In re Bowling Const. Corp.

19 F.2d 604, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1175
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 12, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 604 (In re Bowling Const. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bowling Const. Corp., 19 F.2d 604, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1175 (D. Md. 1927).

Opinion

SOPER, District Judge.

Eli G. Neiswen-der is the holder of a promissory note for $950, dated January 21, 1924, payable two years after date to the Bowling Construction Corporation. It recites that it is secured by mortgage of even date. It was indorsed by the payee and delivered to Neiswender on or about April 10,1924, in part payment of certain indebtedness, in accordance with an oral agreement that the note and the mortgage by which it was secured should be assigned to him. The mortgage covers certain real estate in Baltimore City and was duly recorded among the land records thereof, but through some oversight the assignment of the mortgage was never executed. The Bowling Construction Corporation was adjudicated a bankrupt on the 6th day of October, 1926, having general creditors who became such both before and after the assignment of the mortgage note. The note remains unpaid, and Neiswender has filed a petition wherein he prays the court to direct the trustee to execute an assignment of the mortgage, so that he may hold, not only the evidence of indebtedness secured thereby, but also the record title thereto. The trustee sets up the claim that the indebtedness is a part of the estate in bankruptcy, and does not belong to the holder of the mortgage note.

It is not denied that, as between the mortgagee and the assignee, the assignment was valid, but it is contended that the trustee in bankruptcy does not stand precisely in the shoes of the bankrupt mortgagee, for the reason that by the provisions of section 47a of the National Bankruptcy Act, as amended by the act of 1910 (Comp. St. § 9631), the trustee is vested, as to all property in the custody of the bankruptcy court, with all the rights, remedies, and powers of a creditor holding a lien by legal or equitable proceedings thereon. The purpose of the amendment-was to give the trustee the rights of a lien or judgment creditor, enabling him to protect general creditors from unrecorded liens, which a lien or judgment creditor might have attacked, had-bankruptcy not intervened. See the authorities cited to section 47a in Collier on Bankruptcy, 1054, note 57.

The state law controls as to what rights a lien or execution creditor would have. In re Floyd-Scott Co. (D. C.) 224 F. 987; Hoyt v. Zibell (C. C. A.) 259 F. 186; Holt v. Crucible Steel Co., 224 U. S. 262, 265, 32 S. Ct. 414, 56 L. Ed. 756. The question, therefore, to be deterinined, is whether, under the Maryland law, the assignee of a mortgage note, who does not also hold record title to the mortgage securing the note, takes precedence over prior general creditors and subsequent judgment creditors of the mortgagee. The effect of the transfer of mortgage notes without an assignment of the mortgage (prior to the enactment of the statute hereinafter discussed) under the Maryland law is described by the Court of Appeals of Maryland in Demuth v. Old Town [606]*606Bank, 85 Md. 315, 323, 37 A. 266, 267, 60 Am. St. Rep. 322, as follows:

“Now it cannot be doubted that prior to tbe adoption of Acts 1892, c. 392 (which, however, has no application to this case), the law of Maryland was, and still is, except in so far as modified by the statute just named, that the indorsement or assignment of a promissory note secured by a mortgage gives to a bona . fide holder of such note the benefit of the lien of the mortgage as fully as though he had been named as the actual mortgagee, and this, too, though the public records furnish no evidence of the indorsement or transfer and delivery of the note. The transfer or indorsement of the note, which is the principal, carries the mortgage, which is the incident, and effectually clothes the bona fide holder of the note with the lien of the mortgage itself.”

Obviously, if the bona fide assignee of the note is clothed with the lien of the mortgage itself, the mortgagee, in whose name the mortgage is recorded, must hold it for the benefit of the holder of the notes. Now it is well settled in a great number of cases in Maryland that a trust upon real estate, created by an unrecorded or otherwise defective deed or mortgage, is valid, and with certain statutory qualifications will be enforced in equity against subsequent judgment creditors, as well as pri- or and subsequent general creditors of the settlor of the trust. The doctrine is applicable, whether the trust' be expressly created by deed unrecorded, or whether it arises from a valid contract in writing for specific security. Carson v. Phelps, 40 Md. 73, 99. The theory underlying the rule was clearly expressed by Judge Alvey in the leading case in Maryland of Dyson v. Simmons, 48 Md. 207, where the relative rights of a mortgagee under a defective mortgage of real estate and a subsequent judgment creditor of the mortgagor were considered :

“The principle is now so well settled that it would seem to be beyond all question and controversy that if a party makes a mortgage, or affects to make one, but it proves to be defective, by reason of some informality or omission,'such as failure to record in due time, defective-acknowledgment, .or the like, though even by the omission of the mortgagee himself, as the instrument is at least evidence of an agreement to convey, the conscience of the mortgagor is bound, and it will be enforced by a court of equity. * * * As against the mortgagor himself, this proposition was never regarded as questionable; * • • but as against judgment creditors of the mortgagor, obtaining their judgments subsequent to the date of the mortgage, there was formerly some dispute. The question, however, both in England and in this state, has been long since settled; and the eases, without an exception, so far as we are informed, hold that a judgment, being but a general lien, must be subordinated to the superior equity of a prior specific lien, created by a defective mortgage or conveyance. Judgments create liens only because the land is made liable by statute to be seized and sold on execution; * * * but such lien secures to the creditor neither jus in re nor jus ad rem.”

See, also, Doxen v. Wagner, 142 Md. 441, 121 A. 254.

The rule is modified for deeds or conveyances of land, except deeds or conveyances by way of mortgage, by the provisions of article 21, §§ 19 to 21, of the Maryland Code, which provide that any such deed may be recorded after the expiration of the statutory period of six months from its date (see article 21, § 13), and when so recorded shall have, as against creditors who become so after the recording, the same effect as if recorded within the prescribed time, but as against all creditors who become so before the recording, without notice, the deed shall have effect only as a contract for the conveyance of the estate purported to be conveyed. The design of these provisions was perhaps the protection of creditors against unrecorded deeds, but it was held by the Court of Appeals of Maryland in Cramer v. Roderick, 128 Md. 422, 98 A. 42, that, if such was the purpose of the Legislature, the framers of the statute were unfortunate in their choice of expression, since the equitable title to land immediately passes from vendor to vendee under a contract of conveyance, and a specific equitable lien in favor of the vendee immediately arises. Consequently the court held, under the authority of Dyson v. Simmons, supra, that the interest of the vendee under a deed recorded more than-six months after date could not be seized and sold under an execution by a judgment creditor of the vendor, who became such after the execution of the .contract of sale and before the deed was recorded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 604, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bowling-const-corp-mdd-1927.