Schneider v. Martens

96 A. 673, 127 Md. 547, 1916 Md. LEXIS 20
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 96 A. 673 (Schneider v. Martens) 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
Schneider v. Martens, 96 A. 673, 127 Md. 547, 1916 Md. LEXIS 20 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case alleges that the plaintiff, Dora Martens, in July, 1912, entered into an oral contract with the defendants, William Schneider and Wilhelmina Schneider, his wife, whereby she agreed to sell and convey to the defendants the leasehold property known as No. 3922 Eastern ave *548 ivue, Highlandtown, Baltimore County, Maryland, of which she was the owner, and the defendants agreed to pay her therefor the sum of $1,500.00; that in pursuance of the contract the plaintiff, on the 8th of August, 1912, executed and delivered to the defendants a deed for the property which was duly recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore County; that while the deed recites that the consideration was paid, no consideration was in fact paid, and that the recital was inserted in the deed by the attorney who prepared it with the understanding of the attorney and the plaintiff and defendants that the defendants would pay the consideration of $1,500.00 upon the recording of the deed, but that the defendants refused to pay any part of the consideration mentioned when the deed was recorded, and continue to refuse to pay the same or any part thereof. The bill then prays for a decree declaring the unpaid purchase money to be a vendor’s lien upon the property; for a sale of the property for the purpose of paying the lien, and for general relief.

The defendants answered the bill and allege that in August, 1911, the plaintiff “habitually” importuned them to move into and take possession of the property referred to, but that they, not earing to break up their own home, refused to accede to such importunities; that they finally yielded to the request of the plaintiff, and in the month of July, 1911, the plaintiff agreed with them that if they would tahe the property they could repair and improve the same so as to make it a thoroughly modern dwelling, and pay the plaintiff the difference between the cost of the improvements and the sum of $1,500.00; -that pursuant to said agreement, they, the defendants, expended in improvements on the property the sum of $1,035.85, and also paid the plaintiff the sum of $100.00; that the deed for the property, which was not execwted until August, 1912, was prepared at the instance of the plaintiff and by her attorney; that they have always been ready and willing to pay the amount they owe the plaintiff, and that they are willing to reconvey the property to the *549 plaintiff upon payment by her of the amount expended by them on the property and other amounts due them; that they are also willing to have the property sold, but insist that they be reimbursed for all money expended by them or that may be due them.

The appeal is from a decree of the lower Court declaring the unpaid purchase money to the amount of $1,500.00 to be a vendor’s lien upon the property mentioned, and ordering the property to be sold to satisfy the lien unless the amount thereof was paid within thirty days from the date of the decree.

The plaintiff testified that the defendants are her daughter and her son-in-law. She- purchased the property No. 3933 Eastern avenue, in July, ,1911, and paid $2,000.00 for it. It was a two-story brick building, with a two-story frame back building, and was in good condition at the time she purchased it. In the summer of 1911 she had a conversation with her daughter, Mrs. Schneider, which resulted in an agreement on her part to sell the property to her daughter for $1,500.00. Some time before Christmas, 1911, Mrs. Schneider asked the plaintiff if she could have possession of the property, saying that she would pay for it as soon as she sold her property on Foster avenue, and that she was accordingly allowed to take possession of it in 1911. The deed to the defendants was executed in August, 1912, and recorded on the 16th of the same month, and at the time of the execution of the deed Mrs. Schneider promised to pay the $1,500.00 as soon as the deed was recorded. Plaintiff asked her a number of times to pay for the property, and she always replied that she had not gotten the money yet, and that finally she told the plaintiff she would not pay her a cent. The improvements were made after Mrs. Schneider took possession of the property. The plaintiff never authorized the improvements, and Mrs. Schneider never made any claim to the plaintiff for any' allowance for repairs or improvements, and the plaintiff never heard of such a claim *550 until after this suit was brought. The plaintiff has never received any part of the purchase money. On one occasion, long after the improvements were made, Mrs. Schneider, who owed the plaintiff’s son Ered for the milk business she had purchased from him, came to the plaintiff’s house with $1,000.00 in bank notes and asked her and her son which one she should pay the $1,000.00 to, and that her son replied: “Give it to me first; I need it bad, and mamma waits a lib tie.” On cross-examination the plaintiff stated that the reason she sold Mrs. Schneider for $1,500.00 a property for which she had just paid $2,000.00, was that she was her daughter.

Catherine Whaley, who stated that she used to work for Mrs. Schneider and frequently visited her, testified that during the summer of 1913 she asked Mrs. Schneider to lend her some money, and that she replied that she could not do it because she still owed her mother the $1,500.00 for the house, and that Mrs. Schneider never said anything to her about her mother agreeing to pay for the improvements on the property.

Ered Martens, a brother of Mrs. Schneider, testified that when she took possession of the property in 1911 it was in good condition. He sold Mr. and Mrs. Schneider his milk business, and on the night he made the sale to them, in 1912, she said to him: “Fred, you know I owe mamma $1,500.00 for the house No. 3922 Eastern avenue, and now I am buying the business I have not got enough money to pay you just now; will you wait xintil we malee a little money, as you know the Foster avenue house isn’t sold?” And he told her he “would wait a little while.” He further testified that the defendant made some money, and that one morning his sister came to his mother’s house, where he lived, and said to him and his mother: “Who shall I pay first ?” and that he replied she should pay him first, as his mother could wait a while. In February, 1913, his sister came over to his mother’s house with $1,000.00 and asked who she should give it to, *551 and that he told her to give it to him. He never heard of any claim for an allowance for the improvements made on the properly until after this suit was brought. After Mrs. Schneider “straightened up with” him for the milk business, in 1914, they “had a fuss” and he told her she ought to pay her mother for the house, and she then, for the first time, said she didn’t owe her a cent and stated as the reason for not paying her mother that she had worked for her.

John W. Prinz, Esq., the attorney who prepared the deed for the property, testified that in July, 1912, Mr. Schneider came to him and told him that Mrs. Martens, the plaintiff, desired to see him in reference to the transfer of the property, No. 3922 Eastern avenue. He did not know the plaintiff but knew Mr. Schneider intimately and had represented him in legal matters. He went to the plaintiff’s house with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 673, 127 Md. 547, 1916 Md. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-martens-md-1916.