Plaza Corp. v. Alban Tractor Co.

151 A.2d 170, 219 Md. 570
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 23, 2001
Docket[No. 23, September Term, 1958.]
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 151 A.2d 170 (Plaza Corp. v. Alban Tractor Co.) 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
Plaza Corp. v. Alban Tractor Co., 151 A.2d 170, 219 Md. 570 (Md. 2001).

Opinion

Prescott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

After reargument, the original opinion is modified so as to read as follows:

The decision in this case depends upon the relative priority of two mortgages—one covering both real estate and chattels personal, and held by the appellant; the other covering chattels personal, only, and held by the appellee.

On December 26, 1950, John B. Gaither, Jr., Inc. (Gaither) was incorporated by the filing of articles of incorporation with the State Tax Commission designating its principal office as 3544 Milford Mill Road, Baltimore County, Maryland, this being also the address given for the resident agent, John B. Gaither, Jr., who was president of the corporation. After the incorporation, a number of amendments were filed with the State Tax Commission enlarging the general purposes of the corporation and changing its stock structure, but in no way affecting the change of the location of its principal office from Baltimore County to Baltimore City, although it did *575 establish a business office at 10 West 25th Street in Baltimore City. 1

On October 20, 1954, Gaither purchased from the appellee, Alban Tractor Co., Inc. (Alban), certain construction equipment, and executed and delivered, unto Alban, a conditional contract of sale in the amount of $203,195.62 covering said equipment. This conditional sales contract was recorded on the same day in Baltimore City, and immediately assigned to the Union Trust Company.

On December 1, 1954, Gaither executed a mortgage to the appellant, Plaza Corporation (Plaza), covering a part of the same personal property mentioned in Alban’s conditional sales contract above, additional personal property and certain real estate. This mortgage was forwarded, on the same date, to the Clerk of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for recording.

On May 6, 1955, Gaither was in default in its payments due under the conditional sales contract, given to Alban and transferred by it to the bank. On that date Alban paid, in full, the amount due to the Union Trust Company under the assignment of the conditional sales contract, sold to Gaither additional equipment for a price of approximately $119,000 and took from Gaither a chattel mortgage on the additional equipment as well as the equipment that had been named in the conditional sales contract, the latter including a substantial part of the same property that had been included in Plaza’s chattel mortgage. This mortgage to Alban was recorded on the same day in Baltimore City.

On November 5, 1956, Herbert L. Wynne, the attorney named for the purpose of foreclosure in the Alban mortgage, filed a petition for the sale of the mortgaged chattels in Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, and, after a decree appointing him trustee to make sale, proceeded to advertise the chattels for sale.

On November 15, 1956, Gaither executed a Deed of Trust *576 for the benefit of creditors to Herbert H. Hubbard and Sidney Waldman, trustees.

On November 29, 1956, Mr. Isekoff, the attorney named for the purpose of foreclosure in the Plaza mortgage, notified Wynne that Plaza had filed foreclosure proceedings in Baltimore County on November 27, 1956. The real estate named in the Plaza mortgage was sold and the sale reported to the Court in the Baltimore County proceedings, but the sale was not ratified or confirmed by the court at the time of the trial below, insofar as the record herein discloses.

On December 1, 1956, Wynne, as trustee aforesaid under the Alban chattel mortgage, proceeded to sell the chattels named in the Alban mortgage, these chattels bringing $148,500 (which amount was insufficient to pay Alban in full), consisting of $67,200 for the chattels named in both the Alban and Plaza mortgages and $81,300 for those named only in the Alban mortgage. Plaza filed exceptions to the ratification of the sale by the court in Baltimore City. Pursuant to a stipulation entered into at the trial on May 29, 1957, this sale was ratified, without prejudice to all of the exceptions and contentions of Plaza.

In September, 1957, the chancellor signed a decree in which he dismissed Plaza’s exceptions on the ground that Plaza had made no showing of a lien on any of the chattels sold, and, therefore, was without right to urge its exceptions; and directed the trustee, as all parties had agreed thereto, to pay forthwith to Alban the sum of $70,000 and to deposit the balance of the fund in certain institutions, subject to the further order of the court. •

There was no testimony offered to show that Plaza had actual notice of Alban’s conditional sales agreement when it took its chattel mortgage; or that Alban had actual notice of the Plaza mortgage when Alban received its mortgage.

I

It will be noted at the outset that Plaza makes its claim as a senior encumbrancer and filed exceptions to the ratification of the sale made under the Alban mortgage. Ordinarily, the holder of a prior mortgage has no standing in court to file *577 exceptions to the ratification of a sale made under a junior mortgage; because, generally, such a sale is made subject to the prior mortgage and does not affect the rights of the prior mortgagee. Article 66, sec. 7 (c), Code (1957); 2 Jones, Chattel Mortgages and Conditional Sales, sec. 694. However, the stipulation of the parties herein was made before the sale was ratified and transferred the claims of all of the parties to the chattels sold from the chattels to the proceeds of their sale. This, the parties had a right to do and the stipulation effectively placed before the court the respective claims of Alban and Plaza to the proceeds of the sale. Willard v. Ramsburg, 22 Md. 206, 215, 216; In re Sachs, 30 F. 2d 510, 511 (C. C. A. 4th Cir.). Cf. 2 Jones, op. cit., sec. 779.

II

We shall next consider the question of the jurisdiction and/or venue of the court in Baltimore City to appoint a trustee and order the sale of the mortgaged property. The appellant claims that the court below (and all other courts) lacked jurisdiction or venue because Alban’s chattel mortgage was not recorded in Baltimore County, in accordance with Article 21, secs. 45 and 46 (Code 1957), which requires that a chattel mortgage be recorded in the “county or city” where the mortgagor resides, but was only recorded in Baltimore City. It argues that the provision “at any time after filing the same (the mortgages or certified copies) to be recorded to submit [them] to a court of equity” contained in sec. 6 of Article 66 (Code 1957), prevented the court in Baltimore City from acting under the procedure authorized by said section, without the mortgage having first been filed for record in Baltimore County.

The chattels involved herein were sold under said section 6. 2 It will be noted that this section does not confer special and extraordinary powers of jurisdiction upon the equity courts. Foreclosure of mortgages after default has long been *578

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Bluebook (online)
151 A.2d 170, 219 Md. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plaza-corp-v-alban-tractor-co-md-2001.