Seidewitz v. Sun Life Insurance Co. of America

125 A. 78, 144 Md. 508, 1924 Md. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 17, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 125 A. 78 (Seidewitz v. Sun Life Insurance Co. of America) 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
Seidewitz v. Sun Life Insurance Co. of America, 125 A. 78, 144 Md. 508, 1924 Md. LEXIS 17 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Edwin A. Seidewitz a,nd wife executed a mortgage on the 21st- day of March, 1918, on certain real estate then in Baltimore County (now in Baltimore City) to the Sun Life Insurance Company of America for $12,000, with interest thereon from date, the principal being payable three years after date, and the interest quarterly, as was evidenced by a promissory note for said principal amount, and twelve notes, each for $180, for the interest. A petition was filed hy Amalie Eieger, alleging that she held a second mortgage for $2,500 on the same property, and an order of court was passed making her a party and ordering the- auditor, in stating his account, to allow her such sums as may be available and found to be due to her by reason of that mortgage. The Sun Life Insurance Company of America afterwards filed a petition stating1 that, in addition to its mortgage un *510 der which the sale hereinafter referred to was made, if was the holder of a second mortgage, dated May 1, 1920, from Adele Seidewitz, widow, and others, payable to it, for $2,000, witb interest from November 1, 1921, which principal and interest were in default. That petitioner also filed a waiver of priority of mortgage from Amalie Eieger dated the 20th of April, 1920. An order of court was passed directing the proceeds of the sale remaining in the hands of the attorney, after the payment of the principal and interest due under the first mortgage, to be applied on account of the payment of its claim under the second mortgage. So1 in speaking of the second mortgage we will mean the second one of the Snn Life Insurance Company, and will refer to the one of Amalie Eieger1 as the third.

There was a sale made by Jacob M. Moses, the attorney named in the first mortgage, on the 16th of February, 1922, which, was duly reported to the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. The property included in the mortgage was reported as sold to Christopher R. Wa-ttensch&idt for the sum of $10,-000. Although the order of ratification of the sale does not appear in the record, it was ratified,, and an auditor’s report distributing the proceeds is in the record, leaving, after the distribution to commissions, costs, taxes, etc., the sum of $9,120.40, to be applied to tbe first mortgage. The claim filed in the case by tbe mortgagee of that mortgage was $12,-546.00, making balance due tbe mortgagee $3,425.60. The auditor also made a note on the audit that the papers show due on a second mortgage, Sun Life Insurance Company, including interest, $2,210, and due on the mortgage of Amalie Eieger, with interest not disclosed, $2,500. There is thus an apparent shortage from the sale of $10,190.50 on the three mortgages.

According to an “offer of proof” hereinafter referred to, Edwin A. Seidewitz died on August 24th, 1918, and devised all of his property to his wife for life, or until remarriage, *511 and after her death or remarriage, to his children in equal shares. The second mortgage was executed by Adele Seidewitz, widow, William E. Seidewitz and wife, Edwin AY. Seidewitz, Albert it. Seidewitz and Laurie H. Riggs, trustee appointed by the court for Adele O. Sbidewitz, an infant, to make the mortgage.

Adele O. Seidewitz, by her mother and next friend, hied a petition in this case, asking that she be made a party and be granted leave to except to tbe auditor’s account. An order was passed making her1 a party plaintiff and granting leave to her to except to the auditor’s account, which she did. Amalie E'ieger, who had been made a party, also excepted to the auditor’s account. The report and account of the auditor was finally ratified and confirmed, and the order concludes that “the exceptions be and the same are hereby dismissed, without prejudice to each exceptant, to pursue their respective remedies in a proper forum and in another proceeding.”

The .portion of that order which we have just quoted relates to a matter which we will now consider. The record is very unsatisfactory, and we had to assume some things which ought to have been made clear in the record, and not by reciting them in the briefs — particularly that of the appellee— which are not to be found in the record, to which, of course, we are confined. There is in the record what is called “offer of proof.” It begins by stating that Amalie Eieger and Adele C. Seidewitz, by Adele Seidewitz, her mother and next friend, “upon the hearing of exceptions to the auditor’s account heretofore separately filed by them in said case, offer to prove.” They conclude the offer of proof by stating that:

“It is contended that the Sun Life Insurance Company should be allowed only the difference between $14,756.00 (the amount of its claims) and $8,714.61, the adjusted amount of loss under said policies, this difference amounting to $6,041.39, and that the balance remaining out of $9,120.40 (the net proceeds of *512 sale) after the payment of said $6,041.39 to the Sun Life Insurance Company, which balance amounts to $3,079.01, be audited to the holder of the third mortgage, Mrs. Amalie Eieger, in satisfaction of her mortgage claim.”

Upon that offer of proof, the following order of court was passed:

“The papers in the consolidated cases contained much of the matters hereinabove referred to, and given proper consideration; the matters of oral testimony could not affect the questions to he determined in the ratification of the auditor’s account, for which reasons the tender is refused and the usual exception allowed.”

The order1 of ratification of the audit is dated the same day as the above: order, the 12th day of May, 1923, and follows it in the record. An order of appeal is filed by each of the exceptants “from the order passed on the 12th day of May, 1923, to the Court of Appeals of Maryland.” We assume that the order of appeal wa® intended to be from the order of ratification, although both orders of the Court were dated the 12th of May, 1923. What “the papers in the consolidated cases contained” we are not informed. There are no consolidated cases in this record, and of course this Court has no means of knowing what papers are referred to; or what they contain. ' But regardless of that, the offer of proof contains many things which could not be proved by oral testimony, and it was properly rejected as a whole. Indeed, upon what principle a witness could be permitted to testify as to what a last will and testament, mortgages of record, insurance policies, cr other written or record matters, contain, we are not informed. It would have been so easy to obtain legal evidence of the two> mortgages not in the record, the insurance policies, the suits referred to, and any relevant matter contained in them, that we do< not understand why it *513 was not furnished, if supposed to* he necessary or useful, or why a simpler and more inexpensive way could not have been adopted — for the attorneys to ag¡ree upon those things, which were admitted to be correct, and offer evidence* in proper shape of those matters which could not be agreed upon.

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Bluebook (online)
125 A. 78, 144 Md. 508, 1924 Md. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seidewitz-v-sun-life-insurance-co-of-america-md-1924.