Geisey v. Holberg

45 A.2d 735, 185 Md. 642, 1946 Md. LEXIS 167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 7, 1946
Docket[Nos. 63-65, October Term, 1945.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 735 (Geisey v. Holberg) 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
Geisey v. Holberg, 45 A.2d 735, 185 Md. 642, 1946 Md. LEXIS 167 (Md. 1946).

Opinion

Marbury, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Frances B. Geisey and James M. Geisey were married on August 3,1943. Each had been married before. Mrs. Geisey had a minor son from her former marriage. On September 30, 1943, Mr. Geisey purchased for $12,000 No. 103 West Twenty-ninth Street, in fee simple, paying $4,000 in cash and giving an $8,000 mortgage to George J. Zaiser, George R. Zaiser and Roland D. Zaiser, trustees under the will of Louis F. Zaiser. The title to the property was taken in the name of Mr. and Mrs. Geisey as tenants by the entireties, and the Zaiser mortgage was executed by both of them. Some difficulties arose between the husband and wife in January, 1944, they separated for eleven days, but subsequently started living together again. Their home was an- apartment at 29 South Exeter Street, in a building owned by Mr. Geisey and used for his business. The Twenty-ninth Street property was purchased, according to Mr. Geisey, for the purpose of investment and to allow the first floor apartment to be used by Mrs. Geisey’s mother and by her minor child by the first marriage, without the payment of any rent. In February, 1944, Mr. Geisey suggested to his wife that they buy some Cigar Store stock. Mrs. Geisey agreed to put in $152 as her share *645 of the investment, and he paid $1,500 for the stock which was put in her name. A few days later, her husband asked her to sign a power of attorney, so that if he had to sell the stock in a hurry, and she was not available, he could carry out such a transaction. He also told her he had asked his attorney, Mr. John E. Magers, to prepare such a power of attorney. On March 21, 1944, Mrs. Geisey went to Mr. Magers’ office to pay the interest due on the Zaiser mortgage, and also to pay an $800 installment on it, thereby reducing it to $7,200. At that time, Mr. Magers had the power of attorney ready, and she signed it. It is admitted by Mrs. Geisey that Mr. Magers read the power of attorney to her, and she signed it, and that he told her correctly that it was a general power of attorney. She took the executed paper home, and gave it to her husband. She said she wanted to sign it without reading it, and would have so signed it. She testified she told Mr. Magers that the power of attorney was for the sale of the stock. Mr. Magers said, that to his knowledge and recollection, there was nothing said by her about it being for that purpose, and that when Mr. Geisey asked him to prepare the power of attorney, he did not mention the stock. Mr. Geisey testified that he had been engaged in the coin machine business about five years; that he bought the Cigar Store stock for $1,500 paying for it, and putting it in his wife’s name for income tax purposes. He denies that she ever put up $152, but admits he had $152 of her money, which he afterwards returned to her. He also denies that he ever told her that he wanted the power of attorney merely for the purpose of selling the stock. He admits that he and his wife were on good terms at the time the power of attorney was arranged for, but he gives no explanation of why he wanted it. He kept it until June 29, 1944, when he had it recorded so that he could execute the second mortgage on the Twenty-ninth Street property, hereinafter referred to.

The parties separated finally on May 25, 1944, and Mrs. Geisey went to live with her mother and, son in *646 the Twenty-ninth Street property. On July 25, 1944, Mr. Geisey had the Cigar Stores stock transferred to his own name, and eventually, on December 11, 1944, it was sold for the net amount of $1,899.46.

Mr. Geisey had no bank account and apparently used cash in large amounts in his occupation, which was the retail part of setting up music boxes, cigarette machines and pin ball machines in other persons’ places of business. He had borrowed $4,000 from David R. Holberg when he originally bought the Twenty-ninth Street property, and this was used for the cash payment made at that time. He testified that he had made the first payment on the mortgage of $800 and he paid $200 interest which made $5,000 in cash he had put in the property. . Mr. Holberg had made a loan to Mr. Geisey in July, 1942, of $1,500 without security which was repaid at the rate of $250 per week. On August 16, 1943, he made another loan of $4,000 without security, repaid at the rate of $200 per week. The “interest” or charge for making this loan was $200. On January 7, 1944, another unsecured loan of $5,000 was made by Holberg to Geisey for which $250 was charged. On July 6, 1944, Holberg lent Geisey $5,000. Holberg said that Geisey came to him and said he needed some money, and he would be willing to give him collateral for it by way of a second mortgage; that he, Holberg, did not ask for collateral. Geisey told Holberg that he had power of attorney to act for his wife. Holberg said he went and looked at the property, and thought the loan was all right, and gave Geisey the money. Holberg said he thought he would have made the $5,000 loan without the second mortgage. He may have loaned him twice that much. Holberg did not ask Geisey where his wife was, or why his wife did not sign the mortgage. He stated that he did not know they were separated, and he did not know who was occupying the house. The mortgage was executed for two years, was signed by Geisey, both for himself and for his wife under the authority of the power of attorney. The check was drawn to the order of Mr. *647 and Mrs. Geisey and was endorsed by Mr. Geisey and he had it cashed through Silverstein, a friend of his who was in the wholesale coin vending business. None of the proceeds was given to Mrs. Geisey, and she knew nothing about it. Mr. Geisey said he used the money to pay back his business, which was his way of saving the money he took from his cash business capital for the $4,000 cash deposit on the purchase of the property. This he had previously borrowed, without collateral, from Mr. Holberg, and he had repaid the latter. He also had taken from his cash capital the $800 installment paid on the first mortgage, and the $200 “interest," or charge, paid to Holberg for the first loan. Mr. Weiskopf, the attorney representing Holberg in the mortgage matter, said he was told it should be gotten through as soon as possible, that Mr. Geisey needed the money.

In August, 1944, Mrs. Geisey learned for the first time about the Holberg mortgage. She then executed and recorded a revocation of the power of attorney. This came about as the result of a notice sent by Mr. Geisey to Mrs. Geisey’s mother on July 24, 1944, notifying her to move from the premises thirty days from date. Thereafter, on November 4, 1944, Mrs. Geisey filed her bill of complaint, asking that the power of attorney be declared null and void, and that the second mortgage be declared null and void.

Prior to the filing of this bill of complaint, and on July 17, 1944, eleven days after the ^second mortgage had been given to Holberg, Mr. George C. Rauchhaus, who was in the amusement business, who had known Mr. Geisey several years, and in whose place of business the latter put vending machines on commission, bought the Zaiser first mortgage at the request of Mr. Geisey. The mortgage was not then in default, but Zaiser’s attorney wanted to dispose of it because of trouble he saw coming between the Geiseys, and he told Mr. Geisey he would have to get someone else to take it.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 735, 185 Md. 642, 1946 Md. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geisey-v-holberg-md-1946.