Royal Insur. Co. v. Drury

132 A. 635, 150 Md. 211, 45 A.L.R. 582, 1926 Md. LEXIS 20
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 132 A. 635 (Royal Insur. Co. v. Drury) 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
Royal Insur. Co. v. Drury, 132 A. 635, 150 Md. 211, 45 A.L.R. 582, 1926 Md. LEXIS 20 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

*214 Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The chief question to be determined in this case is whether or not the final ratification of a sale of property made under a power of sale contained in a deed of trust, to the holders of the notes secured by the deed of trust, effects “any change of ownership” in the property within the meaning of that phrase as used in the “standard mortgage clause,” now customarily attached to fire insurance policies covering mortg'aged property.

In the fall of 1920 Mr. R. E. Walker, president of the Brightwood Sanitarium Company, after a casual meeting with Mr. D. H. Roland Drury in Washington, D'. C., asked him if he could secure a $15,000 loan on a fifty-acre tract of ground and the building thereon, owned by the sanitarium and situated on the Baltimore and Washington Boulevard, about six-tenths of a mile from the main road leading to Laurel. After some discussion, Drury, who had for many years been engaged in the real estate and loan business in Washington, agreed to try to raise the money and Walker agreed to pay him a $7,500 bonus if he obtained it. Drury thereupon investigated the property 'and on November 17th, 1920, the Sanitarium Company executed a deed of trust conveying the property to Drury and B. Erlie Talbott, the appellees, to secure the payment of ten negotiable promissory notes of varying amounts, totalling $22,500, made payable to Mildred B. Drury, the wife of D. II. Roland Dlury, or order, six months after date. These notes were endorsed without recourse by Mrs. Drury, and sold at a discount to the following persons, who still hold them: Thomas B. Harney, Martha G. Harney, Evelyn S. MbLachlen, Thomas P. Hickman, John P. Cochran, John H. Drury and Emma Goldman. The actual amount received in cash by D. II. Roland Drury from the purchasers of the notes was $19,365, out of which he retained a commission of $4,375.50 and turned over the balance of $14,989.50, less expenses, to the Maryland Title Insurance Company on December 16th, 1920, with instructions to pay it to the Sanitarium 'Company when the title *215 to the property should be found good, and the deed of trust reported to be a first deed of trust of record. Due to difficulties with the title, the deed of trust was not actually recorded until June 3rd, 1921, six and a half months after it wras executed in November, 1920. Tbe Sanitarium Company expected to issue $40,000 in bonds, from tbe proceeds of which the loan obtained from Drury was to be paid, and this Drury loan was wanted for tbe purpose of enabling the company to complete the purchase of the property aud begin building operations pending the issuance and sale of the bonds. Some work was done on the foundation of the proposed new building and a larg’e amount of material was delivered on the ground, but, upon the failure of the company 1o issue and sell the bonds, the work ceased, the material, whicli had not been paid for, was taken away by tbe material men, and the whole project collapsed. In October, 1921, Drury, who had been unable to get possession of tbe insurance policy which Mr. Walker, president of the company, had told him was in existence, applied to A. LC. Baker & Company, an insurance agency in Washington, for a policy on the residence building on the property. This application was made to Mr. Baker over the telephone, and Drury, who sometimes solicited insurance for1 this agency, and who received a commission on the policies subsequently issued on the risk involved in this case, gave him at that time a description of the property, the name of the owner, and the names of the trustees under the deed of trust. A one-year policy for $10,000 was thereupon issued upon the property by Baker & Company, as agents for the Firemen’s Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, in which policy the Sanitarium Company was described as owner, and a standard mortgage or trustee clause in favor of Drury and Talbott, Trustees, was attached. At the time this policy was issued no foreclosure proceedings had been instituted under the deed of trust, though the notes were unpaid 'and overdue. However, on November 18th, 1921, the trustees docketed suit against the Sanitarium Company and advertised the *216 property for sale under the terms of the deed of trust. Prior to the- date set for the sale a preliminary injunction restraining it was obtained 'at the instance of certain alleged creditors of the company, and the controversy thus begun was not settled until the injunction was dissolved by a decree of this Court, rendered on November 17th, 1922. (See Kinsey v. Drury, 141 Md. 684.)

The $10,000 policy expired in October, 1922, and on September 18th, 1922, Baker & Company sent Drury two $5,000 policies covering the property from October 19th, 1922, to October 19th, 1923, in place of the $10,000 policy. One of these $5,000 policies was issued by the same company which issued the $10,000 policy, while the other was issued by the Boyal Insurance Company, Limited, an English corporation, the appellant in this case. No additional information was given Baker & Company by Drury at the time these policies were issued, and, like the original $10,000 policy, they were each issued to the Sanitarium Company as owner, with a standard mortgage clause in favor of the appellees attached.

After this Court dissolved the above mentioned injunction, the property was again advertised, 'and was actually sold on December 22nd, 1922, to the holders of the notes under the deed of trust, for the sum of $15,000, which sum was about $10,000 less than the total amount due for principal, interest and taxes under the deed of trust. Drury and Talbott, the trustees, reported this sale to the Court ou December 27th, 1922, setting out in the report that tho property had been sold to Thomas B. Harney, Martha G-. Harney, Evelyn S. McLachlen, John B. Cochran, Thomas P. Hickman, John H. Drury and Emma Goldman, and also stating that, as these purchasers were the holders of tho notes secured by the deed of trust, the trustees had not required them to make the initial payment of $1,500 called for in the advertisement of sale, the trustees “being satisfactorily assured that said purchasers will duly settle for said property upon the ratification of said sale by this Honorable *217 Court.” The report of sale also stated: “Taxes and insurance adjusted to the day of sale.” On January 30th, 1923, this sale was finally ratified and confirmed, but no deed for the property has yet been given by the trustees to the purchasers, nor have the purchasers paid anything on the purchase price. The testimony shows that the trustees intended to accept the notes held by the purchasers as part payment on the purchase price, collecting in cash only such sum as would be needed to pay the costs of the case, and it 'also appears that all the purchasers were solvent and able to pay their full share of the purchase price without regard to the notes held by them.

Shortly after the sale of the property, the same parties who had sought to enjoin the sale had themselves made parties to the foreclosure suit, and filed claims against the proceeds of the sale, but these claims were disallowed in the lower court, and this decision of the lower court was affirmed by this Court on June 1st, 1924. (See Kinsey v. Drury, 146 Md. 227.)

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 635, 150 Md. 211, 45 A.L.R. 582, 1926 Md. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-insur-co-v-drury-md-1926.