Groh v. Cohen

149 A. 459, 158 Md. 638, 1930 Md. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 12, 1930
Docket[No. 17, January Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 149 A. 459 (Groh v. Cohen) 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
Groh v. Cohen, 149 A. 459, 158 Md. 638, 1930 Md. LEXIS 73 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

ITriver, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The decree under review on this appeal invalidated, except as between thé parties, two iniortgages which the bill of complaint alleged to be inoperative as against the plaintiffs, to whom the owner of the mortgaged property is indebted on a judgment and mechanics’ lien claims. The judgment was in existence prior to the acquisiton of the property by the defendant owner and the execution of the mortgages in controversy, while the mechanics’ lien claims are for materials and labor subsequently used in the erection of buildings on the mortgaged land. In order to obviate the judgment lien, the purchaser and present owner of the land, Harvey C. Wills, who is a building contractor, caused the title to be conveyed to one of his employees, Roy 0. Earn, who, with his wife, executed the mortgages, one to D. Webster Groh, for $8,000, and the other to Garland E. Groh for $1,000, securing loans to provide for the payment of the purchase price and for the improvement of the property. Immediately following the execution of the mortgages, on October 14th, 1927, Earn and wife conveyed the equity of redemption to Wills by a deed in which the latter assumed the two mortgage debts. The lots were purchased from the Farmers & Merchants Bank, of Hagerstown, and its deed to Earn, the nominal purchaser, bore the same date as the mortgages and the deed *640 from Earn and wife to Wills, but tbe bank’s deed was not delivered until some time between that date and October 20th, 1927, when it and the mortgages were recorded. The deed from Earn and wife to Wills was filed for recording on October 24th. Between the last mentioned dates the construction of the buildings on the lots was commenced.

Contemporaneously with the execution of the mortgages, Earn filed a paper reciting that the proceeds of the mortgage loans, amounting to $9,000, had been paid fi> the Groh Realty Company, in trust to be applied as the building work progressed, and authorizing the company to pay out of the funds $2,400 as the purchase price of the lots, $270 to Garland E. Groh as a fee for searching the title and procuring the loans, and the balance to' Harvey C. Wills, or to material and labor claimants on his order, in stated amounts at specified stages of the work. For the amount of the first mortgage loan three cheeks, one for $2,000 and two- for $3,000 each, were drawn by the mortgagee to the order of the Groh Realty Company, of which Garland E. Groh was virtually the sole proprietor. His own check for the loan of $1,000 on the second mortgage was similarly drawn. That check and the one for $2,000 given by his father, the first mortgagee, were deposited in bank on October 20th, but one of the $3,000 checks, was not so used until November 30th, and the other for that amount has never been deposited. The three checks representing the first mortgage loan were drawn against the mortgagee’s interest account in the Farmers and Merchants Bank. The work on the houses, in the course of erection on the mortgaged land, was discontinued by the owner when the buildings were far from completion, because he had not sufficient money and material and he had exhausted the payments then due from the mortgage loan funds, according to the terms of the agreement under which they were to be applied. At that time $1,697.30 had been paid out of the loan funds for material and labor costs, in addition to the purchase price and fee heretofore mentioned. There are unpaid mechanics lien claims aggregating $4,775.40. The Groh Realty Company still has in its possession $1,622.70 of the money received *641 from the loans, and. holds the unused $3,000 check of the first mortgagee.

.It is an undisputed fact in the case that the participation of Karn and wife as grantees and mortgagors of the property involved in this suit subjected them to no intended liability. They were wholly ignorant of the nature and purpose of the papers which they signed, and they did not even transiently receive any part of the loans which the mortgages were designed to secure. This was clearly understood by the mortgagees, one of whom, acting for his individual interest and as son and ag'ent of the other, planned the transaction and conducted it in the manner described. While there was consequently no pretense that Karn and wife actually incurred any of the indebtedness recited in the mortgages for the pu r-chase and improvement of the property which they immediately conveyed to Wills, yet the mortgagees made affidavits, in the statutory form, that the considerations stated in their respective mortgages were true and bona fide as therein set forth. The statement thus made in the affidavits being fictitious, it is just as ineffective as if it had been omitted. The Code provision (article 21, section 33) that no mortgage ‘‘shall be valid except as between the parties thereto, unless fhere be endorsed thereon an oath or affirmation of the mortgagee that the consideration in said mortgage is true and bona, fide as therein set forth,” cannot be satisfied by an affidavit. which is not true in fact. The considerations stated in the mortgages in question purported to be loans to the persons signing the instruments as mortgagors, when in truth no such loans were ever made or contemplated. Tf the title had been conveyed primarily to the real purchaser, and he had executed the mortgages which in terms secured loans for the payment of the purchase price and the cost of improvements, the mortgagees would have been fully protected from the liens of any pre-existing judgments against the mortgagor. (Code, art. 66, sec. 4.) But such a purpose does not justify or validate the use of affidavits which are illusory.

In the case of Ressmeyer v. Norwood, 117 Md. 320, the *642 contested mortgage recited as its consideration an indebtedness of $6,657 from the mortgagor to his wife, the mortgagee, while it was proved that the mortgage was not executed to secure an indebtedness to the mortgagee^ but for the purpose of being assigned as security for debts owing by the mortgagor to other persons for a total 'amount equal to that which the mortgage specified. It was held that, apart from any question of actual fraud, the mortgage was void as against the liens of attachments levied on the mortgaged land, because the consideration in the mortgage was not true and bona fide as therein set forth, although so characterized in the accompanying affidavit. In support of that conclusion 'the court cited the cases of Denton v. Griffith, 17 Md. 301; Cockey v. Milne, 16 Md. 200; Nelson v. Hagerstown Bank, 27 Md. 51; Marlow v. McCubbin, 40 Md. 132.

In Govane Building Co., n. Sun Mortgage Co., 156 Md. 401, it was held that an affidavit as to the consideration in a mortgage was not false because of the difference, representing a bonus, between the covenanted mortgage debt and the sum actually loaned, or because the debt was owing to the principal of an agent in whose name the mortgage was taken by proper authority. There was in that case a real liability on the part of the mortgagor to pay the stipulated debt to a mortgagee who was duly empowered to act in that capacity for the lender.

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

Related

Ameriquest Mortgage Co. v. Paramount Mortgage Services, Inc.
4 A.3d 934 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Ameriquest Mortgage Co. v. Paramount Mortgage Services, Inc.
964 A.2d 279 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
Leister v. Carroll County National Bank
86 A.2d 393 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1987)
Wilson Brothers v. Cooey
247 A.2d 395 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1968)
Pagenhardt v. Walsh
243 A.2d 494 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1968)
Plitt v. Stevan
162 A.2d 762 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1960)
Kline v. Inland Rubber Corp.
69 A.2d 774 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1949)
Sandler v. Freeny
120 F.2d 881 (Fourth Circuit, 1941)
In re Shapiro
34 F. Supp. 737 (D. Maryland, 1940)
Jackson v. County Trust Co.
6 A.2d 380 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Neeb v. Atlantic Mill & Lumber Realty Co.
5 A.2d 283 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
White Eagle Polish American Building & Loan Ass'n v. Canton Lumber Co.
178 A. 214 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 A. 459, 158 Md. 638, 1930 Md. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groh-v-cohen-md-1930.