Rosenthal v. Miller

129 A. 28, 148 Md. 226, 1925 Md. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 29, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 A. 28 (Rosenthal v. Miller) 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. Miller, 129 A. 28, 148 Md. 226, 1925 Md. LEXIS 23 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

During the influenza epidemic in the fall of 1918 some of the members of the Russian Greek Catholic Church of Baltimore City, a voluntary unincorporated association, determined to secure a burial ground -for the use of themselves and their co-religionists, and to carry out this intention Rev. Constantine Seletzky, their priest, was asked to secure the ground, and to have it transferred to certain trustees for the use of the Russian Resurrection Society, an unincorporated benevolent association connected with the church. A tract of land in Baltimore County was finally selected and purchased, find the title was. conveyed to the “'Rev. Constantine 0. Seletzky, Stefan Michasink and Andró Maximuk, trustees, and their successors and assigns forever in fee simple, for the use and benefit of said Russian Resurrection Society with full power to said trustee to sell, assign, lease, mortgage or otherwise convey said property.”

The purchase price of the property was $2,050, of which $1,250 was paid in cash, and a. purchase money mortgage was given for the balance of $800. On March 7th, 1919, just a few months after the acquisition of the property, the trustees, pursuant to an alleged authorization by said society, conveyed it, by a deed absolute on its face, to one John Koucbutko, and he in turn executed a mortgage on the property to Constantine Seletzky individually for $2,050. There *228 upon, eight alleged members of the Russian Resurrection Society filed a bill in the Circuit Oourt for Baltimore County against the society and the trustees, setting out that the land had been purchased for use as a burial ground, that all the members of the society or church who contributed .$'25 were to receive a burial lot; that seven of them had so contributed, and the eighth had given $50 and loaned $300; that none of them had received any lo't; that all of them had ceased to be members of the 'aforesaid society, and that the deed from the trustees to Kouchutko, .and the mortgage by the latter to Seletzky, were without consideration and void and made for'the purpose of defrauding the complainants. The bill then asked that- the deed and mortgage be set aside, a trustee appointed to sell the land and divide the proceeds among those equitably entitled thereto, and for other relief. The answer of the trustees and the society admitted the use for which the property was purchased, .and admitted also that one of the complainants had advanced $300 towards the purchase price, but it denied that there had been .any agreement or understanding that those contributing $25 should receive a lot, and alleged that all such contributions were free-will offerings; that a total of $774 of the purchase money had been so donated, .and that the balance of the $1,250 cash paid on the property was made up of the $300 loaned by one of the complainants, of $100 loaned by Kouchutko, and of money .given by the trustees .themselves. The answer further alleged that the property was conveyed to Kouchutko as a more convenient method of holding the title; that said Kouchutko1 held the property for the benefit of the Russian Resurrection Society, and that Rev. Seletzky also held the mortgage of $2,050- for the benefit of said society, the mortgage having been given to prevent said Kouchutko from disposing of the property contrary to the intention of said society. No testimony was taken in that case, but according to the testimony in the present case Rev. Seletzky, upon the advice of his counsel that it would cost as much to contest the case as it would to settle it, paid the complainants *229 the sums they claimed, amounting in all to about $500, and the ease was dismissed. The money used in this settlement is said to have been furnished by Rev. Seletzky.

On May 6th, 1921, Kouehutko’s loan of $100 for the purchase of the property was paid off by one Alexander Ohuhinsld, who had about $200 in it, .and the property was then conveyed to Ohubinski, and by him conveyed on October 30th, 1922, to Earl W. Blackburn, who subsequently conveyed it to the appellees. During all this time Rev. Seletzky paid the interest on the purchase money mortgage of $800, and he retained the mortgage for $2,050 given him by Kouehutko until February 3rd, 1922, when he assigned it to his wife, and she, together with Seletzky, on November 22. 1922, sold and assigned it to William E. Schloegel, for a valuable consideration, the Rev. Seletzky apparently retaining the money. It further appears from the testimony that, at the time the property was bought in 1918, the Russian Resurrection Society was composed of about forty members ; that only part of them contributed anything towards the purchase price of the property, and no permanent record was kept of those who did contribute; that the trustees had the land laid off in burial lots with a road running through it, but that no lots were ever sold; that as a result of the Russian Revolution the Russian Greek Catholic Church in Baltimore became divided; that this division extended to the Russian Resurrection Society and eventually resulted in its complete disorganization. It also appears that all of the $1,250 contributed to the purchase price has been accounted for and paid to the donors, except the .sum of about $3'50, and the parties who gave this amount are apparently unknown and have made no claim for it since they donated it in 1918.

After purchasing the property from Blackburn in 1922 the appellees paid off' both the purchase money mortgage and the second mortgage held by Schloegel, built .seven houses on the land at a cost of about $25,000, .and then undertook to sell them. The appellant agreed in writing to buy one of *230 the houses for $4,500, of which sum $300 was paid in cash, and the balance was to be paid on the delivery of a deed conveying a “good and merchantable” fee-simple title. He declined to complete the purchase, and the appellees thereupon filed a bill for specific performance in the Circuit Court -of Baltimore City, the appellant being a resident of-that city. The answer of the appellant alleged that the title to the land was not “good and merchantable,” and the de-. cisión of the lower -court being against him, he took this appeal.

The objections to the title are all based on the original deed to Rev. Seletzky et ah, trustees, the appellant contending that the trust -sought to be created by it was a passive one and the use was executed in the 'beneficiaries of the trust; that the trust is void for uncertainty as to the beneficiaries; that the deed violates the rule against perpetuities, and finally that the purchaser of the property would have to see the application of the purchase money.

We- do not -think that the trust sought to be created was of so passive a nature that the statute of uses would execute it and vest title in the members of the society. The- trustees were given express power to sell, assign, lease, mortgage or otherwise convey the property; they actually -did -have it laid off in burial lots and attempted to dispose of these lots, and it seems apparent from the record that it was the intention of those concerned with this- project that the trustees should actively manage and control the property as a burial ground for the members of the- Russian Greek Catholic Church of Baltimore City. Such a trust would not be executed by the statute. Tiffany on Real Property, 355, 412; 26 R. C. L. 1173 to 1179, and note in 78

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ensor v. Ensor
312 A.2d 286 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1973)
O'Neal ex rel. Warmack v. Warmack
466 S.W.2d 913 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1971)
Smith v. Washington
226 A.2d 335 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1967)
Schwarz v. United States
191 F.2d 618 (Fourth Circuit, 1951)
Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Sanford
29 A.2d 657 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1943)
Reeside v. Annex Building Ass'n
167 A. 72 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A. 28, 148 Md. 226, 1925 Md. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenthal-v-miller-md-1925.