Ehlen v. Selden

59 A. 129, 99 Md. 699, 1904 Md. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 A. 129 (Ehlen v. Selden) 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
Ehlen v. Selden, 59 A. 129, 99 Md. 699, 1904 Md. LEXIS 104 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The record now before us brings up the single question as to whether the ruling of the Superior Court of Baltimore City sustaining a demurrer to the declaration filed by the appellee against the appellant, is right. The declaration alleges that the defendant and the plaintiff orally agreed on January 9th, 1902, that the plaintiff would hold himself ready to lend to the defendant and would lend to him for one year at six per cent interest if requested by the defendant to do so, at any time after the date named and up to and including the 30th day of June of the same year, the sum of $65,000 to be secured by a first mortgage on a certain mine in West Virginia, *700 and that until such security were offered by the defendant within the period indicated and until the loan was consummated the defendant would pay the plaintiff legal interest on said sum of $65,000 from January 9th, 1902: That the plaintiff did hold the sum of $65,000 in readiness to lend to the defendant from said 9th day of January, 1902, until, up to and including said 30th day of June, but the defendant did not offer said security and did not call on and request the plaintiff to make said loan within the period mentioned but on the contrary declined to accept the same, and that he refuses to pay the said legal interest on the sum of $65,000 from January 9th, to June 30th, 1902,- though often requested to do so. To recover a sum equal to that interest the suit was brought. The defendant demurred to the declaration, the Court sustained the demurrer and gave judgment for the defendant and from that judgment this appeal was taken by the plaintiff.

The grounds upon which the appellee, the defendant below, relies to support the judgment sustaining the demurrer are as follows: First, that the contract declared on being an oral one stipulating for the mortgaging of land is within the Statute of Frauds and cannot, therefore, furnish a cause of action; and secondly, that the contract provides for two contingencies each of which is dependent on the option or election of the defendant, the appellee, according to one of which there was a promise to pay the interest from January 9th, 1902, until the mortgage security should be offered by the defendant within ■the .designated period and the loan should be consummated; and according to the other of which upon the expiration of the said period without the consummation of the loan there was no promise to pay the interest at all.

First. It is true that a verbal agreement to mortgage land is within the fourth section of the Statute of Frauds (Alexander v. Ghiselin, 5 Gill, 138), and if the contract set out in the declaration belongs to that class of undertakings, the action cannot be maintained. But is there a term in the contract obliging the appellee to execute or the appellant to accept a mortgage conveying real estate? If there is not or if the con *701 dition with respect to the mortgage is collateral to the substantive and predominant thing agreed to be done, then the statute has no application and the contract is not affected by it. This principle is very well illustrated by the case of Lamm v. The Port Deposit Hom. Asstn., 49 Md. 233. It appeared there that Lamm purchased on September 12th, 1874, a house and lot at a mortgagee’s sale made by Mr. W. J. Jones, the agent of the appellee mortgagee : That the purchase was made on the faith of represesentations of the agent that the appellee would deliver possession of the property within three months from the day of sale; and that possession was not obtained until February, 1876. Thereafter Lamm sued the Homestead Association to recover the expenses incurred by him in getting possession of the property and the loss of the intermediate rents and profits. The trial Court withdrew the case from the jury, first, because the contract to deliver possession was within the Statute of Frauds, and, secondly, because the contract was beyond the scope of the agent’s authority; and judgment was entered for the defendant. On appeal the judgment was affirmed by this Court not because the contract was within the statute, but because it was beyond the scope of the agent’s authority. In the course of the opinion it was said: “The fourth section of the Statute of Frauds refers by its terms and meaning to contracts for the sale of lands, &c., or any interest in or concerning them, and not to collateral or independent undertakings outside of such contracts, and does not apply to the representation, if any, made at the sale in question.” In Horner and Condon, Extrs., v. Frazier, 65 Md. 1, this state of facts was shown : David Frazier sued Alexander H. Horner to recover damages for a breach of contract. The declaration stated that certain land owned by the plaintiff was to be sold at trustee’s sale and that the defendant proposed to the plaintiff that the latter should become the purchaser of the land at the sale, and promised the plaintiff that if he would confess judgment in favor of the defendant for the amount of a certain unfounded claim which the defendant then held against the plaintiff, the defendant, in *702 consideration thereof, would advance and supply to the plaintiff all the money required to meet the payments of the purchase-money under said sale upon the understanding that the money which should be so advanced should be returned to the .defendant by the plaintiff after the latter had effected a sale of the land so to be bought. The plaintiff accepted the proposal and purchased the land on the faith of the agreement and then complied fully with his part of the contract by giving the confessed judgment for the unfounded claim, but the defendant failed to comply with his part of the agreement. It was held that the contract was not one concerning an interest in land and was therefore not obnoxious to the fourth section of the Statute of Frauds. A very similar case has been decided in the same way quite recently in England. Boston v. Boston (1904), 1 K. B. 124.

The thing which was agreed to be done by the appellant was to keep in readiness the sum of $65,000 for the purpose of loaning it to the appellee and if called on and requested to do so, to loan it to him, at any time between the dates named; and the thing which the appellee stipulated to perform was to pay interest bn that amount. As an incident to the chief term of the agreement, it was stated that the loan, if made, was to be secured by a first mortgage on a certain mine. But the suit does not seek to recover for a failure to execute and de~ .liver a mortgage; on the contrary it is for a failure tó pay the interest stipulated to be paid, and stipulated to be paid without any reference whatever to the execution of a mortgage. There was no obligation on the part of the appellant to, accept a mortgage to secure the loan. If the loan transaction had been effected the appellant could have dispensed with the condition respecting the execution of the mortgage; and there is no term of the agreement which would have compelled him to accept a mortgage if he . had elected to consummate.the loan without requiring it. There was, as the agreement is set forth.ip the deqlaratiqn, no.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A. 129, 99 Md. 699, 1904 Md. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehlen-v-selden-md-1904.