Savings Banks Retirement System v. Clarke

265 A.2d 921, 258 Md. 501, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1024
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 9, 1970
Docket[No. 428, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 265 A.2d 921 (Savings Banks Retirement System v. Clarke) 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
Savings Banks Retirement System v. Clarke, 265 A.2d 921, 258 Md. 501, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1024 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Circuit Court for Prince George’s County (McCullough, J.) sustained the demurrer of the appellees, defendants below, to the Amended Bill of Complaint of the appellants, plaintiffs below, without leave to amend, on two grounds: (1) that the Amended Bill of Complaint showed on its face that the plaintiffs had not relied upon the alleged fraud of the defendants, and (2) that the claim of the plaintiffs was barred by the three-year Statute of Limitations. An appeal from the lower court’s order of December 24, 1969, was duly perfected to this Court.

The Amended Bill of Complaint, filed on October 21, 1969, alleges the following:

1. Arthur H. White and his wife, Mary E. White (two of the plaintiffs below and two of the appellants before us) own certain property in Prince George’s County, described as Lot No. 6 in Block 1 in the subdivision known as “Beacon Heights,” a plat for the subdivision being recorded among the Land Records of Prince George’s County in Plat Book WWW-35, Plat No. 82. The remaining plaintiff and appellant here, The Savings Bank Retirement System is the holder of a deed of trust note on Lot No. 6.

2. On May 26, 1961, the then owner of Lot No. 6 executed a note and deed of trust securing Government Services Savings and Loan Association in the amount of $12,-900, the deed of trust being recorded in the Land Records of Prince George’s County in Liber 2559, folio 353, and conveying Lot No. 6 to the Trustees named in the deed of trust as security for the debt.

3. Thereafter by mesne conveyances Lot No. 6 became vested, subject to the lien of the deed of trust of May 26, 1961, in Rollin Hills Apartments, Inc., a Maryland Corporation (Rollin Hills), the stock of which was substantially, if not entirely owned by Gus Basiliko.

*503 4. Sometime prior to March 17, 1964, Rollin Hills contracted to sell Lot No. 6 to the Whites and on or about April 29, 1964, settlement was held under this contract of sale and the Whites paid the entire purchase price to Rollins Hills.

5. At the time of the settlement on April 29, 1964, the Savings Banks Retirement System (Retirement System), acting through its agent, Bogley, Harting & Hight, Inc., advanced $15,600 to the Whites and received from them a note and deed of trust “purporting to create a first lien upon the aforesaid lot in favor of the Retirement System. The sums so advanced were used by the Whites as purchase money for the said lot, and were intended to discharge any and all prior liens of record affecting the said lot.”

6. The Whites and the Retirement System would not have paid over the purchase money required by the contract with Rollin Hills and would not have authorized the use of the purchase money to discharge any prior liens of record, unless they were assured that a clear title would have passed to the Whites, subject only to the first lien in favor of the Retirement System for $15,600. At the time, or shortly after the settlement on April 29, 1964, the funds advanced by the Whites and the Retirement System were used to discharge the prior lien of the deed of trust recorded in Liber 2559, folio 353, securing Government Services Savings and Loan Association in the amount of $12,606.07, which was the then remaining balance due on that lien.

7. When the proceeds of sale were disbursed, the sum of $1,735.09 was disbursed out of the funds of the Whites and Retirement System to Rollin Hills which sum represented the entire equity of Rollin Hills in the property.

8. On April 7, 1964 (subsequent to the contract of sale) Rollin Hills executed a note to John W. Hebb, one of the defendants and appellants, for $27,500 and also a deed of trust to secure the note, to A. Slater Clarke and Thomas J. Scanlon, Trustees “purporting to create a lien” on Lot No. 6 as well as other property. The deed of trust of April *504 7, 1964, was recorded among the Land Records of Prince George’s County the following day, April 8, 1964, at 1:34 p.m.

9. At the time of the execution and recordation of the deed of trust of April 7, 1964, Rollin Hills and its officers and the Trustees and the noteholder and the subsequent holder of the note all had actual knowledge of the existence of the contract of sale by which Lot No. 6 had been sold to the Whites.

10. The note of April 7, 1964, was endorsed to the defendant, L. Wilbur Engleman, who still holds the note and who'had full knowledge of the facts theretofore set out at the time of the execution of the note.

11. The note of April 7, 1966, was executed without consideration and is void.

12. When the deed of trust and note of April 7, 1964, all of the defendants knew that Rollin Hills had executed a contract of sale for Lot No. 6 “and therefor had no legal right to execute said deed of trust or note.”

13. Rollin Hills at the time of the settlement on April 29, 1964, “with the knowledge and consent of all Defendants herein, falsely and fraudulently represented to the Plaintiffs herein that the title to the aforesaid property was free of liens, while in fact the lien of the aforesaid deed of trust had been recorded among the Land Records of Prince George’s County, Maryland.”

14. The false representation was made for the purpose of defrauding the Plaintiffs by inducing the Retirement System to advance mortgage funds and by inducing the Whites to advance the balance of the purchase price for Lot No. 6.

15. The plaintiffs “and each of them relied on the misrepresentation that the title was free of liens” and “they had a right to rely on such misrepresentation with full belief in its truth and that they would not have advanced the funds by way of the mortgage money or purchase price if such misrepresentation had not been made.”

16. As a result of the fraudulent misrepresentation the plaintiffs, and each of them have been damaged by hav *505 ing paid out their funds in reliance on the security or ownership of Lot No. 6 free of the lien of the deed of trust of April 7,1964.

17. The plaintiffs made diligent and reasonable efforts to discover any possible liens such as the deed of trust of April 7, 1964, “in that they retained the law firm of Conroy & Williams, who are recognized expert title attorneys, to examine the land records of Prince George’s County and to report all liens to Plaintiffs.”

18. Conroy & Williams “failed to report the aforesaid lien to the Plaintiffs and the existence of said lien was not discovered by Plaintiffs until approximately February 1, 1967 following commencement of foreclosure proceedings by Defendants on January 13,1967.”

19. The deed of trust of April 7, 1964, “purporting to create a lien” upon Lot No. 6 was executed “in an attempt to defraud the creditors” of Rollin Hills and “to create a fraudulent lien upon property then owned by” Rollin Hills as well as upon Lot No. 6 “which was not then the property of” Rollin Hills.

20.

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Bluebook (online)
265 A.2d 921, 258 Md. 501, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savings-banks-retirement-system-v-clarke-md-1970.