Grafflin v. State, Use of Ruckle

63 A. 373, 103 Md. 171, 1906 Md. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 63 A. 373 (Grafflin v. State, Use of Ruckle) 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
Grafflin v. State, Use of Ruckle, 63 A. 373, 103 Md. 171, 1906 Md. LEXIS 113 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal brings up a record from the Court of Common Pleas. It appears that in January, 1897, Lewis F. Grafflin, one of the appellants, was appointed by Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, committee of the estate of Thomas C. C. Ruckle, who had been adjudged by the inquisition of a jury to be a lunatic: That Grafflin thereupon gave bond to the State of Maryland in 'the penalty of thirteen thousand dollars with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, a body corporate, as surety, conditioned for the faithful performance of the trust reposed in him by the decree which appointed him, or which might “be reposed in him by any future decree or order in the premises:” That on October the 27th, 1898, Grafflin, the committee, secured an ex parte order from the Circuit Court permitting him to invest the sum of three thousand dollars belonging to the lunatic, in a first mortgage on a certain parcel of land lying in Baltimore County: That Grafflin, instead of complying with the requirements of the last-named order, took, on October the twenty-eighth — (the day following the date of the order) — a second mortgage on the designated property for three thousand dollars, though *174 there was then outstanding, as a first lien on the property, a prior mortgage securing the payment of a debt of fourteen hundred dollars: That Grafflin did not in fact invest the sum of three thousand dollars in the second mortgage, but prior to the date when he obtained the order authorizing the investment,*’he had advanced to the mortgagor a considerable part of the sum, and that he retained fourteen hundred dollars of the three thousand dollars with which to pay off the first mortgage: That he alleges he was taken sick before he could pay off the first mortgage, and during his sickness was robbed of the fourteen hundred dollars so retained: That on February 14th, 1901, the lunatic by his next friend Oliver J. Whildin, filed a petition in Circuit Court No. 2 calling to the attention of the Court, amongst other things, the fact that Grafflin had disregarded the order of October, 1898, and had invested the lunatic’s money in a second mortgage, and that thereupon an order was passed requiring Grafflin to show cause on or before March eighth, 1901, why he should not be compelled to bring into Court the sum of three thousand dollars which he had been previously authorized to invest in a first mortgage, but with which authorization he had not complied: That Grafflin showed cause which was deemed by Circuit Court No. 2 wholly insufficient; and that on June 14th the Circuit Court passed a decretal order removing Grafflin from his trust, and appointing the Continental Trust Company in his place, and directing him to bring into Court on or before the twenty-fifth day of June the sum of three thousand dollars with interest from October 27th, 1898: That Grafflin failed to bring into Court the money mentioned in the Court’s order, and thereafter on October the twelfth the pending suit was brought against Grafflin and the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company for the use of the lunatic bn the bond given by Grafflin at the time of his appointment. To the declaration which assigned as breaches of the bond the failure of Grafflin to bring the three thousand dollars into Court, and his neglect to account for a further sum of thirteen hundred and odd dollars, the defendants filed several pleas, and later on the Fi *175 delity and Guaranty Company interposed a further plea by way of defense on equitable grounds, which raises the important and the main question in the case. The plea was demurred to, the demurrer was sustained; and then the same question was again presented in an offer of testimony which, upon objection, was excluded, and finally was for the third time insisted on in the defendant’s fourth prayer which was rejected.

The plea by way of defense on equitable grounds is quite lengthy and only the substance of it need be stated. It alludes to the order of October, 1S98, authorizing the investment of three thousand dollars in a first mortgage; it avers that a mortgage was executed, and that the Fidelity and Guaranty Company learned on January 14th, 1901, that a prior mortgage for fourteen hundred dollars existed on the property and thereupon the company, before any action was taken on behalf of the lunatic against Grafflin and at least nine months before the institution of this suit, commenced proceedings to acquire title to the fourteen hundred dollar first mortgage, and on the maturity of the said first mortgage made a tender to the assignee and holder thereof, of all sums due thereon, which tender was refused; that the company did subsequently acquire the first mortgage, and on July the tenth, 1901, caused the same to be released whereby the three thousand dollar mortgage became and still is a first lien on the land “the same in every respect as if said prior mortgage of fourteen hundred dollars had never been executed:” That the order requiring Grafflin to bring three thousand dollars into Court was passed without the knowledge of or any notice to the defendant company; and that it was obtained at a time when the company was engaged in the litigation which resulted in procuring the assignment and the ultimate release" of the first mortgage; that the order to bring the money into Court was not a final order, and is not such as the defendant could have appealed from even if it had been a party to the proceedings with notice. The plea further alleges that the defendant • company was never called on by Circuit Court No. 2 to pay the three thousand dollars into Court; that it has never had an opportunity to *176 show to said Court the purchase and release of the first mortgage; that the pending suit was not authorized by Circuit Court No. 2, nor was it brought in the name of the substituted committee in pursuance of any order of Court, but was brought for the use of the lunatic himself. And finally that the defendant company is ready, upon proper order, to pay into Circuit Court No. 2 the sum of three thousand dollars with interest' thereon to await the decision of said Court upon the question of the company’s liability under the aforegoing facts; and that by reason of those facts the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain this suit as to said sum of three thousand dollars.

Does this plea set up a valid defense on the part of the surety to the suit on the bond ? Assuming for the purposes of this discussion, and for those purposes only, that it is competent for a Court of law in a suit on a delinquent committee’s bond to inquire, at the instance of a surety on that bond, into the propriety of an order or decree requiring that committee to bring into the Court under whose supervision he is administering his trust, the funds which form part of the lunatic’s estate; do the facts set out in the plea show that the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction to pass the order, or that it committed an error in passing it? In other words, do those facts indicate that the order was wrong when passed ? because if it was right zvhen passed subsequent events could not make it wrong. Now, the plea admits that the Committee Grafflin had been authorized to invest the three thousand dollars on a first mortgage and it also admits that in disregard of the Court’s order a second mortgage was taken.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A. 373, 103 Md. 171, 1906 Md. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grafflin-v-state-use-of-ruckle-md-1906.