Kretzer v. Lorshbaugh

83 A. 1027, 117 Md. 562, 1912 Md. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 83 A. 1027 (Kretzer v. Lorshbaugh) 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
Kretzer v. Lorshbaugh, 83 A. 1027, 117 Md. 562, 1912 Md. LEXIS 126 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Washington County as a Court of Equity, and the principal question arises upon the construction and effect of the. .following agreement between the appellee, Harry E. Lorsh-baugh, and Malinda Ridenour, deceased, whose heirs at law are the appellants.

“This memorandum of agreement made this day of August, 1903, by Malinda Ridenour, of Hagerstown, Maryland, witness-eth, that whereas Harry E. Lorshbaugh has advanced unto me, TVIalinda Ridenour, the sum of $100, the receipt of which I hereby acknowledge, as part of the purchase price of the property recently purchased by qne of Charles T. Semler, which said property is situated on the south side of Liberty Street, in Hagerstown, and is now occupied by Pinkney Cramer as tenant, and whereas the said Lorshbaugh has advanced divers other *564 sums to be used in improvements on the said property; now, therefore, this is to certify to all therein concerned that T, the said Malinda Ridenour, have agreed with the said Harry E. Lorshbaugh that in consideration of the said sums of money to me advanced I will not alienate the said property without the consent of the said Lorshbaugh, and without paying him the sums of money advanced to me, with interest thereon; and T have further agreed that in case of my death the said property shall become the absolute property of the said Harry E. Lorsh-baugh, free from all claims of all who may attempt to claim under me; it being the intent thereof that in consideration of certain moneys paid me, I have agreed that, in case the said Lorshbaugh survives me, all my interest in the said property shall become the interest of the said Harry E. Lorshbaugh. Witness my hand and seal.

Test: MaliNda RideN. (Seal).”

■ Malinda Ridenour died intestate about December 19th, 1908, seized of a house and lot in Hagerstown, upon which there was a mortgage of $300, held by Alexander Armstrong, dated August 15th, 1903, and leaving as her heirs at law a brother, a sister and a niece, named in the proceedings.

A short time after her death, Harry E. Lorshbaugh filed a creditors’ bill in the Circuit Court for Washington County against the heirs of the said Malinda Ridenour, and against the executors of said Alexander Armstrong, then deceased, alleging that she was in her life time indebted to him in the sum of $407.25, as set out in an account filed with the bill as an exhibit, the items therein being money loaned August 15th, 1908, $130; money advanced to pay interest on Armstrong mortgage, $90; money to repair house, $71.00; expenses, sickness and burial, $116.25, and alleging that she left no personal estate of any value. The heirs of Malinda, Ridenour answered • admitting her death intestate and that she died seized of the house and lot mentioned, but denied that she left no personal estate, and that she was indebted in any manner to said Lorshbaugh. They also admitted the execution of the Armstrong mortgage, but demanded proof *565 that it was still unpaid. The executors of Alexander Armstrong answered, claiming that the mortgage was still due and unpaid with interest from August 15th, 1908, and consented the property should be sold as prayed, provision to be 'made for the payment of their mortgage out of the proceeds of sale.

Proof was made as to who were the heirs at law as stated in the bill, and that Malinda Ridenour died seized of the house and lot mentioned, and a copy of the Armstrong mortgage was put in evidence, with a copy of a, deed from Charles T. Semler and wife to Malinda Ridenour of even date with the mortgage. Semler testified that the negotiations for the lot were conducted by Lorshbaugh, that the price was $400, which he received by a check of Alexander' Armstrong, and he made the conveyance to Malinda Ride-nour by Lorshbaugh’s direction. An agreement of counsel was filed showing that Lorshbaugh and Malinda Ridenour, kept house together and lived together as husband and wife in Hagerstown from 1884 to 1885 to the time of her death.

Robert D. Kochenour testified that he had known both those persons ever since he could remember, and remembered the purchase of the Semler property, and that Lorshbaugh sold a house he had owned, not long before the Semler purchase. He identified the agreement first mentioned herein as a paper he had seen before, and testified that in the spring-following the purchase of the Semler property, Lorshbaugh called to him on the street, and he went over to the house where Lorshbaugh and Malinda then were, and had that paper, and that Lorshbaugh told him he wanted him to see that paper signed and told him to read it; that he read it to them, and Malinda said she was going to sign, and he saw her sign it and deliver it to Lorshbaugh. He said Malinda thought there was not room enough on the paper for her full name, and that was why her full name does not appear; that he told her that did not matter; he did not think they would ever have occasion to use it, and that he meant by that. *566 be always thought Harry would die first. lie said she told him that Harry was paving the interest on the mortgage, and was giving her five dollars a week to put away to pay on the mortgage.

klrs. Sender testified that ilalinda told her Lorslibaugh had paid part of the purchase money and was to get it back out of the property. There was no testimony offered by the defendants.

Tn January, 1910, Alexander Armstrong, Jr., to whom the mortgage had been assigned by the executors of his father, obtained an order .of Court, authorizing him, on account of the failure of the parties to the cause, to bring the case to a hearing, to sell the property under the power in the mortgage, and directing him after payment of the mortgage debt, interest, costs and commissions, to hold the residue of the proceeds of sale subject to the further order of the Court, and the property was so sold February 22nd, 1910, for $540, and the sale was ratified September 5th, 1910.

There was no evidence sustaining the three last items in the account filed with the bill, and the Court so found in the opinion filed in the ease. The learned judge of the Cir-' cuit Court held that the agreement mentioned showed that Lorshbaugh had advanced $100 part of the purchase money and was entitled to be repaid said sum with interest from August 15th, 1903, and so decreed, and directed .the auditor in stating an account in the case where the sale was made, after payment of the mortgage debt, interest, commissions and costs of sale, to distribute the surplus, first to the payment of costs in the creditors bill case, and then to the payment of the $100 with interest from August 15th, 1903, and directed a copy of said order to be filed in the sale case also.

The learned judge of the Circuit Court, without referring to adjudged cases, rested this conclusion upon the general statement in Cyc., Vol. 27, p. 855, that an action for money had and received will lie to recover money paid by .plaintiff to defendant for a consideration which has wholly failed, *567 ■and of tbo correctness of that doctrine we think there can be no doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
83 A. 1027, 117 Md. 562, 1912 Md. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kretzer-v-lorshbaugh-md-1912.