McCarty v. Hamburger

75 A. 964, 112 Md. 40, 1910 Md. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 A. 964 (McCarty v. Hamburger) 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
McCarty v. Hamburger, 75 A. 964, 112 Md. 40, 1910 Md. LEXIS 94 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The mortgage sale in this case was reported on February 3rd, 1909, in the Circuit Court for Allegany County, by Mr. Robert H. Gordon, the attorney named in a mortgage from Margaretta McCarty to Mary E. Gordon, Robert H. Gordon and Seligman Hamburger, all of Allegany County, Maryland, and the report states that the sale was made after default, at public auction, to George H. Longerbeam of the City of Cumberland for the sum of ten thousand dollars.

The mortgage was executed on the 10th day of June, 1903, to secure the payment of an indebtedness of nineteen hundred dollars to Mary E. Gordon, the sum of four hundred dollars to Robert H. Gordon, and the sum of fifteen hundred dollars to Seligman Hamburger, and at the date of the sale repeated defaults had been made in the payment of the interest.

The property conveyed by the mortgage is stated to contain about eleven hundred acres, situate, lying and being on the Eorth Branch of the Potomac river above the City of Cumberland, in Allegany County, and known as “The Black Oak Bottom Farm.” The property was at the request of the mortgagees duly advertised by the attorney, in the Cumberland “Daily Times,” a newspaper published in the City of Cumberland, and by hand bills distributed by the attorney, as a mortgagee’s sale of one of the most valuable farms in Allegany County. The ■ advertisement contained a further description, to wit: “This farm consists of about three hundred acres of Potomac river bottom land, with a lime stone base and about six hundred acres of limestone mountain woodland much of it admirably adapted to fruit trees and orchards. The land produces blue grass naturally and the hot- *42 tom has long Leen known as the best corn-producing land in Western Maryland. The Baltimore and Ohio and the Western Maryland railroads both have a station immediately adjoining this farm. There are two houses, the old homestead and a tenant house. There are stables and other buildings and each field is well watered, the Potomac river skirting one side of the farm. It is about six miles from Keyser and fifteen miles from Cumberland. There are massive beds of .lime stone on the property convenient to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.”

This property and improvements were sold by the attorney in its entirety at public sale, in front of the Third Rational Bank in the City of Cumberland, on the 30th day of January, 1909, after the property had been exposed for sale for the period of one hour and ten minutes.

Subsequently, on the 6th of March, 1909, certain objections were filed to the ratification of the sale by the appellants, ¥m. J. McCarty and Mary S. McCarty, assignees of Margaretta McCarty, mortgagor.

They are substantially as follows:

First. That the price at which the property was sold, was a totally inadequate one and greatly less than the value of the same and far less than the property would have brought had the sale been properly and fairly made.

Second. That at and before the time at which the sale took place, a certain person, to these exceptants well known, falsely and maliciously and for the purpose of preventing persons desiring and intending to bid for the property at the sale circulated a’ report throughout the neighborhood where the intending bidders resided that the title to the property was defective and that the Court or the mortgagees could not give a good title to the purchaser of the property, thus preventing the intending bidders from attending the sale and bidding’ on the property; and

Third. And for other good and sufficient reasons to be adduced, at the hearing of these exceptions.

*43 These exceptions were overruled on hearing by the Circuit Court of Allegany County on the 25th day of March, 1903, and the sale finally ratified and confirmed. And from this order, an appeal has been taken.

We do not regard either one of the objections urged against the ratification of the sale as sound or supported by the evidence set out in the record.

There was no evidence to sustain the third objection and it is sufficient to say, it will not be considered.

The second objection, is also without merit and untenable. It is based, upon a statement that a certain person falsely and maliciously circulated a report in the neighborhood that the title to the property was defective and a good title could uot be given the purchaser, whereby intending bidders were prevented from attending the sale and bidding.

It does not appear from the evidence that any bona fide purchaser or any person with means was prevented from purchasing the property by reason of the alleged rumor. It is not asserted in what respect the title was defective, except a bare statement made after the sale to the effect that the purchaser could not get the farm, “because it was willed to the children.” There is nothing in the record to show, that the title is defective or that any person with any serious intentions of purehasng the property was either prevented from attending the sale or bidding thereon in consequence of the alleged report that the title was defective. On the contrary, the witnesses Brady and Seymour who testify as to this rumor were not influenced or affected by it. They .both state they heard the rumor before the sale. The former advised several persons to purchase the farm and the latter claims he is willing, since the sale, to give more than ten thousand dollars for the farm. The witness Llewellyn who, it is alleged, was prevented from buying the farm because the title was “bad,” stated that he was not able to purchase it. He testified, “if I had the money I would give $15,000 for it myself and Mr. Seymour was the only man so far as he knew, who was willing to give that sum for it. Such testimony is *44 entirely too vague, indefinite and inconclusive, in the absence of proof indicating fraud or collusion on the part of either the attorney or the purchaser, to disturb or vacate a sale fairly made. The purchaser alone would be injured by a defect of title if any, and in this case there is no complaint whatever from him.

The remaining questions arise upon the first exception, and they are practically-: was the sale fairly made and for a price that ought to he approved by the Court ?

Upon a careful review of the whole case, we are all of the opinion there is nothing in the record to show a doubt or cast suspicion upon the fairness of the sale, or to reflect upon the conduct of the attorney who made the sale or the purchaser of the property. In no view of the evidence can we perceive such inadequacy of price as would justify the rejection of the sale.

There is some conflict in the testimony and difference of opinion among the witnesses as to the value of the farm, but the highest offer on the day of sale, was ten thousand dollars. Some of the witnesses place the value of the property at $10,000, others at $15,000, and the owner, was willing to accept $13,000. The property had been divided into lots, and offered at private sale, and a bid of $13,000 therefor had been declined, at the request of the owner. Subsequently, it was advertised at public sale under the mortgage under the conditions and with the result herein stated.

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Bluebook (online)
75 A. 964, 112 Md. 40, 1910 Md. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarty-v-hamburger-md-1910.