Lake v. Callis

97 A.2d 316, 202 Md. 581
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 9, 1953
Docket[No. 172, October Term, 1952.]
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 97 A.2d 316 (Lake v. Callis) 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
Lake v. Callis, 97 A.2d 316, 202 Md. 581 (Md. 1953).

Opinions

Sobeloff, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A trustee in bankruptcy is here contesting with the bankrupt and his wife for a portion of the cash surrender value of certain insurance policies. Questions involving the law of subrogation, bankruptcy and tenancy by the entirety have been raised. The case had its origin in a mortgage foreclosure proceeding instituted in the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County.

Originally Eugene M. Callis and his wife, Esther Perry Callis, as tenants by the entireties, owned a large dairy farm, but on January 1, 1949, they conveyed approximately 400 acres of the land to a newly created [584]*584corporation called “Kennersley Farm Dairy, Inc.”, reserving to themselves a little over six acres improved by a valuable colonial mansion and appurtenant buildings. All the capital stock of Kennersley ■was issued in the name of Mr. Callis individually. Seeking funds for his corporation to satisfy a $47,000 mortgage and other debts and perhaps also an individual debt of Callis, incurred before the corporation was formed and which it apparently assumed, he applied to the Philadelphia Life Insurance Company for a $150,000 mortgage loan and offered as security the corporate property and certain insurance policies on his life. The policies were made payable at Mr. Callis’ death to his wife, but it has been stipulated that they belonged to him. The prospective lender was unwilling, however, to make the loan unless the whole farm, the six acres and the residence belonging to the individuals as well as the land of the corporation, were treated as a unit and included in the mortgage. The application was then revised, Mr. and Mrs. Callis and Kennersley offering to mortgage both farm and home to secure the loan. In granting the application the mortgagee repeated the requirement for the pledging of Mr. Callis’ life insurance “as additional collateral”.

The mortgage, and the note it secured, dated September 8, 1949, were executed by Kennersley and by Callis and wife. It was recited that the obligation was joint and several and specifically stated that Callis and wife assumed the full obligation as makers. The mortgage expressly stipulated that in case of default sale should be made of the property as a whole, that is to say, the corporation’s land and that of Callis and wife were to be offered as a unit. The life insurance policies were not referred to in the mortgage but were assigned to the lender in connection with separate collateral forms.

Mr. Callis, though not his wife, became a bankrupt on August 6, 1951. When an installment fell due on the mortgage debt at the end of that year there was a default. Thereafter the mortgagee assigned its mortgage for foreclosure, and the assignee instituted proceedings on [585]*585June 17, 1952, and sold the entire property as a unit for $145,000 on August 4, 1952. The separate order ratifying the sale has not been appealed.

Because there was a resulting deficiency of some $3500, the mortgagee was entitled to resort to the cash surrender value of the bankrupt’s life insurance to the extent necessary to discharge the balance of its claim. The pledged policies had a total cash surrender value of about $20,000, and thus a fund of approximately $16,500 remains, and it is over this sum that Callis and wife and Charles M. Lake, trustee of the bankrupt estate, are here litigating.

The appellees filed exceptions opposing the ratification of the sale unless the insurance collateral should be turned over to them, and the appellant filed a petition of intervention in which he claimed the same collateral, or the residual proceeds therefrom, and asserted that the bankruptcy court had exclusive jurisdiction of the controversy. Normally such an issue would be raised not by exceptions to the sale, but by exceptions to an audit. Any procedural irregularity in this regard, however, has been waived by the parties and passed over by the court below inasmuch as the question raised must be dealt with at some stage of the proceedings. The appellees’ exceptions were later amended to make claim to the balance of the cash surrender value of the policies, after paying of the deficiency due the lender, rather than to the policies themselves. The Circuit Court held Callis and wife entitled to this balance and directed its ultimate payment by the mortgagee to the appellees. It further ordered the policies in the meantime to be deposited with the Clerk of the Court. From this order the trustee appealed.

The theory upon which the Chancellor decided the case in favor of the appellees is that while Callis and wife signed the note, and mortgaged the property owned by them as tenants by the entireties, they did so as an accomodation for Kennersley and Eugene M. Callis in his individual capacity. The appellees’ contention was [586]*586that as they were in reality sureties they could show the true situation notwithstanding any other designation of them in the note or in the mortgage, and that when their home was sold to satisfy the obligation of the primary debtors they became subrogated to the mortgagee's rights and were entitled to pay themselves out of what remained of the insurance fund. Their argument, upheld by the Chancellor, was that these proceeds belong to them by the entireties just as the six acres and the home belonged to them and hence the fund in dispute is not an asset of the bankruptcy trustee, even though the bankrupt is one of the tenants by the entireties.

The appellant, on the other hand, first questioned the admissibility of any evidence tending to dispute the recitals in the mortgage document and in the note indicating that the husband and wife were primary debtors and, secondly, he asserted that even if parol evidence may be received to show that they were in fact sureties for the other debtors still the burden of proof resting upon them had not been met.

There was the further argument that even assuming that the appellees were accommodation makers there were “no equities in their favor sufficient to entitle them to subrogation” as against the trustee. In order to raise such equities, the trustee insisted, the appellees should have shown that they did not receive any of the proceeds or benefits of the mortgage loan, directly or indirectly, and in the absence of such proof they could not maintain their claim for subrogation. As to this it was the appellees’ position that the burden was on the appellant to prove that they, the appellees, had benefited from the proceeds of the loan, if such were the case. Thus each of the parties relied on the assumption that the burden of proof was on the other, and the detailed facts as to the distribution of the proceeds of the mortgage loan were not developed. As both sides preferred to argue doubtful inferences from facts not proved though available, rather than to prove the facts, the record was left in a very incomplete state.

[587]*587Do we have in this record an adequate basis for a conclusion that the appellees were sureties and not principal debtors? Certainly the documents offered in evidence declare unequivocably that they are principal debtors and that must be their position vis-a-vis the creditor. As between the debtors themselves they are permitted to show by parol testimony that in fact a different relationship existed. Snook v. Munday, 96 Md. 514, 45 A. 1004. The appellees did produce as a witness an official of the mortgagee who related the details of the negotiations leading to the grant of the mortgage loan.

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Lake v. Callis
97 A.2d 316 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.2d 316, 202 Md. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-v-callis-md-1953.