Griffith v. Frederick County Bank

6 G. & J. 424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 6 G. & J. 424 (Griffith v. Frederick County Bank) 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
Griffith v. Frederick County Bank, 6 G. & J. 424 (Md. 1834).

Opinion

Stephen, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant in this cause seeks the aid of this court in two distinct characters; — as a creditor of Ephraim and John Etchison, and also as a purchaser of a part of the tract or parcel of land called the “ Great Meadows.” In both these capacities, he seeks to affect property, which had been conveyed by his debtors, and which had been decreed to be sold for the purpose of satisfying the objects of such conveyance. His bill is a bill both for discovery and relief. In the first place, we think it clear beyond a shadow of doubt, that the complainant is entitled to no relief against Stewart, Warfield, and Gaither, whom he attempts to charge as executors in their own wrong of Ephraim Etchison. The allegations of his bill, as to any improper intermeddling by them with the personal estate of said Etchison, being wholly unsustained by proof. Gaither was a creditor of Etchison by judgment, regularly and legally obtained in Montgomery county court; to satisfy that judgment, he issued an execution, and placed it in the hands of the sheriff of the county, by whom the property of the defendant was sold to satisfy the debt due upon it. In the whole of this proceeding, there is not a scintilla of proof of any improper or illegal interference, by either Warfield, Stewart, or Gaither. The complainant in his bill then prays, that in case the said Mahlon Chandler, and Joshua Pearce, and Hannah his wife, have good title to the aforesaid land called “ Great Meadows,” a specific execution of said agreement, and payment of the balance of the purchase money may be decreed to them; and in case of a failure of title, then that the aforesaid agreement may be rescinded, and the said Chandler, Pearce and wife, may be decreed to bring into court the moneys received by them, to be applied to the payment of the debts due from said John, and Ephraim, deceased.” We think the court below were also correct, in refusing the relief so prayed, because the complainant, under the circumstances of the case, and according to the clearest principles of equity and justice, was not entitled to [436]*436it. On the sixteenth day of June, 1829, John and Ephraim Etchison being about to obtain a loan of four thousand dollars from the Frederick County Bank, solicited Joshua Stewart and Charles D. Warfield to become their endorsers, to enable them to effect said loan. To induce them to do so, they executed to them on that day a deed of indemnity, by which the tract of land called the “ Great Meadows,” together with other property, was conveyed with a power of sale in case the note endorsed by them and discounted by said bank should not be paid, when payment thereof should be demanded. This deed vested in Stewart and Warfield all the interest, estate and title of Ephraim and John Etchison, to the property thereby conveyed, until it had performed its office of indemnifying them against loss, in consequence of the responsibility incurred by them by reason of their said endorsement. It was a deed founded upon a good consideration, and could not be impeached, invalidated or set aside at the instance of a creditor, whose pretensions could only be considered equally meritorious. That such a deed is founded upon a good and valid consideration, see 2 Johns. 306, where Chancellor Kent says— “ indemnity is a good consideration within the statute of frauds. ” See, also, to the same effect, 3 Cranch, 73, where the chief justice says, — “The deed is made to save Hooe harmless, on account of his having become the security of Fitzgerald to the United States, and on account of notes to be endorsed by Hooe for the accommodation of Fitzgerald in the Bank of Alexandria.” These are purposes for which it is supposed this deed of trust could not lawfully have been executed; and the deed has been pronounced fraudulent under the statute of I3i/i of Elizabeth. That statute contains a proviso, that it shall not extend to conveyances made upon good consideration and bona fide. The goodness of the consideration in the case at bar has been admitted. “ This deed of indemnity being then founded upon a good and valuable consideration, it would have been repugnant to every principle of justice and equity, to [437]*437lake from tbo grantees the security thereby afforded to them; and it is quite clear, that in no other way and upon no other terms, could the contract have been rescinded as prayed for by the complainant in his bill.” In such cases the parties must be restored to their former rights, and placed In the same situation in which they stood anterior to the contract. Whenever a court of Equity is prevailed upon to set aside an agreement, it will be on refunding what has been bona fide paid, and making allowances for improvements. 2 Powell on Con. 143. It is true, the prayer of the bill does not absolutely ask for a rescinding of the contract, but is in the alternative, that in case Chandler, Pearce and wife, have good title to the said land, a specific execution of said agreement, and payment of the balance of the purchase money may be decreed to them. It is necessary to consider what was the capacity in which the complainant stood before the court in order to ascertain his right or title to call upon it to administer to him this relief. He states himself in his bill to be a creditor of the Etchisons, and a purchaser from them of a part of the land conveyed by them to Warfield and Stewart, called the Great Meadows.” As a creditor at large, and before judgment, and before he has a certain claim upon the property of his debtor, has he a right to call for a specific execution of the contract in his behalf? We think he has not. A leading case on this subject, and which is frequently referred to for the principle decided by it, and particularly by Chancellor Kent, in 2 John. C. R. 145, is to be found in 1 Vernon, 399 — the case of Angelí vs. Draper. In that case the bill stated, that the plaintiff had obtained judgment against I. S. for £100, and that the defendant upon pretence of a debt due to himself, and to prevent the plaintiff’s having the benefit of his judgment, had got goods of I. S, of great value into his hands, sufficient to satisfy his debt with a great overplus, and prayed an account and discovery of these goods. The defendant demurred, because the plaintiff had not alleged that he had sued out execution, and had actually taken out fieri [438]*438facias; for until he had so done the goods were not bound by the judgment, nor the plaintiff entitled to a discovery or account thereof. Per. Cur. Allow the demurrer. The plaintiff ought actually to have sued out execution before he had brought his bill. This case establishes the principle, that the creditor, until he has established a certain claim or lien upon his debtor’s property, has no right to call for an account and discovery of such property, in the hands of a stranger or third person. If he has not, it is conceived that the same principle forbids his interference with the disposition of his debtor’s property, and disables him from calling for a specific execution of the contract in this case, upon the ground merely that he is a creditor, and may ultimately have a claim upon it for the satisfaction of his debt. In 2 Johns.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 G. & J. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-frederick-county-bank-md-1834.