Rosenthal v. Heft

142 A. 598, 155 Md. 410, 1928 Md. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1928
Docket[No. 36, April Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 142 A. 598 (Rosenthal v. Heft) 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
Rosenthal v. Heft, 142 A. 598, 155 Md. 410, 1928 Md. LEXIS 136 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On July 8th, 1921, Morris Heft and Bessie Heft, his wife, by their agreement under seal, bargained and sold to Abel Rosenthal seven lots of ground on Maple Avenue in Baltimore City “at and for the price of $12,000, of which $500 have been paid prior to the signing hereof, and the balance is to be paid as follows: Subject to the present mortgage, which is on the said property which amount shall be deducted of the purchase price and balance in cash on the day of transfer.” On the same day Rosenthal by a similar agreement undertook to sell Heft and his wife a property known as No. 934 Madison Avenue, in that city, “at and for the price of $12,500, of which $500 have been paid prior to the signing hereof, and the balance is to be paid as follows: $4,500 in cash on the day of transfer, and balance by a first mortgage loan to the amount of $J,500 payable within five years at the rate of $200 every three months with interest.” Each of those agreements concluded with this statement: “It is agreed and understood between all parties hereto that one contract is subject to the other one.” The appellant said that the purpose of that clause was to make the performance of each contract depend upon the performance of the other, so that, if the Hefts refused to perform their contract in reference to the Madison Avenue property, Rosenthal would be excused from performing his contract with reference to the Maple Avenue property. Except for that the two agreements appear to have been unrelated and independent.

Following the execution of those agreements on July 20th, 1921, Mr. and Mrs. Heft by their deed of that date con *414 veyed the Maple Avenue property to Abel Rosenthal and. Howard S. Kroh “subject, however, to the legal operation and effect of two mortgages, one from the said Morris Heft and wife to the Provident Savings Bank of Baltimore dated 11 June, 1920, and recorded among the land records aforesaid in Liber S. C. L. No. 3601, folio 245, and the other from the said Morris Heft and wife to the Linthicum Realty-Company dated 11 June, 1920, and recorded among the lands records aforesaid in Liber S. C. L. No. 3607, folio' 388, and also to the conditions and restrictions contained in the aforesaid deed.” The consideration stated in that deed was “$5 and divers other good and valuable considerations.”’

The Hefts had obtained the property, which they thus conveyed, under a deed from the Linthicum Realty Company and had executed to that company a purchase money mortgage for $4,500, subject to a prior mortgage for $6,000,. given by the Hefts to the Provident Savings Bank of Baltimore, on which a balance of $5,500 was still unpaid, which it assigned to the National Eire Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut. $1,300 of the mortgage to the Linthicum. Realty Company was paid on July 1st, 1920, so- that when Rosenthal and Kroh took title to the property there remained due and unpaid on these two' mortgages $3,200 to the Linthicum Realty Company and $5,500 to the Provident Savings-Bank, together with such interest as may have accrued at that time.

On April 5th, 1922, the mortgage to the Provident Savings Bank being in default, the assignee instituted proceedings to foreclose it, and subsequently in that proceeding it was foreclosed, and the property sold for $5,800, which sale was in due course ratified, and an auditor’s account stated, showing a deficit of $324.01, which was also finally ratified and confirmed.

On November 13th the Frontier Mortgage Company, assignee of the Linthicum Realty Company, sued Morris and Bessie Heft in the Superior Court of Baltimore City on the mortgage and mortgage notes they had given it, and it obtained, on October 22nd, 1924, a judgment against them for *415 $3,355, together with interest, costs of suit and a counsel fee of $100.

Following that judgment, on July 16th, 1926, the Hefts -commenced an action in the Superior Court of Baltimore City against Rosenthal to recover from him the amount of -the judgment which had thus been entered against them as well as the unpaid deficit on the first mortgage, on the theory that, when he purchased the property subject to- the mort.gages outstanding against it, he assumed the payment of them, and that, in consequence of his failure to make such payment, they, the Hefts, were still obliged to pay the amount for which they were primarily liable under the mort.gages, whereby an action for such amount had accrued to them against Rosenthal.

In that proceeding the plaintiffs, on February 24th, 1921, filed an amended declaration, which contained the six common counts and a special -count in which, after alleging the facts to which we have referred, they said “that by reason of the failure of the defendant to- pay said mortgage indebtedness as agreed in the contract and deed aforesaid between the plaintiffs and defendant, and so assumed and agreed to be paid by the defendant herein, the defendant is therefore in-debted to the plaintiffs for the sums- aforesaid with interest from the respective dates as aforesaid and the plaintiffs have been put to- great expense in the employment of -counsel to ■defend the suits against them, for -court costs, counsel fees, .and expenses, and have -sustained other losses and damages by reason of such failure of the defendant to- carry out and perform his agreement to assume and pay the- aforementioned mortgage indebtedness.” The plaintiffs having filed the particulars of their claim, and having made profert of the deed -and agi*eement, in answer to- defendant’s demand, the defendant demurred to the whole declaration and to each count -thereof, and when that demurrer was -overruled they filed nine pleas. To the third, fourth, fifth, sixth and ninth p-leas the plaintiff demurred, joined issue -on the first and second (general issue pleas) and traversed the seventh, which was a plea of payment, and the eighth, which was a plea of re *416 lease. The demurrers were sustained, issue was joined on the traverse in each instance, and the case proceeded to1 trial, which trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs for $5,081.74, from which judgment this appeal was taken.

The record contains thirteen exceptions, of which the thirteenth relates to the court’s rulings on the prayers, and the others to its rulings on evidence. Those rulings together with the court’s rulings on objections to the pleadings we are called upon to review.

It must be apparent from what has been said that the controlling question in the case is whether the appellant, by his deed or agreement, or either or both of them, assumed the obligation of paying the mortgages outstanding against the property which he purchased, and of protecting his vendors against any liability on account thefeof. But, before dealing with that precise question, we will first dispose of certain formal matters which tend to- obscure it.

The first question is whether we must consider the deed alone, or whether, in connection with it, we may consider the antecedent agreement. If the deed were full, complete, and unambiguous, that question would be free from difficulty, for, in such a case, it would be accepted as the final and exclusive agreement of the parties, in which all prior negotiations and agreements had merged. Lawson v. Mullinix, 104 Md. 156.

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Bluebook (online)
142 A. 598, 155 Md. 410, 1928 Md. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenthal-v-heft-md-1928.