Gaither v. Slack

43 A. 915, 89 Md. 727
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 5, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 43 A. 915 (Gaither v. Slack) 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
Gaither v. Slack, 43 A. 915, 89 Md. 727 (Md. 1899).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This proceeding was instituted by the appellant, assignee of Joseph Slack, to enforce a vendor’s lien upon a farm in Carroll County.

It appears from the record, that on the eighteenth of March, 1891, a certain Joseph Slack sold and conveyed to his son, the appellee, the farm in question, for the consideration (as stated in the deed), “ of natural love and affection which I, the said Joseph Slack, have and bear towards my son, as *728 also for the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars.” For two thousand dollars thereof the son gave to his father his promissory note, payable in three years, and to secure the payment thereof executed and delivered a mortgage on the same farm; copies of the note and mortgage are filed with the bill. As to the balance of the purchase money (the same being $500), the parties entered into a written agreement, wherein the details of the entire transaction appear to be fully set forth. In that instrument, after a recital of the facts, as we have given them substantially, it was agreed and George Slack bound himself and his representatives to pay to his father thirty dollars a year as long as his father should live, “ and no longer;” and to the faithful performance of this he bound himself in the sum of five hundred dollars.

The defences set up by the appellee and his wife, as contained in their answer, are, that the mortgage was “ obtained through and by means of fraud and false representations, held out, and made to George W. Slack by said Joseph Slack;” that the parties to the mortgage understood that “ it was simply a matter of form,” and “ simply a security for the yearly payment of $120 to Joseph Slack during his life ;” and that the real consideration was the payment of that sum annually for that period, and the conveyance by George of his interest in another farm to his brother. Their answer also contains an admission that a default has been made in the interest due on the $2,000 ; and that there is now due on that account two hundred and ninety-seven dollars.

The main question for us, presented by the appeal, arises upon the charge that the mortgage was obtained through the false and fraudulent representations of the father; and this requires of us to examine with care all the evidence that appears in the record.

At the time of these transactions Joseph Slack was sixty-four years of age. He was a widower with two sons, the appellee and William D. Slack, both of whom were con *729 siderably over the age of twenty-one years. He was about to re-marry, and before doing so he was desirous of making some provision for both of his sons. He owned two farms, one containing about ninety acres, and worth $3,600; the other, one hundred and fifty acres, and worth $5,400. These two places he proposed to divide between his two sons. Neither of them held any interest in either of the places, and the statement that part of the consideration the appellee gave for the farm that was conveyed to him was the transfer of his interest in the other place to his brother cannot be correct, because of the indisputable fact that the appellee had no such interest. From the face of the papers in the record it would seem that the father was not unmindful of the principle of equality in the bestowment of his gifts. To William he conveyed the ninety-acre tract, worth about $3,600; to George he conveyed the other, and larger tract, worth over five thousand four hundred dollars, but he charged the latter with the payment of $2,000, and an additional thirty dollars per annum during his own life. There is nothing requiring explanation about any of these facts. Indeed, so far from exciting suspicion, it is almost impossible to believe, without the most cogent evidence, that the father, while he was thus donating, with apparently scrupulous fairness, property of considerable value, and acting ostensibly for the sole benefit of his sons, and so that no result could accrue to himself, other than the absolute deprivation of the title to both farms, could have been meditating and executing a fraud upon one of those sons. What possible motive could so actuate him? Being the owner in fee of both farms he was perfectly free to retain them for his own use, or donate them or any part of them to his sons, upon any terms and conditions that he chose to impose. Why, therefore, attempt to do by fraud the thing he was legally competent to do without staining his hands ? Why resort to false representations and fraud to bring about that which it was perfectly competent to do openly and above board ? It is *730 not charged there was a mistake in the preparation of the papers by which the appellee has been deprived of a right that it was intended the papers should confer upon him. It is conceded the mortgage and the agreement contain everything that should be therein contained and nothing more, nor is it pretended that the appellee was in any manner misled as to the character of the papers that were executed. He knew that by the deed he acquired title to the farm, and that by the mortgage he was fastening a lien on it for $2,000.

The exact nature of the alleged fraud of the father is thus stated by the appellee in his evidence : He says, “ he (father) gave me a deed for this property; he wanted to hold something in the property, something, same as a life-estate, as he told me; then he wanted to take a mortgage on it; that Mr. Wadlow (the conveyancer), said it would be easier fixed in that way, but this mortgage was never to be collected, it was to be mine, that it was to revert to me; I was to pay him a certain amount • a year, but this mortgagewas never to be collected; it was $150 per year I was to pay him as shown by the mortgage and agreement, $120 on the mortgage and $30 on the agreement, &c.” In making this statement he is not corroborated by the statements of Mr. Wadlow or of his father, or, as we have seen, by any of the probabilities of the case. Both Mr. Wadlow and the father testify that there was no other contract than that shown by the agreement. Nor could the statement of the father, that he would not collect the principal sum, deceive him, even if it be conceded that the father then so intended and communicated his intention to his son. The entire transaction was voluntary, so far as the father was concerned. He made no promise that he would not collect it, and if he had made such a promise, having been made without consideration passing to him, it was nudum pactum and not binding upon him. The appellee, however, knew that it was only an intention, which could, at any time, be revoked by his father ; he knew that the mortgage was liable to be fore *731 closed at the pleasure of his father when he accepted the deed for the property and executed the mortgage. He knew that he was receiving a gift from his father of over three thousand dollars beyond the burden he was required to carry. Perhaps the father, in fact, never did intend to collect the money ; he, in fact, told several persons that he did not; and probably would never have done so, had his son paid him the interest thereon annually, as it became due. The very object in retaining the control over this sum was to secure himself against the default of his son. He said to Mrs Ninasah Slack, “ I cannot give all my property away. I don’t know what may happen to me, I may need something.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 915, 89 Md. 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaither-v-slack-md-1899.