Hunter v. Highland Land Co.

91 A. 697, 123 Md. 644
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 91 A. 697 (Hunter v. Highland Land 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
Hunter v. Highland Land Co., 91 A. 697, 123 Md. 644 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

*646 Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Highland Land Go., a body corporate, on July 25, 1912, executed and delivered to the Baltimore Trust Company, also a body corporate, a mortgage on certain real estate lying partly in Baltimore County and partly in Baltimore City, to secure a loan of sixty thousand dollars ($60,000.00). The aforesaid mortgage indebtedness was to be paid July 25, 1913, one year after the date of the execution of the mortgage and, by the terms of the mortgage, if it were not then paid, the right of foreclosure would exist. It was not paid at such time and because of such default the mortgage was on the 28th day of August assigned to one Chas. D. Eenhagen for the purpose of foreclosure, and on the following-day proceedings were instituted in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, sitting as a Court of Equity, and the mortgaged property was thereafter, on the llth day of December, 1913, under the power contained in the mortgage, sold by said Eenhagen at public sale, at the court house door at Towson, to James Carey Martien for forty-two thousand dollars ($42,000.00). The sale so made to Martien was reported to the Court on the 19th day of December, and thereafter, on the same day, the Baltimore Trust Company, by order of the Court and with the assent of Martien, was substituted as purchaser of the property. On January 6th, 1914, Charles B. Hunter and W. Frank Thomas and Enoch Harlan, assignees of Charles B. Hunter, judgment creditors of the Highland Land Company, and the appellants in the first of these appeals, filed exceptions to the ratification of tiie sale to Martien.

There are five exceptions as shown by the record, but they may be stated in three, as follows:

1st. That the sale was made at “a grossly inadequate price”;

2nd. That the sale of the property should not have been made at Towson, Baltimore County, Maryland;

*647 3rd. That the sale was made at “a very disadvantageous time.”

On the 8th of January, Walter E. .Rupp and other creditors of the land company, appellants in the second of these appeals, also filed exceptions to the ratification of the sale made to Martien, the grounds thereof being the same as those above stated, made by the appellants in the first of these appeals. Judge Burke, who sat in the lower Oourt, heard testimony upon the exceptions filed in eaeh of these cases, and by his order of March 20, 1914, he overruled the exceptions ánd finally ratified and confirmed the sale. It is from that order that these appeals are taken.

As to the first of the above stated objections, the law is well established that mere inadequacy of price, standing by itself, is not sufficient to vacate a sale, unless it be so gross and inordinate as to indicate some mistake or unfairness in the sale for which the purchaser is responsible, or misconduct or fraud on the part of the trustee or mortgagee making the sale. Glenn v. Clap, 11 G. & J. 1; Cohen v. Wagner, 6 Gill, 236; Johnson v. Dorsey, 7 Gill, 269; Hubbard v. Jarrell, 23 Md. 66; Bank of Commerce v. Lanahan, Trustee, 45 Md. 396; Mahoney v. Mackubin, Trustee, 52 Md. 357; Garritee v. Popplein, 73 Md. 322; Shaw v. Smith, 107 Md. 523; Vollum v. Beall, 117 Md. 620; Edgecombe Park Co. v. Finney, 121 Md. 326.

We have very carefully examiued the evidence in this case, and we find nothing that shows mistake or unfairness in the sale for which the purchaser can be held responsible, nor do we find anything indicating misconduct or fraud on the part of the mortgagee or any person connected with the sale. The exceptants conceded “that the advertisement of sale was sufficient, and that all due and proper publicity was given the same,” and this is shown to be true by the record before us.

The property was advertised in the Democrat and Journal, a newspaper published in Baltimore County, and in the *648 Daily Record and in the Baltimore Sun, newspapers published in Baltimore City. In addition to this, a notice of such sale drafted by John J. Watson,. President of the Highland Land Company, was mailed at his request to nearly one thousand persons whom he thought might be interested in the purchase of the property. In the advertisement the property was fully described, and the time, terms and manner of sale fully set. forth, and we may add that the terms of sale were fair and reasonable.

The proceedings were instituted for the sale of the property so early as August 28th, and yet the sale was not made until the 17th of December following. This delay was occasioned in great part by the indulgence shown by the mortgagee and its representatives to the mortgagor and those interested in avoiding a sale of the property under the mortgage.

The land company or its representatives attempted to borrow money from other sources to pay off the mortgage indebtedness owing by it to the trust company, and the latter company or its representatives awaited patiently the result of such efforts, and it was not until late in Uovember, after the efforts of the mortgagor to procure money with which to pay off said mortgage were shown to have been unsuccessful, that the property was advertised for sale in December.

We find nothing in the conduct of the mortgagee or those representing it indicating the least desire to take unfair advantage of the financial condition of the land company. It is shown by their conduct and by what was said by Mr. liitchie, when upon the stand as a witness, that the mortgagee did not wish to become the owner of the mortgaged property, but merely wished to collect the mortgage indebtedness, with such costs as had then accrued, which amounted at such time to about sixty thousand dollars ($60,000.00). The wishes and requests of the mortgagor company and those interested in it, except that the sale of the property be *649 further or indefinitely postponed, were granted or complied with hy the mortgagee and its representatives.

The property sold was unimproved and undeveloped for building purposes; parts of it were in woods and other parts ■overgrown with weeds and grass. There was nothing npon it. or at least on the greater part of it, to indicate that it was in course of development for building purposes. A plat bad been made of this property and streets and alleys had been laid out npon it and lots located upon said streets and alleys, as shown upon said plat, but these streets and alleys were never opened or graded. The streets, alleys and lots bad been staked and marked off, but these stakes had disappeared, for Mr. Ritchie tells us that when he and Mr. Poe went upon the property it was impossible to find a marked street ■or alley, or to locate any of the lots.

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91 A. 697, 123 Md. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-highland-land-co-md-1914.