Eversole v. Maull

50 Md. 95, 1878 Md. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 50 Md. 95 (Eversole v. Maull) 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
Eversole v. Maull, 50 Md. 95, 1878 Md. LEXIS 145 (Md. 1878).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

It appears from the record in this case that in 1873, David W. Caskey mortgaged certain leasehold property in Baltimore, to Abraham S. Eversole to secure a loan of $750, for which he had passed to the mortgagee his promissory note, payable one year after date. The mortgage contained the usual consent clause for a decree under the provisions of the Local Law of Baltimore City, on that subject, and on the 1st of March, 1875, a petition was filed in the Circuit Court by Eversole, through James Frame, his solicitor, for a decree for the sale of the mortgaged prop[100]*100erty, and on the next day a decree was accordingly passed appointing Frame trustee to make the sale. On the 29th of May, following, an order was filed in the cause signed hy Frame as solicitor for the complainant, directing the clerk to enter the decree to the use of Edward A. Maull, and it appears to have been so entered on the docket. The cause remained in that condition until the 15th of March, 1816, when an affidavit was filed by Maull, stating that he was the purchaser, and endorsee of the note secured by the mortgage, and setting forth the amount, due thereon and on the mortgage by which it was secured. The trustee then proceeded to sell the property, and sold the same to Maull for the sum of $500. The sale was duly reported, and in due course finally ratified by an order passed on the 19th of April, 1816. The trustee then on the 9th of May following, executed a deed conveying the property to the purchaser, who on the next day mortgaged the same to one Drinkliouse. After this, but-before any account disposing of the proceeds of sale had been stated, Frame and Eversole both died; and on 6th of June, 1811, the widow and administratrix of Eversole, filed her petition in the case, alleging that her deceased husband had employed Frame professionally to institute-the proper proceedings to collect the mortgage debt, and for that purpose had delivered to him the mortgage note; that having the note thus in his possession Frame fraudulently endorsed it to Maull, and then the better to consummate the fraud upon his client, undertook to assign the decree to Maull without the client’s consent or knowledge, but did so without pursuing the special mode prescribed by law, and hence the attempted assignment is null and void; that the sale was also void because there-was no proper affidavit made of the mortgagee’s claim prior thereto, Maull not being the mortgagee nor in any way authorized to make the affidavit; that her husband never knew that the same had been made, Frame having-[101]*101concealed the fact from him, and having told him as late as October, 1876, that the property had not been sold; that she has hut recently discovered the true state of the facts and the fraud which has been practiced upon her husband and his estate; that she has applied to Maull hut is unable to obtain any satisfactory settlement from him, and she therefore prays that he and the administrator of Erame may be required to answer this petition, that the entry of the decree to the use of Maull may be vacated, the sale annulled and its ratification stricken out and for general relief. In his answer to this petition, Maull avers that he purchased the note from Frame and paid him $500 therefor, and when he so purchased it the note bore the endorsement of the name of Eversole the payee, and Frame then endorsed it to him; that the •endorsement of the payee was a general one, and not for any special purpose, and he became the innocent holder thereof for value; that he did not know at the time in what manner Frame held the note except by this endorsement, nor for what purpose or consideration it was so endorsed to him, and that he was not aware of any fraud in connection with the purchase of the note, and has no personal knowledge now of any fraud ever having been perpetrated by Frame upon Eversole; that if Eversole did not receive the money due him, it was by reason of his misplaced confidence in Frame in thus endorsing the note generally to him, but this cannot affect respondent’s rights in the premises; that the note being secured by mortgage he was subrogated to the rights of Eversole under the mortgage, and therefore the proper person in law to make the affidavit in the proceedings of foreclosure, and that it is immaterial in what manner the decree was entered to his use.

The case was submitted on this petition, and answer and the Court thereupon passed an order dismissing the petition. After this the auditor stated an account distribut[102]*102ing the net proceeds of sale to Maull, and then by direction of the petitioner’s counsel, stated another account distributing them to her. To the former account exceptions were filed by the petitioner, and to the latter by Maull. At the hearing of these exceptions several letters and documents admitted to he genuine were introduced, hut Maull reserved and filed exceptions to their admissibility, competency and effect as evidence. The Court then passed orders rejecting the account in favor of the petitioner, and ratifying that in favor of Maull; and from these, as well as from the order dismissing her petition Mrs. Ever-sole has appealed.

In our judgment neither of these orders can he reversed,, nor any relief afforded the appellant, if Maull purchased the note in good faith and for value without notice at the time, either actual or presumed, that Frame had no-authority to sell and transfer it, or that he was committing a fraud upon Eversole by so doing. The note is in the usual form payable to the order of Eversole one year after date, was endorsed by him “without recourse,” apd so far as the record shows these words, “ without recourse," were over his endorsement when he delivered the note to Frame. The precise times when it was thus delivered, and when it was sold and transferred to Maull are not stated, hut it is plain that Frame received it after maturity, and we infer from the averments of the appellant’s petition, and other parts of the record that he sold, endorsed and delivered it to Maull, before the decree in the proceedings upon the mortgage was entered to his use. But it is not to he doubted that a negotiable promissory note may he endorsed and transferred after as well as before maturity, the endorsee after maturity taking subject to all equities between the antecedent parties to it. What these equities are we learn from the decision of our predecessors in Renwiclc vs. Williams, 2 Md., 356, where it is said, the only defences against which an endorsee [103]*103has to guard in taking an overdue note are, first those which have arisen since the execution of the note, and which are not collateral, hut which relate to the note itself, and secondly those which are inherent in the note, and which would show it to have heen void db initio, such as fraud, mistake or absence of a sufficient consideration. In that case, the note sued on was an accommodation note, endorsed by the payee to the plaintiff, “ without recourse” after it was due, and it was held that this did not prevent the plaintiff, a holder for value, from recovering against the maker. Prior to this, it had been decided in Annan vs. Houck, 4 Gill, 324, that a claim which the maker of a note has against the payee, not connected with it, cannot be set off in an action brought by the endorsee against the maker, though the note was endorsed after it fell due; and subsequently, in Williams vs. Banks, 11 Md.,

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Bluebook (online)
50 Md. 95, 1878 Md. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eversole-v-maull-md-1878.