Gregory v. Chapman

87 A. 523, 119 Md. 495
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 A. 523 (Gregory v. Chapman) 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
Gregory v. Chapman, 87 A. 523, 119 Md. 495 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Druid Ridge Cemetery of Baltimore County was incorporated on January 14th, 1896, under the general corporation laws of Maryland. Its charter declared that it was not organized for profit and that it would have no capital stock. Upon the day of its incorporation it acquired by deed a tract of 200 acres of land in Baltimore County. This was in excess of the quantity of land it could hold under the law, but the conveyance was subsequently sanctioned by the Act *498 of 1900, Chapter 537. There was no purchase price mentioned in the deed, hut contemporaneously with its execution tiie parties entered into a written agreement in which the consideration was. expressed. The agreement recited that the deed had been executed by Charles Tyler as owner and holder of the land for himself and his associates, whose interests were divided into ten thousand shares and were held in specified proportions, and it provides that the corporate grantee should pay to the holders of the shares thus defined, as the purchase price of the property conveyed, one-half of the proceeds of all sales of the use of lots in the cemetery for burial purposes. It was agreed that certificates for the shares should be issued by the corporation and be transferable on its books, and that the shareholder’s half of the proceeds of the sale of lots should be divided among them according to their several interests on the first days of January and July in each year. It was further provided that the company should apply the remaining half of the proceeds of such sales to preserving, improving and embellishing the cemetery grounds and its avenues, paths and roads and to defraying its incidental expenses. There was a provision that the lots should be sold at prices to be established in the by-laws of the company, first adopted after the agreement, and should not be changed without the written consent of a majority in interest of the shareholders. This contract was entered upon the minutes of the corporation, and was recited in a later agreement between the parties, executed and acknowledged on March 23rd, 1897, and filed for record the following month with the deed, which had not previously been recorded. In the last mentioned agreement, it was stated that the title conveyed by the deed was intended to be clear of an outstanding mortgage on the land for $25,000.00, which the grantor had proposed to pay from the proceeds of the sale of 1000 shares in the cemetery, and it was agreed, in lieu of this arrangement, that the corporation should assume the mortgage in consideration of the transfer of that number of shares to a designated person for the company’s *499 use. The transfer of the shares is admitted in the agréement to have been made prior to its delivery, and the amount they represented, estimated at $25,000.00, was invested in a mausoleum erected in the cemetery at a total cost of $56,000.

On the day of the execution of the first agreement referred to the company adopted by-laws which included a regulation establishing the prices for the sale of burial lots. Provision was also made for the issuance of certificates of indebtedness if the company should incur debts for services rendered or material furnished in preserving or improving the cemetery. These certificates were to be transferable by delivery, unless otherwise provided by their terms; and it was made the duty of the trustees of the cemetery to set aside from the proceeds of sales of the use of lots such sums as they might deem necessary to pay the certificates at their maturity. The right to vote at the meetings of the corporation was conferred upon holders of certificates of indebtedness and owners of burial lots, but this privilege was not given the holders of land share certificates.

The company began its operations without capital, and it was required from the outset to contract debts and borrow money in order to develop the land it had acquired and make it available for cemetery purposes. There was expended for roads and grading, the construction of an entrance building and a mausoleum, the making of a lake, the erection of fences, and for other improvements, a total of about $80,000.00. In addition to this outlay the company had to provide approximately fifteen thousand dollars a year for operating and maintenance expenses. The sales of lots were not sufficiently rapid and numerous to produce the funds necessary to meet these heavy demands, especially in view of the appropriation of half the proceeds to the land shareholders. It was consequently neeessary to gradually increase the issues of indebtedness certificates. They eventually aggregated $142,203.00 and represented practically every class of expenditures made by the company, as they were issued not only for improvements but also on account *500 of loans contracted to meet tlie current cost of operation, interest on existing debts, reduction of the mortgage, and in some instances, apparently, for shares due holders of land certificates. In 1910 the company owed, besides the certificates of indebtedness, and exclusive of interest, a balance of $15,197.00 on the mortgage, $25,000.00 on promissory notes, $900.00 on what the record describes as comptroller’s notes, $13,569.60 on open accounts and $15,835.11 on land shares, making total liabilities of $212,704.71. Its assets, apart from the cemetery grounds and improvements, consisted of accounts receivable to the amount of $17,574.17 for lots sold, about $400.00 in cash, and some implements and other chattels whose value is not ascertained. At this period burial lots having an aggregate area of 11 acres had been sold for approximately $245,000.00, of which $100,000.00 had been distributed in semi-annual dividends to the holders of the land certificates, and the residue applied to improvements, current expenses and fixed charges. The amount required annually for these purposes was from $7,000.00 to $9,000.00 in excess of the company’s available income, and after its operations had been conducted under these difficult conditions for fourteen years a proceeding, such as the present, for a receivership and dissolution on the ground of insolvency appeared to be unavoidable.

A bill having that object in view was filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County on October 15th, 1910. There were two plaintiffs in the proceeding, one of whom was a creditor upon an open account and promissory note, and the other a lot owner and holder of both land and indebtedness certificates. The company filed an answer admitting its insolvency and consenting to such action in the premises as the Court might deem proper. An order was thereupon passed appointing receivers. Shortly after entering upon their administration they filed a petition to have the holders of the land certificates made parties to the proceeding in order that their interests might be protected, and that the purchaser of the company’s unsold land might acquire title *501 free of any claim based upon these obligations. The petition contained a list of the land shareholders, and the Court ordered that they be made parties and notified by the usual process. In the meantime, on application of the receivers, the publication of a notice to creditors had been directed. Eumerous answers were filed by holders of land shares and by claimants belonging to each of the other classes we have described.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dumbarton Improvement Ass'n v. Druid Ridge Cemetery Co.
73 A.3d 224 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2013)
Dumbarton Improvement Ass'n v. Druid Ridge Cemetery Co.
5 A.3d 1133 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Killen v. Houser
210 A.2d 527 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1965)
Gardens of Faith, Inc. v. Commissioner
1964 T.C. Memo. 178 (U.S. Tax Court, 1964)
Sherwood Memorial Gardens, Inc. v. Commissioner
42 T.C. 211 (U.S. Tax Court, 1964)
Union Trust Co. v. Biggs
137 A. 509 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 A. 523, 119 Md. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-chapman-md-1913.