinated to it by the subordination agreement.

The Dryfooses then moved to set aside this order, on the ground that the subordination of the lien of their deed of trust to Hostetter to that of B. A.’s to Suburban amounted to an invalid application of the curative act, and would deprive them and the Hostetters of vested rights which both had in the property.

From an order entered on 24 August denying this motion and from the order of 28 July, the Dryfooses have appealed. The Hostetters have appealed from the order entered in July granting validity and priority to the Suburban trust.

The Dryfooses rest their case on three arguments:

1. The absence of the affidavit of disbursement renders the Suburban trust invalid, an invalidity which cannot be corrected by the curative act, without unconstitutionally disturbing rights which had become vested;

2.

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Bluebook (online)
302 A.2d 28, 268 Md. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dryfoos-v-hostetter-md-1973.