Mizen v. Thomas

144 A. 479, 156 Md. 313, 1929 Md. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 17, 1929
Docket[No. 74, October Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 144 A. 479 (Mizen v. Thomas) 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
Mizen v. Thomas, 144 A. 479, 156 Md. 313, 1929 Md. LEXIS 15 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On April 6th, 1925, Jacob Mizen and Esther Mizen, his wife, being indebted to Isaac O. Rosenthal in the sum of $23,000, to secure that debt executed to him a mortgage on certain property' in Baltimore City. On August 31st, 1926, Rosenthal assigned the mortgage to the Baltimore Trust Company, which, on May 23rd, 1927, assigned it to Howell H. Thomas, the present holder, and the appellee in this case.

On May 26th, 1927, default having occurred under the covenants contained in the mortgage, the assignee filed a petition for its sale, presumably under a consent to a decree of foreclosure, although that fact does not appear in the record. But in that proceeding a decree was eventually passed authorizing a sale of the property and appointing G. Ridgely Sappington trustee to make it. The trustee in due course qualified and, on July 14th, 1927, reported to the court that he had, on July 6th, 1927, sold the property to the Laurel Development Company, of Baltimore City, for $11,600 to be “paid one-third in cash upon ratification of the sale by this court, balance in six and twelve months, or all cash at the option of the purchaser.” The sale was finally ratified, but *316 the purchaser failed to comply with its terms, and ou August 30th, 1927, the trustee filed a petition setting out the default, and praying that the purchaser be required to pay the purchase money, and “in default thereof that the said property may be decreed to be sold at the risk of” the purchaser. A show cause order granting the relief prayed was passed, and, no cause having been shown, on September 16th, 1927, it was made final, and the trustee thereupon sold the property to the Frederick Hoad Park Building Company for $6,100. That sale was also ratified, and an audit filed and ratified, showing a deficit of $5,805.87. Thereupon the trustee moved for a decree in personam against the Laurel Development Company for $5,670.83, the amount shown by the audit to be due from it, and at the same time the assignee moved for a decree in personam against the mortgagors for $5,805.87, the amount shown by the audit to be still due and unpaid on account of the mortgage, after crediting it with the net proceeds of the second sale. The petition against the Laurel Development Company does not appear to have been pressed, probably because it had no assets, and any further decree against it would have had no practical value. Jacob and Esther Mizen however answered the petition against them, and, after setting forth the facts to which we have referred, they said they were not interested in the resale or the deficiency resulting therefrom, but were entitled to be credited with the purchase price of the first sale, which was more than sufficient to satisfy the mortgage debt, interest, and costs, on the theory that, when the trustee allowed the sale to be ratified and stand, “said Laurel Development Company was thereby accepted not merely as the equitable owner thereafter of said property, but as the party solely entitled to any of the surplus should such resale have resulted in a surplus, and solely liable for any deficiency resulting from said resale, and that said trustee should be required to prosecute his claim against said Laurel Development Company for this reason.” In connection with those issues evidence was offered which proved “that at the original sale the defendant, Jacob Mizen, was one of *317 the two bidders and bid for the property a sum within $100 of the price at which it was finally sold to the Laurel Development Company; * * * that the purchaser at the second sale, to wit, the Frederick Road Park Building Company, is a Maryland corporation, and that its stock is owned, one-third by J acob Mizen, one-third by his counsel, Wm. Edgar Byrd, and one-third by his son-in-law, Reuben Kipnis, the same parties being officers and directors of the company” and that “at the second sale Mr. Mizen and Mr. Byrd stood together, Mr. Byrd bidding, and that when Mr. Byrd was asked in whose name the sale should be reported, he turned to Mr. Mizen and said ‘We will report this in the name of the Frederick Road Park Building Co.,’ and Mr. Mizen replied, ‘Yes,’ whereupon the trustee was so directed,” * * * and also “that the Laurel Development Company had no assets, and that the only money which had ever been paid into its treasury was the money deposited on account of the first sale in this case, and that it had been incorporated in 1927.”

The case was argued and submitted on the petition, the answers, and that evidence, and on June 5th, 1928, the court entered a deficiency decree in favor of Thomas for $5,805.87. From that decree this appeal was taken.

The only question presented by it is whether, where a trustee, appointed to make sale of mortgaged property to satisfy the debt secured by the mortgage, reports a sale of the property to a purchaser, and permits the sale to be finally ratified, and subsequently, upon the failure of the purchaser to comply with the terms of sale, asks permission to resell the property at the purchaser’s risk, the mortgagors remain liable for any deficiency which may result after applying the net proceeds of the resale to the payment of the amount due under the mortgage, plus interest and costs.

Appellants’ theory is that, when the trustee- elected to stand by the sale to the Laurel Development Company, as he did in asking that it be resold at the purchaser’s risk instead of asking that it be set aside, he substituted the purchaser’s obligation for the mortgaged property, and thereafter held the property, not as security for the mortgage debt, but as *318 security for the purchaser’s obligation, and that the mortgagors, having lost their property, were entitled to be credited with the proceeds of its sale.

Appellee, on the other hand, asserts that neither the ratification of the sale to an irresponsible; and defaulting purchaser, nor the resale at the purchaser’s risk, could affect the liability of the mortgagors for the payment of the,mortgage debt, nor their liability for the payment of any deficiency resulting from the inadequacy of the mortgaged property to satisfy that debt.

If we disregard technicalities, and look only at the actualities, the case is rather a simple one. The trustee attempted to sell mortgaged property to a purchaser who happened to be wholly worthless and irresponsible, but the sale was never consummated because the purchaser failed to comply with its terms. The property was then resold at the purchaser’s risk, but the proceeds of the resale were not sufficient to pay the mortgage debt. Prior to the resale the title to the property remained in the mortgagors, because it could not have been divested except by deed, and no deed was given, and after the resale a part of the mortgage debt still remained due and unsatisfied. The mortgagors had received full value for the debt, and the property pledged for its payment had, after a fair and public sale, failed to produce a fund sufficient to satisfy it. Under such circumstances, did the act of the trustee in asking for a resale, or the decree of the court ordering such resale, release the mortgagors from their obligation to pay such part of the debt as remained unsatisfied after the net proceeds of the resale had been applied to its payment.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A. 479, 156 Md. 313, 1929 Md. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mizen-v-thomas-md-1929.