Robinson v. Singerly Pulp & Paper Co.

72 A. 828, 110 Md. 382, 1909 Md. LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 72 A. 828 (Robinson v. Singerly Pulp & Paper 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
Robinson v. Singerly Pulp & Paper Co., 72 A. 828, 110 Md. 382, 1909 Md. LEXIS 51 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Henry, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal from the Circuit Court for Cecil County, in Equity, depends for its determination upon a .single question of fact, coupled with some points of evidence; but in order to understand the proposition a somewhat lengthy statement of the case will be necessary.

The appellant, who is the daughter of the late Joseph Singerly, of Philadelphia, who died in the year 1878, is the beneficiary under the third item of her father’s will to the extent of a life annuity of $6,000, to be paid in monthly instalments of $500. A like bequest was made by the testator to two other children, and the residuary estate was given and bequeathed to the Pennsylvania Company for Insurance on Lives and Granting Annuities in trust to pay the annuities to his children, and William M. Singerly, to whom was bequeathed a large part of the estate, was made responsible for the payment of such portion of these annuities as the income from the residuary estate might be deficient in providing for. The legacy, with the conditions attached, was accepted by William M. Singerly, who paid the several instalments of annuities until his death, in February, 1898.

In 1881, William M. Singerly, in obedience to an order of the Orphans’ Court of the County and City of Philadelphia, passed in the matter of the estate of Joseph Singerly, deceased, entered bond to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in *385 the penalty of on® hundred thousand dollars with the Fidelity Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Company as surety thereon, conditioned for the payment of said annuity. In 1884, Wm. M. Singerly, in order to Indemnify the aforesaid Fidelity Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Company from loss by reason of its suretyship, gave his individual bond to said company in the penalty of $200,000, and secured said bond by a mortgage for $100,000 to said company upon certain property in Cecil County, known as the Providence Paper Mills.

Subsequently, Wm. M. Singerly conveyed the said Providence Paper Mills and another property, known as The Singerly Pulp and Paper Mill, to the Singerly Pulp and Paper-Company, a corporation, and the last-named grantee mortgaged both properties to the Chestnut Street Trust and Savings Fund Company, trustee, to secure an issue, of $500,000 of bonds. ' ' .

On July 13th, 1898, the appellant executed a release to the Fidelity Insurance; Trust and Safe Deposit Company from all liability upon its obligation of suretyship upon the bond-of Wm. M. Singerly, then deceased, and received an assignment to her of the mortgage given by way of indemnity by the said Singerly to the said company, as hereinbefore men-! tioned. “

In September, 1898, the appellant and her husband, who' was then living, fded a bill for the foreclosure of the above-mortgage, and in December of the same year Kichard Y. Cook and George H. Earle, Jr., assignees of the Chestnut Street Trust and Saving Fund Company, and George H. Earle, Jr., receiver of The Chestnut Street National Bank, on behalf c-f themselves and other holders of the bonds of The Singerly Pulp and Paper Company, filed a bill in the Cecil County Court for a foreclosure of the $500,000 mortgage given to secure the bonds aforesaid, and in March, 1899, theSingerly Pulp and Paper Company filed a bill in the Cecil County Court asking for the appointment of a new trustee under the $500,000 mortgage, in the place of the insolvent Chestnut Street Trust and Saving Fund Company. -

*386 These three cases were afterwards consolidated under an agreement filed March 29th, 1899, signed by the solicitors for all the parties, as follows:

“It is hereby agreed in the several above-entitled causes:
(1) That the said causes shall be consolidated.
(2) That a decree be entered adjudging and declaring the mortgage from "Wm. M. Singerly to The Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company assigned to Mrs. Elizabeth Robinson in these proceedings mentioned to be a valid first lien upon the property described in said mortgage.
(3) That a. decree shall be entered in the consolidated cause for the sale of the property covered by the mortgage mentioned in said causes by trustees to be appointed by the Court.
(4) This agreement is subject to the approval of John G. Johnson, Esq., of Philadelphia.”

On April 1st, 1899, the Circuit Court for Cecil County in these consolidated cases passed a decree, the second paragraph of which is as follows:

“That the mortgage from Wm. M. Singerly to the Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, dated 26th day of July, 1884, and assigned by said last-mentioned company to Elizabeth Robinson, according to the true intent and" mean-, ing thereof, is a mortgage to secure to said Elizabeth Robinson the payment of the annuity of $6,000 mentioned in these proceedings, and is a valid first lien upon the property described in said mortgage, being the property known as the Providence Paper Mill, and that there is due and unpaid to the said Elizabeth Robinson the several monthly, payments of $500 each, falling due on the first day of each month since February 1st, 1898, amounting to $6,500, together with interest thereon from said several dates, and by reason of said quarterly payments being due and unpaid, that said mortgage is now in default.”

Subsequently, on January 22, 1900, this decree, on petition filed by Elizabeth Robinson, was corrected so as to make the amount due on the said annuity $Y,000, instead of $6,500.

*387 By the said decree, William T. Warburton, Albert Constable and John S. Wirt, were appointed trustees to sell the property in the proceedings mentioned, and in pursuance of such authority did make sale thereof for the sum of $70,000, and brought the proceeds into Court. The auditor stated an account, which, after allowing $7,344.12 to Mrs. Robinson for arrearages in her annuity, and which, after deducting expenses of sale and other charges allowed by the Court, showed a balance of $43,984.67, which amount the audit distributed as follows: “To Wm. T. Warburton, Albert Constable and John S. Wirt, trustees, to be invested under the direction of this Court and the interest thereof to be paid to the said Elizabeth Robinson during her life, and after her death to be distributed under the future order of this Court.”

This audit was filed March 22, 1900, and on May 8t'h, 1900, the said Court passed the following order ratifying the same:

“Ordered this 8th day of May, 1900, that the within and aforegoing report of the auditor be and the same is hereby ratified and confirmed and the trustees are hereby ordered to distribute the funds in accordance therewith, with a due proportion of interest as the same has been or may be received.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 828, 110 Md. 382, 1909 Md. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-singerly-pulp-paper-co-md-1909.