McCauley v. Shockey

66 A. 625, 105 Md. 641, 1907 Md. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 24, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 66 A. 625 (McCauley v. Shockey) 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
McCauley v. Shockey, 66 A. 625, 105 Md. 641, 1907 Md. LEXIS 54 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a decree of the Circuit Court for Washington County, in equity, dismissing a bill filed by the appellant, as plaintiff below, to set aside a mortgage from the appellees, Samuel and Abraham Shockey, to their sisfers Susan and Ida Shockey. The mortgage was alleged to have *642 been made for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the appellant, as a creditor of the mortgagors, with the knowledge and participation of the mortgagees.

The material allegations of the bill of complaint are as follows. The appellant on April 2nd, 1904, instituted separate suits for slander against the appellees, Samuel and Abraham Shockey and recovered a judgment against Samuel for $466.66 and one against Abraham for $1,700. On the 9th of May, 1904, while the slander suits were pending, the defendants therein executed a mortgage upon all of their real estate to their sisters, Susan and Ida Shockey, to secure a pretended indebtedness to them upon promissory notes amounting to $1 i;700.4S, in furtherance of an áttempt on the part óf the mortgagors, participated in by the mortgagees, to put the mortgaged property beyond the reach of the plaintiff and hinder, delay and defraud him in the collection of his said judgments. The mortgaged property was located in Washington County and consisted of the two brothers’ undivided one-half interest in a farm of about one hundred and twenty-seven acres, fifty-five acres of mountain land and two houses in Hagerstown, all of which were owned in fee by the two brothers and their two sisters as tenants in common. Prior to the making of the mortgage the brothers and sisters occupied the farm as a home and rented out the two houses and they thereafter continued to use and occupy all of the properties in the same manner that they had done before the mortgage was made. The mortgage indebtedness greatly exceeded the value of the interest, in the said property owned by the mortgagors and they were without other resources except a small amount of personal property which was insufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s judgments.

The prayer of the bill was for a decree setting aside the mortgage and directing a sale of the interests of Samuel and Abraham Shockey in the property described in the mortgage and the application of the proceeds thereof to the payment respectively of the plaintiff’s judgments and for further relief.

The Shockey brothers and sisters, the present appellees, *643 jointly answered the bill admitting their ownership of the real estate mentioned in the bill as tenants in common, the recovery by the plaintiff of the judgments against the brothers and the making by them of the mortgage of their interests in the real estate to their sisters. They jointly and severally denied that the mortgage was made for a false or pretended consideration or for the purpose on the part of either the mortgagors or mortgagees of hindering, delaying or defrauding the plaintiffin collecting his judgments, but averred that it was made solely for the bona fide purpose of securing the indebtedness therein mentioned which was asserted to be an actual and subsisting obligation on the part of the brothers to the sisters. This answer was excepted to by the plaintiff on the ground that it did not fully answer the allegations of the bill that all of the defendants at and prior to the making of the mortgage occupied and were in possession of the farm and rented the other real estate out to tenants and that since the making of the mortgage the defendants continued to occupy and use the mortgaged property as they had theretofore done; or the allegations that the mortgage conveyed all of the real estate owned by the brothers and that they were without other property or means from which the plaintiff’s judgment could be realized. An amended answer was then filed by the defendants jointly in which they admitted the allegations referred to in the plaintiff’s exceptions, but neither the original or amended answer disclosed the nature or details of the transactions out of which the alleged mortgage indebtedness arose.

The evidence in the record shows that the mortgaged farm had for many years constituted the family home of the defendants. Their father, David Shockey, died in 1875 leaving the farm and the mountain land to his wife with remainder to his children of whom the appellees are the survivors. The four appellees, all of whom are unmarried, acquired the interests of the other children in the farm and, since the death of their mother, in 1886, lived together upon it and operated it for their joint account. They usually cultivated the farm themselves but they sometimes let out the land to tenants who *644 worked it on shares. At intervals of a year or longer the brothers and sisters had settlements with each other and adjusted the state of accounts between them and notes bearing interest were given for the balance, thus ascertained. The sisters, who seem to have been very industrious, also engaged in certain pursuits on their own account. They kept cows and raised chickens and sold butter and eggs and evaporated peaches and occasionally took boarders and also at times took in sewing. The one sister, Susan, testified that from 1876 to 1886 their average annual receipts from evaporated fruit were from $90 to $130 and from 1887, when they had gotten a hot air evaporator, to 1896 their earnings were from $350 to $468 per year. The brothers and sisters all testified with some measure of detail that the promissory notes secured by the mortgage represented the total amount of various loans¡ with interest thereon that had been made to the brothers by their sisters during a period of twenty or more years.

In 1888 the appellees, as tenants in common, purchased one of the two mortgaged houses in Hagerstown for $2,500 and in 1892 they purchased the other one for $1,600, they also purchased $700 of Hagerstown Drainage Bonds for their joint account. Prior to the institution of the slander suits in' which the judgments were rendered against the two brothers they had a bank account in their names as. Shockey Brothers with Eavy, Lane & Co. in Hagerstown, and a similar one with the Peoples’ Bank of Waynesboro. The aggregate value of the farm, mountain land and the two houses in Hagerstown was about $13,000 so that the half interests therein covered by the mortgage was worth approximately $6,500.

It further appears from the evidence that, not only was the mortgage executed after the institution of the slander suits in which the judgments were recovered against the mortgagors, but at or about the same' time the Hagerstown Drainage Bonds were sold, and the bank accounts standing in the name of the mortgagors were both closed out, and their share of the farm was leased for a money rent to their sisters who could at any time retain the rent and apply it on account of the debt *645 due to them and thus defeat any attempt of the plaintiff to recover, by an attachment issued on his judgments. By these transactions the two Shockey brothers stripped themselves of all property which could have been resorted to by the plaintiff for satisfaction of his judgments against them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A. 625, 105 Md. 641, 1907 Md. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccauley-v-shockey-md-1907.