Mahoney v. Mackubin

54 Md. 268, 1880 Md. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 54 Md. 268 (Mahoney v. Mackubin) 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
Mahoney v. Mackubin, 54 Md. 268, 1880 Md. LEXIS 88 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the appeal from the order ratifying the sale of the mortgaged property made in this case, that order was affirmed hy this Court at its April Term, 1879, and the cause was remanded in order that the proceeds of sale might he distributed. The auditor has now stated an account making such distribution, to which exceptions have been filed hy Mahoney and wife, substantially to this effect: 1st, that large sums have been paid hy Shipley and Mahoney hy way of bonus and usury, which are properly credits on the mortgage debt, and have not been allowed; 2nd, that it was error to allow the mortgagee commissions on the amount of sales ; and 3rd, that the allowance of $150 to the mortgagee as a counsel fee for his services in resisting the exceptions to the sale was also erroneous. [271]*271Upon the hearing of the exceptions the Court overruled the first and third, and sustained the second, and directed the auditor to state another account in accordance with that opinion. Erom this order both parties have appealed and we shall dispose of the three questions in their order.

1st. As to the alleged usury. The only testimony on this subject is that taken under the exceptions to the ratification .of the sale, hut we shall assume that that testimony may he used in support of the exceptions now- filed to the auditor’s account. The mortgage under which the sale was made was of a farm in Baltimore County, and was given by Shipley and wife on the 11th of Eehruary, 1870, to Mackubin as trustee, under a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, to secure the sum of $15,864.86, payable in five years, with interest, which was part of the trust funds held by him under that decree, and which that Court authorized him to invest in this mortgage, upon condition that it should he a first lien on the mortgaged property. On the day this mortgage was executed, Shipley and wife executed another mortgage on the same property to Thomas H. Gaither, to secure the sum of $1586.44, which amounted to two per cent, for five years on the sum loaned to Shipley. Gaither was the husband of the principal beneficiary of the trust funds held by Mackubin, and the latter, as he testifies, was accustomed to advise with Gaither, and be guided by him in his investments of that fund tó the extent that he would make no investment like this without Gaither’s sanction or approval; and it is clear from the testimony there was no other consideration for this mortgage to Gaither than his assent to this investment. But that mortgage was paid and satisfied in this way: Shipley needed the loan to pay off liens upon the property, and by his direction Mackubin so applied the money. Some of the lien holders, however, who, according to the assurances of Shipley, had promised to release their liens and take others subsequent to the mortgage, refused to do [272]*272so. Mackubin then, in order to make the mortgage to himself as trustee the first lien, as the Court had required, paid off, out of his own money, liens, including the Gaither mortgage, to the amount of $9000, and took a second mortgage to himself individually for that amount. The release of Gaither’s mortgage appears to have been made on the 20th of May, 1871. After this, Shipley effected a sale of the property to Mahoney, and on the 15th of September, 1873, executed a deed conveying the same in fee to Mrs. Mahoney for the consideration of $45,000. At the time this sale was made and the deed executed, Shipley paid off Mackubin’s individual mortgage for $9000, and also paid $864.36 of principal on the mortgage to him as trustee, thus leaving that mortgage to stand for the even sum of $15,000. Now, assuming (but without intimating an opinion to that effect) that the transaction between Shipley and Gaither was made under such circumstances as to affect and taint this mortgage with usury, so that Shipley could, upon proper proceedings, have had the sum thus paid to Gaither eliminated from the mortgage debt, the question arises, does Mahoney stand in the same position, and is he entitled to the same relief? This depends upon the terms upon which he purchased the property from Shipley. The deed itself merely conveys the property in fee, and makes no reference to the mortgage. But the testimony, as we read and understand it, shows that this $15,000 mortgage constituted part of the consideration mentioned in the deed, and that the balance of it was made up of city property conveyed to Shipley by Mahoney, and the latter’s note for $1500, which he afterwards paid. This, as we understand his testimony, is Mahoney’s own version of the transaction. Baker, the agent of Shipley, who negotiated the sale and made the contract with Mahoney, says the farm was traded to Mahoney subject to a $15,000 mortgage, that his business as Shipley’s agent, was to raise [273]*273the other $10,000 to pay off the second mortgage, and as all the papers in the transaction passed simultaneously, it was virtually one act, to pay off the second mortgage and pass the farm over to Mahoney subject to the $15,000 mortgage as per terms of contract.

In our judgment the testimony establishes the fact that it was the understanding and agreement between the parties when this contract of sale or exchange of properties was made, that Mahoney should take the farm subject to, and should assume and pay, this specific mortgage debt of $15,000, as part of the consideration mentioned in the deed and as part of the price he was to pay for it. This being the character of the contract the case falls directly within the decision in Hough vs. Horsey, 36 Md., 181. Applying the reasoning of the Court in that case, we say here: If this mortgage debt is to he reduced at the instance of Mahoney by reason of the alleged usury, it is manifest he will get the farm for less than he agreed to pay for it. Whether that debt was tainted with usury or not, was wholly immaterial in determining the price agreed to he paid for the land. The effect of sustaining his exception on this ground would he to relieve him from doing what he has expressly agreed to do, and upon the faith of which he obtained the conveyance for the land embraced by the mortgage. Such a proposition cannot be entertained by a Court of equity for a moment. He must pay the mortgage debt according to his contract of purchase, and leave the question of usury to he settled between the mortgagor and mortgagee. The only difference between the two cases is that in Hough vs. Horsey, the agreement to pay the mortgage debt was expressed in the deed itself, while here the deed merely states the consideration to he $45,000, and the fact that the $15,000 mortgage debt formed part of it, and was to he paid by the purchaser is established hv parol proof. But we see no difficulty whatever in allowing such proof to he introduced. It merely [274]*274shows how the stated consideration was made np and how it was to be paid, and in nowise alters, varies or affects the deed itself. But even if such be the effect of this proof, still having been admitted in the Court below without exception to its admissibility or competency, it must be considered and allowed by this Court to have that effect. Gibbs vs. Gale, 7 Md., 76. We are therefore clearly of opinion the mortgage debt cannot be abated on account of any usury that may have been paid by or exacted from Shipley prior to the purchase of the property hy Mahoney.

The mortgage note for the principal fell due on the 11th of February, 1875.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Md. 268, 1880 Md. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahoney-v-mackubin-md-1880.