Felgner's Administrators v. Slingluff

71 A. 978, 109 Md. 474, 1909 Md. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 71 A. 978 (Felgner's Administrators v. Slingluff) 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
Felgner's Administrators v. Slingluff, 71 A. 978, 109 Md. 474, 1909 Md. LEXIS 10 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mrs. Ann M. Slingluff filed a hill in equity against Edward L. Feigner for an accounting for all sums of money re *477 ceived by him from a property previously owned by her, and prayed for a discovery and a decree in personam against Mm for such amount as may be found to be due her. The lower Court decreed that he pay her the sum of $3,802.03 and co'sts, and Mr. Feigner having died, his administrators were made parties defendant and entered an appeal from that decree. A cross-appeal was entered by Mrs. Sling-luff.

On the 26th of September, 1899, Horace Slingluff, husband of the plaintiff, gave a mortgage, in which she joined, to Mr. Feigner for $22,000.00 on a property in Baltimore County county called “llpton.” Mr. Slingluff afterwards took the benefit of the Bankrupt Law, and on March 27, 1900, the mortgage was foreclosed and the property purchased by Mr. Feigner. At that time large improvements which Mr. Sling-luff had begun were incomplete and the dwelling house was consequently in bad condition. Mr. Feigner agreed with Mrs. Slingluff that he would complete the repairs which were in course of construction, keep an account of the moneys expended thereon and, when completed, would convey the property to her, who with her husband was to give Mr. Feigner a note secured by mortgage upon said property. The parties do not materially differ as to the terms of that agreement'— the principal difference being that the plaintiff claims it was made before the foreclosure sale of March 27, 1900, and the defendant that it was made shortly afterwards.

On May 1, 1901, a deed was executed for the property to Mrs. Slingluff", and Mr. and Mrs. Slingluff gave Mr. Feigner a mortgage of that date to secure a note for $30,495, payable three years after date and six interest notes for $913.85, each, one being payable every six months after date. The principal sum included the original mortgage of $22,000, the repairs made by Mr. Feigner amounting to $4,896.74, the costs of the foreclosure proceedings $687,40, including a fee of $500.00 to Mr. Dillehunt, who was the attorney who made the sale, and $2,367.90 interest to May 1, 1901, which together with an adjustment of taxes, $17.97—amounted to $30,495.01. We do not understand the correctness of those *478 sums to be questioned, but the plaintiff claims that there should have been a credit of $1,400.00 for rent received from David Hutzler, which will be referred to later.

As additional security, Mr. and Mrs. Slingluff agreed to assign to Mr. Feigner an endowment policy of insurance issued on the life of Horace Slingluff for the sum of $5,000, which at the time, by reason of certain accumulations, had a cash value of something over $7,000. The Slingluffs also agreed to furnish the dwelling house, to provide a gardener and do what they could towards securing a good rental. The object of this was to get the property in a condition that would enable them to dispose of it to the best advantage, in order, to pay off the mortgage and have some surplus for the benefit of Mrs. Slingluff, which she claims it was agreed she should have. The insurance policy was assigned to Mr. Feigner, but the trustees in bankruptcy of Mr. Slingluff made a demand for it, and after some litigation the matter was finally compromised by- dividing the value of the policy, which resulted in Mr. Feigner receiving $3,574.15. Mr. Slingluff, who represented his wife, and Mr. Dillehunt, who represented Mr. Feigner, who was his father-in-law, practically agree as to what that agreement was, excepting Mr. Sling-luff claims that the rents for 1900 were to go to Mr. Feigner while Mr. Dillehunt contends that the payment of rents to him was to begin with those of 1901. The rents were derived from the property during the summer season. Mr. Slingluff. rented the property to David Hutzler for the summer of 1900 at $1,400.00, to Louis Hamburger for the summer of 1901 at $1,400. and to Levi Greif for the summer of 1902 at $3,200.00, and Mr. and Mrs. Slingluff expended money and time with a view to making the property attractive to purchasers.

There were a number of interviews between Mr. Slingluff and Mr. Dillehunt, and considerable correspondence passed between them, some of which will be hereafter referred to— the letter of October 11, 1902, bearing more particularly on the agreement that Mrs. Slingluff was to have the surplus, *479 over and above the claims and expenses of Mr. Feigner, out of a sale of the property. On February 24, 1903, a deed was executed by the Slingluffs to Mr. Feigner for the property embraced in the mortgage which was duly delivered 1o Mr. Dillehunt. hut he put it in his safe and never recorded it. On April 17, 1903, Mr. Dillehunt, as assignee of the mortgage, reported a sale of the property under the power of sale to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in which report he states that he sold the property on April 8, 1903, to Mr. Feigner for $24,000. That sale was in due course ratified by the Court, an Auditor’s report was filed and ratified and the deed was made by Mr. Dillehunt, assignee, to Mr. Feigner on May 13, 1903. Both Mr. and Mrs. Slingluff deny any knowledge of that foreclosure sale until the matters connected with this suit were placed in the hands of Mr. Bartlett, who, they allege, first told them of it, and they claim that they supposed the deed which they executed had passed the title to Mr. Feigner, subject to the agreement which they say then existed.

Before this hill was filed Mr. Feigner had sold part of the property to Charles D. Fitzgerald for $27,500.00 (as we understand the amount), and the balance to the Western Maryland Bailroad Company for $5,812.50, and the plaintiff claims that the purchase money received, the insurance money and rents more than paid Mr. Feigner, who she alleges was compelled to give her the surplus under the agreement. The defendant denies there was any surplus, hut contends that if there was the foreclosure proceedings preclude any recovery. The first question therefore to be determined by us is the effect of those proceedings.

1. We cannot agree with the counsel for Mrs. Slingluff that there was a merger by virtue of the deed of February 24, 1903. A sufficient answer to that contention is that before the deed was made, to wit, on October 31, 1902, the morí gage had been assigned to Mr. Dillehunt. While he undoubtedly took the assignment subject to all equities existing between the mortgagor and mortgagee, the legal title was transferred to him and hence there was no merger by reason *480 of the deed to Mr. Feigner. T¿e general rule is that: “In order for the mortgage to be extinguished by the union of titles of the mortgagor and the mortgagee, such titles must unite in the same person at one and the same time.” 20 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law 1068. Even when a mortgagee acquires the equity of redemption in his own name it does not necessarily follow that the mortgage becomes merged and extinquished, but it depends upon the intention of the mortgagee, and when it is for his benefit to do so the presumption is that he intended to keep the mortgage alive. Ibid, 1064; Polk v. Reynolds, 31 Md. 106.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 978, 109 Md. 474, 1909 Md. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felgners-administrators-v-slingluff-md-1909.