Govane Building Co. v. Sun Mortgage Co.

144 A. 486, 156 Md. 401, 1929 Md. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 25, 1929
Docket[No. 80, October Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 144 A. 486 (Govane Building Co. v. Sun Mortgage Co.) 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
Govane Building Co. v. Sun Mortgage Co., 144 A. 486, 156 Md. 401, 1929 Md. LEXIS 22 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

*402 Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit in equity in which the validity of a mortgage is challenged on the ground of an alleged false affidavit to the consideration.

The bill of complaint is by the appellee, the Sun Mortgage -Company, mortgagee in a subsequent mortgage, and the defendants are the Govane Building Company of Baltimore City, Incorporated, the common mortgagor; Charles E. Ehman and Benjamin Weinstein, incorporators and officers of said mortgagor; the wife of Weinstein; Thomas Isekoff, the mortgagee named in the challenged mortgage; Joseph B. Moss, to whom it was assigned; and certain material men, mortgagees in two junior mortgages.

The bill alleges that the said building company, Ehman, and Weinstein, in March, 1926, entered into negotiations with plaintiff to borrow $3,200 for the purpose of redeeming certain ground rents and erecting eight houses in or near Govans, a suburb of Baltimore City, and recently annexed thereto, and offered as security therefor a first mortgage on certain land on the southeast side of Park Avenue, and a second mortgage on certain other property, which said loan was finally accepted and consummated by the execution of a mortgage from the building company, Weinstein and wife, and Ehman, to plaintiff, dated April 13rd, 1926, and duly recorded; that said mortgagors represented said land on the southeast side of Park Avenue to be free from mortgages and all other incumbrances; that said mortgagors subsequently executed mortgages upon the same property to certain material men; that the mortgage to plaintiff being in default, and foreclosure proceedings being about to be instituted, the said Moss informed plaintiff that he was the holder of a first mortgage on a portion of the said property on the southeast side of Park Avenue, which mortgage he acquired by assignment from the said Isekoff, said mortgage bearing date of August 1st, 1924, the date of the assignment being December 30th, 1926, both mortgage and assignment being duly recorded; that said mortgage to Isekoff is not a lien on the property mortgaged to plaintiff, the mortgage to Isekoff having been made for a simulated or pretended consideration, no *403 money passing thereunder from Isekoif to the mortgagor, and the affidavit thereto' was false and fraudulent, and that said mortgage should be declared null and void; that the said Moss never paid said Isekoif any consideration for the assignment of said mortgage, but that said assignment was made for a pretended consideration and to hinder and delay plaintiff and other creditors of said building company; that the houses erected on said property are still in an uncompleted condition, and said building company is insolvent and unable to finish them; that while plaintiff’s mortgage is in default, it cannot foreclose the same and pass a good title to purchasers of said property by reason of the invalid mortgage held by Moss, which casts a cloud on the title. The prayer of the bill is: (1) That the mortgage to Isekoff and the assignment to Moss be declared null and void. (2) That a receiver be appointed to complete the buildings and sell the property, and to bring the proceeds into court, to be distributed to the payment of costs of this proceedings, the costs of the completion of the buildings, and to plaintiff and said junior mortgagees. (3) For further relief.

All the defendants admit the insolvency and consent to the appointment of a receiver, but the building company, Weinstein and wife, Ehman, Isekoff, and Moss deny the material allegations of the bill as to fraud. Their answers admit that no money passed from Isekoff to the mortgagors or from Moss to Isekoff, but aver that the consideration for the mortgage was given by Moss and the mortgage taken in the name of Isekoff as a matter of convenience, Moss being- in business in Washington, and it being contemplated that releases would be required from time to time as lots were sold or leased, and Isekoff being counsel for both the mortgagor and said Moss, and being informed by all the parties that the loan had been made and requested to take the mortgage as agent for Moss.

The facts of the case as developed by the testimony seem to be substantially as follows: In the early part of the year 1924 Charles E. Ehman, a contractor and builder, owned the property described in plaintiff’s mortgage, and desired to develop it, but had not the money and was not in a position to get it through his own efforts. So he proposed to Wein *404 stein that if he would provide the money necessary to get the development under way and to get several houses started, so that the scheme could he further financed by creating ground rents or giving mortgages, he, Ehman, would put up his lots against the money to be raised by Weinstein, and they would share equally in the ownership and profits. It was then supposed that the amount required to launch the enterprise would be about $5,000. So it was arranged that the Govane Building Company should be incorporated and the said lots conveyed to it by Ehman, or by Charles Ehman & Sons, the corporation which held the title.

Probably a little before the actual incorporation of the Govane Building Company, but at or about the time building operations were to begin on said lots, Weinstein, in compliance with his agreement, began getting together money for said operations, most of which was furnished by Moss, knowing it was to be used in said operations and on the promise that said loans up to $5,000 should be secured by a mortgage of said lots. $3,510 was raised by Moss in April, 1924, by mortgaging property he and his wife owned on Maple Avenue, the proceeds of which mortgage were turned over directly to Weinstein by the mortgagee, a building association; $125 and $730 were given by Moss to Weinstein by checks dated February 9th, 1924, and February 27th, 1924. Both Moss .and Weinstein testified that in addition to the above amounts, other sums wer,e paid over to' Weinstein in cash, more than enough to make up the sum of $5,000, for which sum it was agreed that a. mortgage of said lots would be given. Weinstein testified that a calculation was made at the time the check for $730 was. given, and the amount of that check was the amount required fo make up' the sum of $5,000, which Moss; had agreed to lend on the mortgage, the $3,510 raised by Moss on the Maple Street property having been arranged for prior to that date.

The testimony of Moss, Weinstein, and Ehman is that the mortgage of August 1st, 1924, from the Govane Building-Company to Isekoff for $5,000 was to secure the amount due by said company to Moss, and it was taken in the name of *405 Isekoff as a matter of convenience in giving releases when required. There is absolutely no contradiction of any of this testimony. Of tlio $5,000 claimed to have been lent by Moss, certainly $4,425 is fairly well accounted for, and unless the uncontradicted testimony of Weinstein and Moss is to be discredited because no vouchers are produced, the balance was made up- of cash advanced from time to time.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A. 486, 156 Md. 401, 1929 Md. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/govane-building-co-v-sun-mortgage-co-md-1929.