Slagle v. Crise

99 A. 666, 129 Md. 443, 1916 Md. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 13, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 99 A. 666 (Slagle v. Crise) 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
Slagle v. Crise, 99 A. 666, 129 Md. 443, 1916 Md. LEXIS 165 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

.delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee, Clarence L. Crise, on the 4th day of October, 1911, borrowed of the appellant, Charles W. Slagle, the sum of five thousand dollars to be repaid with interest on the 11th day of October, 191Y, and to secure the payment of said sum and interest he executed and delivered to Slagle a mortgage conveying unto him the property therein mentioned and described,

This property had been previously conveyed on October 11th, 190Y, to the Mercantile Trust' and Deposit Company of Baltimore City to be held by it in trust until October 11th, 191Y, when it is to revert to the appellee, if then living, but if dead at such time, to pass to those mentioned in the deed of conveyance. Because of the possibility of the appellee dying before the time mentioned in the deed for the property to revert to him, it was agreed as a further security for the payment of the money so borrowed that Crise should insure his life for the sum of five thousand dollars and assign the policy to Slagle. In pursuance of such agreement the following clause was inserted in the mortgage:

“The said Clarence L. Crise has also delivered to the said Charles W. Slagle in addition to this mortgage, for the purpose of securing the payment of said principal note and said interest notes a policy of insurance on the life of the said Clarence L. Crise for the *445 Finn of five thousand dollars, issued hy the Travelers’ Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, the annual premium on which the said Clarence L. Orise covenants and agrees to pa.y when and as it falls due, until said indebtedness and interest thereon is fully paid.”

The mortgage also contains the assent of the mortgagor to the passage of a decree, under the local Statute of Baltimore City, for the sale of the mortgaged property in case of default in any of the covenants of the mortgage. The appellant Slagle on April 27th, 1916, filed his petition upon which a decree was passed on the same day for- the sale of said property.

Upon the passage of the decree the trustee named therein advertised the mortgaged property for sale and thereupon the appellee Orise filed his hill in Circuit Court No. 2 of B-altimore City asking among other things that Slagle and the trustee be enjoined and restrained from selling or offering for sale the property mentioned and described in the mortgage or any part of it.

The facts alleged in his bill are substantially as follows: The appellee, Crise, on the day of the execution and delivery of the mortgage also executed and delivered unto Slagle the following assignmnt:

“Tor the purpose of securing the prompt payment of the annual premium due and to fall due on a certain policy of life insurance on my life, referred to in a mortgage of this date, delivered to Charles W. Slagle hy me to secure a loan of five thousand dollars ($5,000.00); and for the further purpose of securing the prompt payment of the interest on the said loan of $5,000.00 this day made to mo hy Charles W. Slagle, and secured by mortgage of even date herewith, I do hereby assign to said Charles W. Slagle $742.20 of my annual income, payable to me hy the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company of Baltimore, and I hereby authorize said Company to pay the same to said extent, *446 to the said Charles W. Slagle, as the same falls due and becomes payable.”

On the day of the execution and delivery of the aforegoing assignment Slagle wrote to the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company as follows:

“I wish to give you notice that, for the purpose of securing a loan of $5,000.00 on this day made to him by me, and the interest thereon to accrue, by mortgage dated the 4th day of October, 1911, Clarence L. Crise has granted and conveyed to me all his interest derived under the will of his father, the late John L. Crise, and also all of his interest in and to that property mentioned and referred to in a deed of trust from him * * * to your Company, bearing date of October 11th, 1907, and now recorded, etc. Mr. Crise has also assigned to me $742.20 per annum of his income, which has heretofore been paid by you to him. This is for the purpose of securing the premium on a certain policy of insurance on the life of the said Clarence L. Crise, in my favor as additional security, and also the interest due annually on said loan of $5,-000.00.
“I will be obliged to you if you will take note of this fact and hereafter will, to the extent of $742.20, pay the income to me instead of to the said Clarence L. Crise.”

The Trust Company thereafter regularly deducted from the income of Crise an amount sufficient to meet the payments of said interest and life insurance premium and placed the same to the credit of Slagle, and the interest has always been promptly paid to Slagle by the Trust Company when and as it became due and payable.

The premium on the policy falling due on October 11th, 1912, was paid by check drawn by the Trust Company to the order of Slagle and by him endorsed1 to the Insurance Company.

*447 Thereafter, on December 3rd, 1912, Orise, to avoid the great expenso of an endowment policy, obtained the consent of Slagle to substitute therefor a straight life insurance policy, upon which the premium for a like amount of insurance was only $89.64; and the old policy was surrendered and the new one issued and assigned to Slagle, and on the 17th day of December, 1912, Slagle again wrote to the Trust Company, saying:

“Ueferring to the order heretofore filed with your Company by Clarence L. Crise under date of October 4-th, 1911, by which he assigned to me $742.20 out of the annual income payable to him by your Company for the purpose of securing payment of the annual premium due upon a policy of life insurance referred to in said order, and the interest upon the mortgage of $5,000.00 held by me; I beg to advise yon that the insurance policy which was given with said mortgage has been exchanged for an insurance policy in the Travelers’ Insurance Company, upon which the annual premium amounts to the sum of $89.60 only; so that hereafter the amount of the annual interest and insurance premium referred to in said order will be the sum of $389.60 instead of the sum of $742.20, as mentioned in said order.”

The first premium on the new policy was paid March 6th, 1913, by check of the Trust Company payable to the order of Slagle and by him endorsed to the Insurance Company. This was the last premium paid upon the policy, and thereafter it lapsed and became void. This fact, the bill alleges, was not known to Crise until communicated to him by Slagle. Crise thereafter applied for reinstatement, and for new insurance, hut was refused both because of the fact that a short while before he had suffered from a stroke of paralysis, and because of this physical impairment he has since-been unable to obtain any insurance upon his life.

The hill alleges that the “trustee named in said decree has not only threatened to advertise said property for sale *448 under said decree, alleging that scdd Clarence L.

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Related

Dungan v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance
46 Md. 469 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1877)

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 666, 129 Md. 443, 1916 Md. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slagle-v-crise-md-1916.