Purnell v. Union Trust Co.

173 A. 1, 167 Md. 85, 1934 Md. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 11, 1934
Docket[No. 20, April Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 A. 1 (Purnell v. Union Trust 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
Purnell v. Union Trust Co., 173 A. 1, 167 Md. 85, 1934 Md. LEXIS 89 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

J. Hurst Purnell, the husband of the appellant, Katherine K. Purnell, was, in 1931, and for a time prior thereto, in the real estate business in the city of Baltimore, trading under the name of' “J. Hurst Purnell, Inc.” He was president and active head of the company and owned nearly all of the stock. His wife was the owner of only a very few shares of the stock. The company owned some unimproved land in a development known as “Keswick,” which was subdivided into lots upon which houses were built with the view of selling them at a profit.

On the 2nd day of February, 1931, J. Hurst Purnell, Inc., borrowed from the appellee, Union Trust Company, $5,000, and gave to that company its promissory note for that amount, indorsed by J. Hurst Purnell individually, and assigned to it certain mortgages as collateral security therefor.

On the 28th day of May, 1931, J. Hurst Purnell and wife borrowed of her brother, William G. Knapp, the sum of $5,000, and, to secure its payment, gave to him their interest bearing note containing a power to confess judgment thereon.

J. Hurst Purnell, Inc., desired to increase its line of credit with the Union Trust Company, and on the 9th day of July, 1931, J. Hurst Purnell and Katherine K. Purnell, his wife, as required by the Union Trust Company, executed a paper writing in the nature of a guaranty, by which they agreed to indemnify the Union Trust Company against all loss it might suffer, to the extent of $22,000, in consequence of the credit granted by it to J. Hurst Purnell, Inc.

*87 Thereafter, on the 4th day of January, 1932, the note for $5,000, given by J. Hurst Purnell, Inc., to the trust company, heretofore mentioned, was renewed, with the individual indorsement of J. Hurst Purnell thereon; and on the 6th day of January, 1932, J. Hurst Purnell, Inc., borrowed the further sum of $17,000 from the Union Trust Company, and gave to the latter company its note for that amount, indorsed by J. Hurst Purnell individually.

In December, 1931, J. Hurst Purnell had become sick, and as a result thereof was confined to his home. While in that condition he found it necessary to borrow money to tide over his financial difficulties. He asked his brother-in-law, William G. Knapp, to go to the bank of the Union Trust Company, and ask Mr. W. Graham Boyce, its vice president, to call to see him at his, Mr. Purnell’s, home. This Mr. Knapp did, though Mr. Boyce did not call at the home of Mr. Purnell until the following month, January, 1932. At that time Mr. Purnell applied to the Union Trust Company, through Mr. Boyce, for a loan of $10,000, and offered him as collateral security a second mortgage of $10,000, following a first mortgage of $25,000, executed to the Safe Deposit & Trust Company upon No. 4314 St. Paul St., Baltimore, where he then resided, and owned by him and Mrs. Purnell; the cost thereof being $75,000. This security was not satisfactory to Mr. Boyce and further security was required. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Boyce met William G. Knapp and his father at the Maryland Club, and there suggested to William G. Knapp that he should help his brother-in-law, Mr. Purnell. Mr. Knapp had a life insurance policy of $25,000, the cash value of which at that time was about $12,000. This he agreed to assign to the Union Trust Company as a further security for the loan of $10,000 to Mr. and Mrs. Purnell, and, on January 14th, 1932, the trust company loaned to Mr. and Mrs. Purnell $10,-000, secured by a second mortgage on their home, which was executed by them to his brother-in-law William G. Knapp, and by him assigned to the appellee, together *88 with said policy of insurance on the life of William G. Knapp.

On February 8th, 1932, J. Hurst Purnell died. Mrs. Purnell was thereafter made president of J. Hurst Purnell, Inc., and took over its management. Robert Biggs remained counsel to the company, and also advised Mrs. Purnell in certain matters in connection with the settlement of her husband’s estate.

Mrs. Purnell collected the sum of $26,280.33 upon certain life insurance policies held by her husband at the time of his death, in which she was the beneficiary. This money she deposited in the Union Trust Company. $19,-954.20 of it she deposited in a savings account, and $6,326.11 in a checking account, in which she had previously deposited the $10,000 borrowed by herself and husband from the trust company, and secured by the mortgage executed to her brother and assigned by him to the Union Trust Company.

After the death of Mr. Purnell, Mrs. Purnell, then the president of J. Hurst Purnell, Inc., and Mr. Biggs, counsel for that company, planned to erect some new dwellings on part of the unimproved land held by the company. To effect this end they got in touch with Robert A. Brady and his brother, builders, and a written agreement was entered into by them with the Purnell Company, by which the latter was to convey four lots of land to the former, trading as the Colonial Homes Company, subject to certain ground rents. By this agreement the Colonial Homes Company was to erect four dwellings on these lots for the company.

On June 14th, 1932, J. Hurst Purnell, Inc., leased the four lots to the Colonial Homes Company, and on the same day the Colonial Homes Company entered into an agreement with Mrs. Purnell, by which she agreed to advance, individually, to it, from time to time, money, not to exceed in the aggregate $14,000, to be used by the Colonial Homes Company in the building of the'f our houses, and, to secure her in the repayment of the amount so to be advanced, the Colonial Homes Company executed to her, individually, a construction mortgage for $14,000.

*89 The first payment of Mrs. Purnell to the Colonial Homes Company, pursuant to the agreement between her and that company, was $500, made on the 25th day of June, 1932, by a withdrawal of that amount from her savings account of $19,954.20, in the Union Trust Company. This payment was followed by other withdrawals from that account made by her from time to time, until the payments thereon, including the one made on the 14th day of November, 1932, of $350, aggregated $14,600. No explanation was given for the payment of the additional $600, when the mortgage amounted only to $14,000. After November 14th, 1932, Mrs. Purnell withdrew from her savings account, at three different times, the aggregate sum of $5,000, which was used for her own individual purposes; the amount of her account after such withdrawals being $1,276.18.

On December 18th, 1932, Robert Biggs became seriously ill and was confined to his home and thereafter did not return to his office, but died February 23rd, 1933.

In December, 1932, Mr. Knapp asked Mrs. Purnell for a payment on account of the $5,000 note which he held and for the insurance policy assigned by him, which, as already stated, had a cash value of about $12,000. She was unable to pay him in cash, and, in lieu thereof, she, on February 6th, 1933, made a settlement with him by assigning to him the Colonial Homes Company mortgage of $14,000, which assignment was duly recorded on February 27th, 1933, and he returned to her the note of $5,000, given to him by her and her husband.

On April 18th, 1933, Mr. Dunn, vice president of the trust company, demanded of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
173 A. 1, 167 Md. 85, 1934 Md. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purnell-v-union-trust-co-md-1934.