Getz v. Johnston

125 A. 689, 145 Md. 426, 1924 Md. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 125 A. 689 (Getz v. Johnston) 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
Getz v. Johnston, 125 A. 689, 145 Md. 426, 1924 Md. LEXIS 70 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the lower Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, dated October 9th, 192'3, by which it was adjudged, ordered and decreed that each of the parties to these proceedings pay his own costs, both in that court and in the Court of Appeals.

The said decree was passed by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, after a hearing .and arguments, upon the petition of Robert M. Johnston, the appellee, and answer thereto of Leonora A. Getz, the appellant, filed in a cause in that court depending, entitled Leonora A. Getz v. Robert M. Johnston et al. The said petition was filed on September 13th, 1923, and contains substantially the following allegations :

*428 That on the 23rd day of October, in the year 1922, the plaintiff appellant filed her bill of complaint in this honorable court, alleging that there were conflicting claims to the proceeds of the mortgage executed by her on the 17 th day of September, 1920, and that there was a dispute as to the amount then due upon said mortgage, and praying that a decree of interpleader be signed requiring your petitioner and the other defendants to interplead and set forth their respective claims to the proceeds of said mortgage.

That a demurrer was interposed to said bill of complaint, which demurrer was sustained by decree dated February 1st, 1923.

That the plaintiff appealed from this decree to the Court of Appeals of Maryland, which Court held that the plaintiff had not made out a case of conflicting claims such as entitled her to maintain her bill of interpleader, but further held that the lower court should have retained jurisdiction in order to determine the alleged controversy as to the amount due upon said mortgage. The Court of Appeals failed to put the costs on either of the parties, but decreed that they should abide the final result. -

That your petitioner acquired title to said mortgage by assignment dated August 5th, 1922, and recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore City on September 17th, 1922, and immediately notified the mortgagor, or her attorney, that he was the holder of said mortgage. That when said mortgage became due on September 17th, 1922, your petitioner demanded payment thereof, but the mortgagor, through her attorney, claimed that there had been a payment of five hundred and three dollars on account of the principal of said mortgage and offered to pay the difference between the face amount of the mortgage and the amount of the alleged payment. That your petitioner had no record of any such payment and no- knowledge thereof. That upon the advice of his counsel he finally agreed to accept the sum of fourteen hundred and ninety-seven dollars and accrued interest in settlement, and on or about October 15th, 1922, executed a *429 release thereof and forwarded it to his attorneys in Baltimore. That through his counsel he advised the counsel for the mortgagor that he was willing to accept the amount offered by the mortgagor in settlement of said mortgage, and. was informed by her counsel that she could not make settlement because of attachment proceedings, referred to in the bill of complaint having been instituted, and that because of these proceedings the mortgagor could not determine who was entitled to the payment. That the petitioner or his counsel was advised that the mortgagor proposed to file a bill of interpleader in this court for the purpose of determining who was entitled to the proceeds of the mortgage. That your petitioner disputed the right of the mortgagor to file a bill for this purpose and renewed his offer to accept the amount of fourteen, hundred and ninety-seven dollars and accrued interest in settlement as shown by petitioner’s Exhibit No. 6, the said exhibit being a letter from George S. Yost, counsel for the petitioner, to Harry M. Benzinger, counsel for the mortgagor. That in spite of the position taken by the petitioner and his offer to accept the amount claimed by the mortgagor to be due, and to deliver a release upon the payment of said amount, the mortgagor did file a bill of inter-pleader.

That upon the foregoing facts, which were not before the Court of Appeals when the case was considered by that tribunal, it is clear that there is not now, nor was there ever after October 15th, 192'2, a, bona fide dispute as to the amount due upon said mortgage; that the petitioner was always ready to accept the amount of fourteen hundred and ninety-seven dollars and accrued interest in settlement of said mortgage, but that the mortgagor refused to pay said amount, because, in her opinion, there was some question as to the title of the petitioner to the said mortgage, and not because of any dispute as to the amount due thereon. That the question, for the determination of which the Court of Appeals held that this court should have retained jurisdiction, never was a real question, although from the allega *430 tions of the hill of complaint, from which alone the Court of Appeals could draw its conclusions, there was apparently a bona fide dispute as to this amount. That itpon the facts hereinbefore recited the costs, both in this court and in the Court of Appeals, should be placed upon the mortgagor, as the only question about which there ever was a dispute was the question of title raised by the mortgagor, and which was decided adversely to her in the Court of Appeals.

The prayer of the petition is for the passage of an order putting the costs in this ease, both in the lower court and the Court of Appeals, upon the mortgagor, complainant herein.

In her answer the appellant averred that the only substantial question left open for decision, after the decree and mandate of the Court of Appeals upon the former appeal, was whether the mortgagor had or had not paid the said sum of five hundred and three dollars on account of the principal of said mortgage, this payment having been denied by this appellee in the former case, and that the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, to which the former case was remanded, having’ decided that she had paid said sum, the costs directed “to abide the event” should be assessed against the said Robert M. Johnston, the appellee.

Upon the aforegoing petition and answer the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, on October 9th, 19'2-3, passed the following decree:

“The above cause coming on to be heard on the petition of Robert M. Johnston with reference to the costs, and the answer thereto, counsel for respective parties were heard and the proceedings were read and considered, and it appearing to the court that.the question of the amount due upon the mortgage referred to in said proceedings has been heretofore disposed of in the foreclosure case of Robert M. Johnston, Assignee, vs. Leonora A. Getz in this court,
“It is thereupon this 9th day of October’, 1923, by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, adjudged, ordered and decreed that each of the parties to these *431 proceedings pay his own costs, both in this court and in the Court of Appeals.”

From said order and decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, the appellant, Iieonora A. Getz, has appealed.

Leonora A.

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Bluebook (online)
125 A. 689, 145 Md. 426, 1924 Md. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/getz-v-johnston-md-1924.