Johnson v. Johnson

53 A. 792, 96 Md. 144, 1902 Md. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 53 A. 792 (Johnson v. Johnson) 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
Johnson v. Johnson, 53 A. 792, 96 Md. 144, 1902 Md. LEXIS 143 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant and Mary C. Johnson, one of the appellees in this case, are husband and wife and as such lived together from the time of their marriage in November, 1888, till the early part of the year 1897 — a period of about nine years. In consequence of marital- difficulties they then separated and the *145 wife with the one child of the marriage went to reside with her parents. During the separation the appellant sold for $10,000 a fee-simple property which he had inherited from his father. Out of this he paid his wife between thirty-two hundred and. thirty-three hundred dollars as an inducement to her to join in the execution of the deed for the property — she refusing to unite in the conveyance unless so paid. In December of 1897, having composed their differences the appellant and his wife resumed their marital relations, and went to live together at the house No. 2526 Pennsylvania avenue in the city of Baltimore.

This property was purchased at the time for their residence at the price of two thousand dollars subject to a ground rent, and the deed was made to the wife. Of the purchase-money for the property the wife paid one thousand dollars in cash; and for the other one thousand dollars the appellant gave to the vendor, Samuel J. Messersmith, his promissory note upon which he has since paid six hundred dollars. For the balance of the note the vendor has obtained against him a judgment, which was still unsatisfied at the bringing of this suit. At the time of the occupancy of the house by himself and wife the appellant placed therein certain furniture; and they occupied the house together and used the furniture for about nineteen months when, in July, 1899, they again separated. The appellee, Mary C. Johnson, at the time of the last separation removed from the house the furniture referred to as having been placed therein by the appellant, her husband, and deposited the same with her co-appellee, “ The Security, Storage and Trust Co.;” and shortly thereafter contracted with one John Knell to sell him the leasehold interest in the house and lot in question. Upon the refusal of this purchaser to take a deed and pay for the property without a joinder of her husband in the deed and the refusal of the husband to so join in the conveyance unless allowed to share in the purchase-money she began a suit to enforce the specific performance of the contract. The appellant then filed his bill of complaint in this case in the Court below in which he charges that he *146 and his wife bought the leasehold property in question “ for a home and for their mutual convenience, and that they might always have a home free from any uncertainties in business or financial difficulties it was mutually agreed that the lease should be made in the name of his wife alone, although ” he, the appellant, “ owned an equal interest therein with the said wife;” and in respect to the furniture, which has been mentioned, alleged that the same was “purchased” by him and that none of it “was contributed to the home ” by his wife.

' The bill, after other allegations not material to be mentioned, prays for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the leasehold property and of the furniture and for an injunction to restrain the appellee from disposing of the former, and to prevent the latter being removed without an order of Court. It prays for no specific final relief; but asks “ that the Court will adjudicate upon the respective rights of the parties to this ■suit” and for general relief. The answer of the appellee, Mary C. Johnson, to the bill denies that the deed to the leasehold property in question was put in her name for any such purpose as is alleged in appellant’s bill; and avers that she having instituted proceedings for a divorce from the appellant and he being anxious that she should abandon the said proceedings agreed with her that if she would withdraw the proceedings “he would assist her to procure a home for herself and child, which should be entirely free from his control, and of which she should be absolute owner. That in pursuance of said agreement she leased the premises No. 2526 Pennsylvania avenue” to which reference has been made. “That after she procured the lease * * '* she withdrew the divorce proceedings.” As to the furniture the answer denies that it “ belongs in any manner to the plaintiff” (appellant); and avers that it is the property of the respondent (appellee, Mary C. Johnson).

Upon the issues so made up the controversy here is one exclusively between husband and wife. No rights of creditors or of third parties are involved or presented for adjudication. Samuel J. Messersmith appears from the docket entries in the *147 case to have been made a party plaintiff below but no proceedings having reference to this are set out in the record. The decree of the Court below dismissed the bill as to him without prejudice and he has not appealed. The ground upon which the title of the appellant to maintain his bill has been based, as respects the leasehold property, is that by reason, and to the extent, of the money contributed by him or for which he is responsible, towards the purchase of that property there is a resulting trust in his favor; and that has been treated by both sides as a matter to be determined by the evidence. Wé shall dispose of it accordingly and this we may do by stating briefly the conclusions we have reached from an examination of the proof submitted.

The legal propositions applicable to the case in the aspect in which it is presented and to which the proof is to be referred, may also be briefly stated without discussing the many authorities to which reference is made in the briefs in the case. These propositions of law are laid down and recognized in all of the authorities and distinctly so in our own decisions. “Where one party purchases an estate, and pays the money and the deed is taken in the name of another, a trust results by construction of law to the party who paid the money and such payment may be proved by parol.” Witt v. Horney, 59 Md. 584. “ If only a part of the purchase-money be paid by a third party, there will be a resulting trust in his favor pro tanto." 4 Kent, 306 (marg. nth ed.) The rule of law thus laid down is subject, however, to this qualification. “ If the person in whose name the conveyance of property is taken be one for whom the party paying the purchase-money is under a natural or moral obligation to provide, no equitable presumption of trust arises from the fact of the payment of the money, but on the contrary, the transaction will be regarded, prima facie, as an advancement for the benefit of the nominee. In that case, therefore, it will be for the party who seeks to establish a trust on behalf of the payer of the purchase-money, to displace, by sufficient evidence, the presumption that exists in favor of the legal title. ” Accordingly it is held that “ if a *148 parent should purchase in the name of a son, the purchase would be deemed, prima facie, as intended as an advancement so as to rebut the presumption of a resulting trust.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 792, 96 Md. 144, 1902 Md. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-johnson-md-1902.