Rosenstock v. Ortwine

46 Md. 388, 1877 Md. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 8, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 Md. 388 (Rosenstock v. Ortwine) 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
Rosenstock v. Ortwine, 46 Md. 388, 1877 Md. LEXIS 55 (Md. 1877).

Opinion

Bowie, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The defendants’ first prayer, which was conceded, affirms that the order and acceptance thereof by the defendants, on which the action is brought, are conditional only, and the right of the plaintiff to recover depends precisely upon the same conditions which the mortgage required to he performed by Caskey himself, before he would become entitled to the advance of the money now in question. This concession renders the construction of the contract, between the mortgágor and mortgagees, a necessary preliminary to the decision of the case, if not the vital question.

Whether right or wrong, the parties have agreed that this is the law of the case, which agreement “pro haevice” [394]*394is alike binding on them and the Courts. Baugher vs. Wilkins, 16 Md., 35, 46; Phila., Wil. & Balt. R. R. Co. vs. Barker, 29 Md., 339.

The contract between the mortgagor and mortgagee, consists in the lease, and the mortgage, which were executed simultaneously, the latter referring to the former expressly.

These instruments show that the appellants, leased to David W. Caskey, on-the sixth of August -872, in consideration of the payment of rents thereby reserved, sixteen vacant lots, laying on the North side of North Avenue in Baltimore County, near the limits of the City of Baltimore, for ninety-nine years renewable, the said Caskey paying on each of said lots, accounting from the first of January, lte73, semi-annually, certain ground rents, amounting in the aggregate per annum to $1673.50, but each particular lot to be liable only for its own rent or portion of the aggregate sum. Caskey covenanted to pay the rent semi-annually, and all taxes and assessments levied on said lots or rents.

The mortgage from Caskey to Rosenstock & Stein, of the same date, recited the execution of the lease, and whereas the said Caskey is about to erect and build upon said lots, sixteen good and substantial dwelling houses, and whereas the said Rosenstock & Stein, at the request and for the accommodation of said Caskey, have agreed to loan and advance to him the sum of thirty-two thousand dollars, to be paid him during the progress of the building of said houses in the following manner, that is to say: $250 on each house to be erected when the first floor of joist is reached and put down: (and so on each floor being laid to the fourth inclusive:) $250 on each hous¿, when under roof: $250 on each when ready for plastering ;■ $250 on each when plastered, and two hundred and fifty dollars when finished; the whole of which sum of money shall be expended in the purchase of materials for and defraying [395]*395the expenses of erecting said houses, and for no other purpose. Said houses to he erected in accordance with the plans and drawings approved by said Rosenstock & Stein, etc. It was understood and agreed by the parties thereto, that the interest shall be computed and paid on said sum of money to be advanced from the time of the advancements, and the whole $32,000, with interest thereon semi-annually from the first of January, 1873, (interest to that date to be adjusted,) is to be repaid to said Rosenstock & Stein on or before the 1st of July, 1874; and also, that said sum or sucli portion when advanced shall enure as a lien on all sixteen lots of ground, and the improvements thereon erected, etc., and it was a condition precedent to making said loan, that the repayment thereof with interest, as therein provided, and the performance of the conditions therein contained, aud the agreements therein set forth, should he secured by a good and sufficient mortgage, wherefore those presents were executed. Caskey entered into the usual covenants to pay ground rent, interest and taxes.

In case of default being made in any of the conditions of the mortgage, the mortgagees were authorized to sell, etc.

And the said Caskey further covenanted “to begin work forthwith, and to complete the said houses, together with' all necessary out-buildings, fencing and grading of the yards, and to have said houses ready for occupation of tenants in six months from the date hereof,” etc.

D. W. Caskey, the mortgagor, on the 10th September, 1872, delivered to the appellee Ortwine, the following order or draft:

“ Messrs. Gerson Rosenstock, and Meyer Stein;
Will please pay to the order of William Ortwine six thousand dollars, in payment for bricks to be furnished by [396]*396him in.erecting the houses to be built on the lots of ground heretofore leased by the said Rosenstock & Stein to David W. Caskey, out of the last payments that shall be due the said David W. Caskey by the said Rosenstock & Stein, in accordance with the terms of the mortgage from David W. Caskey to Rosenstock & Stein, upon said lots of ground.
Signed, D. W. Caskey.”
“Baltimore City, Sept. 10th, 1872.”

This draft was accepted on the day of its date. Four several payments of $'500 each, dated September 14th, 1872: Feburary 11th, 1873: April 2nd, 1873; and April 25th, 1873; by Messrs. Rosenstock & Stein, were credited by endorsement.

The bricks were delivered as agreed upon by Ortwine ; Caskey commenced the buildings, but stopped work before they were entirely completed. It is in evidence in the cause, that afterwards, about the month of June, 1873, Meyer Stein, one of the defendants, said to the appellee “Ortwine, why don’t you go to work and get those houses finished, I want to get the matter settled,” whereupon the witness testified, he went on to finish the houses, and did all that was required by the contract, as he thinks was intended.

The action is brought by the appellee, upon the theory, that the limitation of time for the completion of the buildings, prescribed by the mortgage, having been waived by the mortgagees, and the work done or completed by the appellee, agreeably to the provisions of the mortgage in other respects, he is entitled to recover the amount of the order, less the credits endorsed, without further abatement or deduction. That according to the true interpretation of the agreement between the parties, as evidenced by the premises of the mortgage, the whole of the sum of money (thereby agreed to be advanced,) was to be expended in [397]*397the purchase of materials for, and defraying the expenses of erecting said houses, and for no other purpose whatsoever.

That the order of the defendants in favor of the appellee, is an assignment of a part of the fund appropriated to the erection of the buildings, not subject to any other conditions or covenants between the mortgagor and mortgagee.

The prayers submitted by the appellee, and granted by the Court, affirm these propositions. The appellants on the other hand, by the instructions offered by them, maintain that the appellee is subject to all the covenants of the mortgagor, is to fence and grade the yards; to pay the the ground rent, interest and taxes ; to drain the premises, etc., and that the sums necessary for these purposes should he recouped or set off against the claim of the appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Md. 388, 1877 Md. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenstock-v-ortwine-md-1877.