Frederick County National Bank v. Schlosser

137 A. 351, 152 Md. 609, 1927 Md. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 137 A. 351 (Frederick County National Bank v. Schlosser) 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
Frederick County National Bank v. Schlosser, 137 A. 351, 152 Md. 609, 1927 Md. LEXIS 152 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court for Frederick County, rejecting the claim of the appellant as assignee of a mortgage in favor of the holders of notes secured by the mortgage. It appears that one Sylvester L. Y. Young,. of Hagerstown, Md., had title to a property on Patrick Street, in Frederick, Md., in which he conducted a garage under the name of Young Motor Car Company, on which he gave a mortgage for $10,000. Thereafter he conveyed the property to his son, Ira L. Young, by deed dated September 1st, 1923, who, with his wife, Clara G-. Young, executed on the same day what purported to- be a purchase money mortgage (subject to the first mortgage of $10,000) to Harvey J. Schlosser for $4,000, to Mary C. Young, (sister of Sylvester L. Y. Young) for $6,000, to- Sylvester L. V. Young for $10,000, and to' Sophia I. Young, (wife of Sylvester L. Y. *611 Young), for $5,000, or $25,000 in all, the mortgage debt having been evidenced by one note to Harvey I. Schlosser for $4,000 -and twenty-one notes for $1,000 each, of which six were payable to Mary C. Young, five to Sophia I. Yonng, and ten to Sylvester L. Y. Young, all payable two years after date with interest thereon payable semi-annually. Harvey J. Schlosser held his note and interest in the mortgage to the foreclosure, but the Young notes were all assigned and disposed of within a few months. Subsequently, on June 23rd, 1925, the Young Motor Car Company, Glenn C. Young, Ira L. Young, S. L. V. Young, Mary O. Young, and Sophia I. Young, gave to the Frederick County National Bank a collateral judgment note for $5,000 at sixty days, depositing therewith as collateral “$5,000' notes Ira L. Young, Clara G. Young to S. L. Y. Young,” which, according to the record in this ease, have all the appearances, of original notes secured by the mortgage of September 1st, 1923, though it now appears that they were fraudulently issued by S. L. V. Young. The record shows that S. L. Y. Young negotiated and made all the transfers of the mortgage notes. After the note to the appellant fell due, it insisted on an assignment of the mortgage to it, the appellant having no knowledge that it was not the holder of five original mortgage notes. On December 29th, 1925, S. L. V. Young sent to the appellant the original mortgage, on which he had signed his name in pencil. Signature with lead pencil is sufficient. 36 Oyc. 448. Above the signature on the mortgage the bank wrote an assignment as follows:

“Having for value received on June 23rd,. A. D. 1925, on said date, to wit: June 23rd, A. D. 1925, duly assigned to the Frederick County National Bank of Frederick, Maryland, a body corporate, five promissory notes for one thousand dollars each, payment of which is secured by the within and aforegoing mortgage, I do hereby assign to the said The Frederick County National Bank of Frederick, Maryland, a body corporate, all of my right, title and interest in the above and foregoing mortgage to the extent of the said five thousand dollars mortgage debt secured hereby and *612 represented by said notes, together with all interest due and payable thereon.
“Dated this 29th day of December, A. D. 1925.
“S. L. V. Young (Seal).”

The assignment was recorded February 19th, 1926. On March 2nd, 1926, Harvey J. Schlosser assigned his interest in the mortgage to Leslie N. Coblentz, and on March 27th, 1926,’the appellant assigned its interest to Albert S. Brown, for the purpose of foreclosure, and thereupon they advertised the mortgaged premises for sale and sold the same for $8050, and the distribution of this fund is the subject-matter of this case. The court below decreed that the proceeds of sale should be distributed “ratably amongst the bom fide holders of the genuine mortgage notes, secured by the mortgage dated September 1st, 1923,” and excluded the appellant from any share in the proceeds of sale.

The appellees all contend for the distribution decreed by the lower court, with which we disagree so far as the original interest in the mortgage of S. L. Y. Young is concerned. The appellant contends, that it is entitled to the amount distributed to the S. L. Y. Young interest in the mortgage, and if that be insufficient to satisfy the appellant’s claim, that the distribution to holder’s of notes issued to Mary 0. Young and Sophia I. Young be postponed until the indebtedness due the appellant on the $5,000 note be paid in full, and with this contention we also disagree.

The appellees object to the assignment to the appellant: first, because it was signed by Young in blank, without any authority to fill in an assignment; second, because of the want of the affidavit required by Code 1924, art. 21, sec. 36, and art. 81, sec. 201. To the first of these objections they say that Young did not know of the assignment until after the sale, and that it was not the 'assignment agreed upon with Mr. MeOardell, the president of the bank, Young saying: “As a matter of fact, when the subject was first discussed there was to be no assignment.” This is not in accord with his conduct as it appears, in the record. Mr. MeOardell had been *613 writing Young for an assignment from September 21st, 1925, and it was in response to his repeated demands for an assignment that Young sent him the mortgage on December 29, 1925, with his, Young’s, signature thereon, and with it the implied authority to supply the formal assignment.

The short form of assignment of mortgages provided by article 21, section 35, of the Code of 1924, does not require an acknowledgment, so that, after the mortgage was assigned in blank and delivered to the assignee, there was no other act required of the assignor, and what was said by Judge Alvey in Jackson v. Myers, 43 Md. 462, would apply here: “If the endorsement of a sealed instrument be in blank, accompanied by delivery, the party to whom the instrument is delivered may fill up the blank with a full assignment to' himself and thus become absolute owner, with right to maintain suit in his own name, within the meaning of the statute; and though the assignment may not be extended until the time of trial, it is regarded, for the purposes of the suit, as having been made in its extended form when the instrument was endorsed; as was the case in Chesley v. Taylor, 3 Gill, 251.” “If a mortgagee executes and acknowledges an assignment in blank and authorizes an agent to find a purchaser and fill in the purchaser’s name and the agent delivers it to the purchaser, who has no knowledge of the agent’s filling up the blank, the assignment is valid.” Jones on Mortgages (6th Ed.), sec. 790; Phelps v. Sullivan, 140 Mass. 36, 54 Am. Rep. 442.

The second of these objections, if well taken, would defeat the appellant’s claim. By article 21, section 36, of the Code of 1924 (Acts 1896, eh. 120), the assignee of a mortgage shall take an oath to be endorsed on the assignment or mortgage that the assignee “has not required the mortgagor, his agent or attorney, or any person for the said mortgagor, to pay the tax levied upon the interest” etc.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

James v. Weisheit
367 A.2d 482 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1977)
Smith v. First National Bank
196 A. 310 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1938)
Hagerstown Bank & Trust Co. v. College of St. James
176 A. 276 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1935)
Baltimore American Insurance v. Ulman
170 A. 202 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Whitelock v. Whitelock
143 A. 712 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)
Sapero v. Neiswender
23 F.2d 403 (Fourth Circuit, 1928)
In re Bowling Const. Corp.
19 F.2d 604 (D. Maryland, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 A. 351, 152 Md. 609, 1927 Md. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-county-national-bank-v-schlosser-md-1927.