Moore v. Councilman

81 A. 122, 115 Md. 629, 1911 Md. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 A. 122 (Moore v. Councilman) 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
Moore v. Councilman, 81 A. 122, 115 Md. 629, 1911 Md. LEXIS 176 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The facts upon which the decision of this case must turn are so fully and clearly stated in an opinion by Judge Burke, who decided this case in the Court below, and set out in the record here, that we need not restate them, but will transcribe them on this appeal. They are as follows:

*630 On the 24th of September, 1902, Mrs. Sadie C. Oouncilman filed a bill of complaint in this Court against her husband, James B. Councilman, and others. The allegations of this bill need not he examined. The bill appears among the proceedings in this cause. It prayed for the appointment of a receiver.; for a decree declaring that Mrs. Councilman was entitled to a lien for betterments of the property known as Woodhome; and that property be sold to satisfy said lien and also a mortgage thereon executed by James B. Councilman to her amounting to $72,500. Mr. Councilman, in addition to this mortgage, was also indebted to his wife in a large sum of money. This Court appointed the Safe Deposit and Trust Company receiver of the property.

Mrs. Councilman died in 1906, and Mr. William Shepard Bryan, her executor, was made party plaintiff in her stead. Under her will the said Deposit and Trust Company was appointed trustee of her estate.

On the 18th of March, 1907, this Court decreed that Mrs. Councilman had no lien by way of betterment on the fee simple interest in Woodhome; but reserved in the decree the question of the rights of the executor of Mrs. Councilman under the mortgage. This decree was affirmed in Bryan v. Councilman, 106 Md. 380.

On the 18th of September, 1907, this Court decided that under the Buie in Shelley’s Case, James B. Councilman, under his uncle’s will, took a fee simple estate in Woodhome. It follows from this construction, of the will of James B. Councilman, the elder, that the mortgage was a lien upon the fee simple interest in that property.

The mortgage being overdue and in default, the Court passed a decree on the first day of October, 1907, for the sale of the mortgaged property, and appointed David G. McIntosh and Edward B. Bich trustees to make the sale. The trustees were required by the decree “to bring into this Court the money arising from said sale, to be distributed under the direction of this Court, after deducting the costs *631 of this suit and such commissions to the said trustees as the Court shall think proper to allow.” The trustees advertised the property at public sale, and offered it at public auction on November 14th, 1907; but, receiving no satisfactory bid, they withdrew it.

On the 29th of May, 1908, the trustees reported to the Court as follows: “The trustees now report that they have received from Doctor Theodore Cook an offer for the whole property, containing about two hundred and twelve (212) acres, for $42,500.00, and upon the terms set out in a letter from said Cook addressed to these trustees, under the date of May 27th, 1908, which has been accepted by the trustees, subject to the approval of this Court, and which letter is annexed hereto as part of this report.

“And these trustees respectfully recommend that the sale be ratified and confirmed by this Court, the sum named as a purchase price being the largest which these trustees have been able to get, after constant and repeated efforts made by themselves and by the Safe Deposit and Trust Company, all of which is respectfully submitted.”

Exceptions were filed to the sale by the purchaser and certain judgment creditors. These exceptions were overruled and the sale was finally ratified; an appeal was taken from the order of the final ratification and this order was affirmed in Cook v. Councilman, 109 Md. 622.

It appears from the facts stated that J. B. Councilman had really no interest in the property. He had mortgaged it for a great deal more than it sold for. The only parties to the cause who had any real or substantial interest in the property, or' in the proceeds of the sale were- the creditors of James B. Councilman, and the executor and trustee of Mrs. Councilman’s estate. In the proceedings to which we have referred, Mr. Edward N. Rich represented J ames B. Councilman, the mortgagor, and Colonel McIntosh appeared for the executor, and also for the trustee under the will of Mrs. Councilman, the Safe Deposit and Trust Company.

*632 On the 5th of March, 1909, Caleb J. Moore, doing business under the name and style of Moore & Walton, a licensed real estate broker, filed a petition in this case, alleging:

First: “That heretofore, to wit, in the month of February, in the year 1908, the defendant, James B. Councilman, who was then in the City of Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, took up with Messrs. Bamberger Brothers & Company, of that city, the matter of finding a purchaser for the real estate in these proceedings mentioned; that the said firm of Bamberger Brothers & Company, who were then engaged as real estate brokers in the City of Philadelphia aforesaid, took up with Messrs. Shriver, Bartlett & Company, of Baltimore City, in the State of Maryland, the matter of finding a purchaser for said property; that the said Shriver, Bartlett & Company, being engaged in the commercial collection- business, solicited the services of your petitioner, who was then and is now a licensed real estate broker, to find a purchaser for said property.

Second: “That pursuant to the solicitation set forth in the preceding paragraph of this petition, your petitioner offered the said property for sale to several persons, and among the persons to whom he offered the property for sale was Doctor Theodore Cook, Sr., who shortly thereafter became the purchaser of said property at and for the sum or price of $42,-500; that the trustees in these proceedings reported to this Honorable Court the sale aforesaid, which sale has since been finally ratified and confirmed.

Third: “That your petitioner was the procuring cause of the aforesaid sale to Doctor Cook, and is, therefore, entitled to receive the usual commissions of five per cent, on the purchase price of said farm, or the sum of $2,125.00.”

The petition then prays that an order be passed allowing that sum out of the funds in the hands of the trustees in these proceedings.

Mr. Bryan, as executor; the Safe Deposit and Trust Company, trustees, and Colonel McIntosh, as trustee, filed *633 answers to this petition. The answer of the executor is as follows:

“1. That he knows nothing of his personal knowledge of the matters alleged in the petition of Caleb J. Moore, and therefore requires clear and full proof of every matter 'of fact alleged therein.

“2. This respondent, as executor of Sadie C. Councilman, holds the mortgage for the satisfaction of which the property in these proceedings mentioned was sold to Doctor Theodore Cook, and is therefore entitled to the entire net proceeds of the sale of said property after deducting therefrom the proper costs of the sale.

“3. This respondent not only never consented to the employment of the said Caleb J.

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85 A. 943 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
81 A. 122, 115 Md. 629, 1911 Md. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-councilman-md-1911.