Kline v. Inland Rubber Corp.

69 A.2d 774, 194 Md. 122, 1949 Md. LEXIS 391
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 9, 1949
Docket[No. 44, October Term, 1949.]
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 69 A.2d 774 (Kline v. Inland Rubber Corp.) 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
Kline v. Inland Rubber Corp., 69 A.2d 774, 194 Md. 122, 1949 Md. LEXIS 391 (Md. 1949).

Opinion

Markell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1945 Lewis Yankelevitz and S. Martin Kornblatt formed a partnership under the name United Distributors and engaged in an automobile accessory business in Cumberland. From January, 1948 till August, 1948 they bought from plaintiff, Inland Rubber Corporation, of Chicago, tires and other accessories at an aggregate cost of about $30,000. On August 12, 1948 there was due by United to plaintiff $9,937.85. On September 4, 1948 plaintiff brought suit, and on October 20, 1948 obtained judgment by default for $9,937.85 with interest and costs.

On January 26, 1948 Yankelevitz sent Dun and Bradstreet an auditor’s financial statement of United, as at December 31, 1947. Before making sales to United plaintiff, like other creditors, got the statement from Dun and Bradstreet. It showed “net worth” of $34,521.- *128 84, among assets “land and building”, $23,000, and no liabilities except accounts and notes payable ($6,898.64) and “fixed liability: mortgage payable, $9,787.88.” The land and building referred to was the property 136-138 North Mechanic Street, where United did business. The property was bought in October, 1945 for $12,000; it was not conveyed to United or to the partners, but to Norman Kline, who gave a purchase money mortgage for $12,000 to the Commercial Savings Bank. Lewis Yankelevitz and Norman Kline are cousins. Lewis’s father, Samuel Yankelevitz, and Norman’s father, Morris Kline, are brothers-in-law. Lewis says the Commercial Savings Bank offered to loan them $12,000 on mortgage if they put the property in Norman’s name. Evidently Norman had some credit, enough in addition to the security of the property to induce the bank to loan 100 per cent on mortgage. By December 31, 1947 United had paid the mortgage debt down to $9,787.88.

A mortgage of the same property from Norman Kline and wife to Morris Kline, dated August 21, 1948 and recorded the same day, recites that Norman and wife “are now indebted” to Morris “in the full and just sum of $7,000.00, for which they have given their promissory note of even date herewith payable on or before five years after date with interest at the rate of 4% per cent per annum, payable semiannually, with the privilege of paying on the principal at any interest paying period,” and is made “in consideration of the premises, and of the sum of $1 in hand paid, and in order to secure the prompt payment of the said indebtedness at the maturity thereof,” with interest, “with the expressed understanding that the property covered is the sole security and obligation for said loan of $7,000.00 and in the event said indebtedness is not paid as agreed,” Morris, his heirs and assigns “shall only have recourse against said property and not against” Norman and wife for any deficiency. The same understanding was expressed in the note. The mortgage bore an affidavit by Morris Kline “that the consideration in said mortgage is true and bona, fide as set *129 forth.” At the time of the mortgage Norman did not owe Morris anything at all. In a letter, dated August 20, 1948, to Norman from Lewis and his wife and Kornblatt and his wife, Norman and his wife were authorized and requested to execute a mortgage to Morris for $7,000, representing “money advanced to us by the said Morris Kline and Samuel Yankelevitz, about $3,500.00, to be assigned to him in due course by the said Morris Kline.” Norman says, “the money from this mortgage, this $7,000.00,” was “borrowed” “to pay for the property”; “the money which was obtained upon this second mortgage” “was to pay my father and Mr. [Samuel] Yankelevitz off;” “my father endorsed a note for Lewis Yankelevitz” “in the Commercial Savings Bank for $4,500.00, and Lewis Yankelevitz or United Distributors paid off a certain amount of money and I believe the balance was around $3,500.00;” his father “had to pay the $3,500.00 at the Commercial Savings Bank”; “in fact Pop is paying it right now;” “and then Sam Yankelevitz accepted the mortgage from Pop; Pop was more or less a trustee for the balance of the money.” Lewis Yankelevitz, when asked “what the $7,000.00 was used for”, says, “Back two years ago, I had borrowed $3,500.00 from my father through the Second National Bank which was used in the business to pay off some accounts of the business at that time.” “My father went my security at the Second National Bank on a note for six months; later the United Distributors owed the Peoples Bank $4,500.00.” The Peoples Bank “demanded payment of the $4,500.00 and Morris Kline signed a note at the Commercial Bank for $3,500.00, which I was paying on at the time that the second mortgage was issued, I owed Morris Kline and my father approximately $7,000.00;” and “that $7,000.00” “paid off the two notes at the Commercial Bank and the one at the Peoples Bank,” “representing money paid at each bank.” Morris Kline, when asked what “that $7,000.00 mortgage was given him for”, says “$7,000.00 was given to me and the balance at the [Commercial] bank was $3,875.00”; *130 “$3,375.00 to the Commercial Bank unpaid by Lewis Yankelevitz on the money that I lent him, $4,000.00;” “the bank come to me and I paid [that $3,375.00] off;” “the balance was to take care of Lewis Yankelevitz’s father, $3,500.00”, “which he paid off at the Second National Bank;” when he [Morris] is paid the money he will give “part of it to Samuel Yankelevitz and part to me”, the part to himself “represents the $3,500.00”, paid “for the money that I lent him when — he got it at the Commercial Bank”; the part to Samuel Yankelevitz “is money that he gave” at the Second National Bank. Samuel Yankelevitz says he knew of this $7,000 mortgage; “I give him $3,500.00 at the Second National Bank to my son”; “and after, you know when I told Morris Kline, I took it in trust for him, to protect his mortgage,” “and left it and I hope to get my money;” “that was the money that [he] paid off to the Second National Bank, money which went to Lewis Yankelevitz”, and he has never been paid back yet. The testimony above quoted or mentioned, of the two Klines and the two Yankelevitzes, confused and in some details contradictory, consists in large part of leading questions by counsel for appellants and the answers. This testimony was taken March 26, 1949.

A demand note, dated August 21, 1947, for $4,500, with interest, payable to the order of Morris Kline, at the Commercial Savings Bank, was signed by Lewis Yankelevitz. The cashier of the bank testifies that on August 21, 1947 Morris Kline executed a mortgage of property of his own to the bank for $4,500; the bank gave Kline a cashier’s check for $4,500, which was endorsed by Kline, and also by Lewis Yankelevitz to the Peoples Bank, was paid by the Peoples Bank on August 22, 1947 and by the Commercial Savings Bank the next day; he “definitely knows that this loan was made for the use of Lewis Yankelevitz;” Yankelevitz made payments on it, the last on August 14, 1948; the balance at that time was $3,375. The cashier of the Second National Bank testifies that on April 21, 1947 the bank *131 loaned to Lewis Yankelevitz “on a note, endorsed by his father and his father’s checking account pledge for that same amount, $3,500.00.” “On August 23, 1948 there was $3,000.00 paid on that mortgage by Sam Yankelevitz; it was charged to his account.”

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69 A.2d 774, 194 Md. 122, 1949 Md. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-inland-rubber-corp-md-1949.