Spangler v. Dan A. Sprosty Bag Co.

36 A.2d 685, 183 Md. 166, 1944 Md. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 24, 1944
Docket[No. 34, January Term, 1944.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 685 (Spangler v. Dan A. Sprosty Bag Co.) 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
Spangler v. Dan A. Sprosty Bag Co., 36 A.2d 685, 183 Md. 166, 1944 Md. LEXIS 150 (Md. 1944).

Opinion

Bailey, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by Mary Louise Hall Spangler from an order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in equity, overruling her demurrer to the bill of complaint of The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, a body corporate, and Mary Louise Sprosty and John B. Pymer, executors of the last will and testament of Dan A. Sprosty, deceased, filed against her and other defendants.

The bill of complaint alleges that The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company is a Maryland corporation, with its principal office in Baltimore City; that it is engaged in the business of buying, selling, manufacturing and renovating bags; that Dan A. Sprosty was, in his lifetime, the owner of all common stock and a majority of the preferred stock of the corporation and was in full and absolute control of the management of its business; that Sprosty died on July 25, 1943, leaving a will naming Mary Louise Sprosty and John B. Pymer his executors and that letters testamentary have been granted to them by the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City; that Mary Louise Hall Spangler, also known as Louise Hall Spangler and L. H. Spangler, a resident of Baltimore County, was, prior to the death of Sprosty, carried on the payroll of the corporation as its employee and claimed to be its representative in the purchase and sale of bags; that after the death of Sprosty, the officers and directors of the company and the executors caused an examination to be made of the accounts of the company and thereby discovered that large sums of money and property had been fraudulently, illegally, unlawfully and wrongfully diverted from said business and had been delivered to, placed in the possession of or titled in the name of the defendant, Mary Louise Hall Spangler, as a result of her fraudulent, illegal, unlawful and wrongful acts by the *169 exercise of threats, coercion, undue influence, control and dominion over Sprosty, whereby he was compelled and forced to join with her in the diversion of said funds and property; that beginning in the month of April, 1942, and continuing until the month of June, 1943, the total sum of $37,635.15 appears to have been so diverted, but that the plaintiffs believe funds, money and property of the company in a substantially greater amount have been also diverted to her, the exact amount thereof being unknown to them; that early in 1942 Sprosty became sick with a serious heart ailment and that from that time until his death he was almost constantly under the care of physicians and was frequently a patient in various hospitals; that he became mentally unstable and that at times he was not mentally capable of transacting business; that while he was in this condition the defendant, Spangler, exercised a dominant control over him and coerced him into diverting the said funds by threats of legal proceedings and of exposure of his illegal acts; that the only source from which Sprosty could obtain funds for such diversion was from the funds of the company; that the manner in which the said funds were diverted to her was as follows:

“The said Dan A. Sprosty, now deceased, with the full knowledge thereof on the part of the defendant, Mary Louise Hall Spangler, would cause to be prepared, fictitious memorandum invoices, purporting to indicate that one L. H. Spangler of the City or Town of Tyrone, in the State of Pennsylvania, had sold to the plaintiff, the Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, a certain quantity of bags and scrap and thereupon the check of the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, would be issued to the defendant, the said Mary Louise Hall Spangler, but designated as L. H. Spangler in the check, for a portion or all of the amount shown to be due on said fictitious invoices, and where a check was issued for only part of the amount shown to be due, a subsequent check would be issued for the balance. *170 That the merchandise alleged to have been sold to the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, as set forth in said fictitious invoices, was never received by it and no consideration was ever received by the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, for any of the checks drawn purporting to be in payment for merchandise set forth in said fictitious invoices.

“That the defendant, Mary Louise Hall Spangler, was ordered by the said Dan A. Sprosty to be placed on the payroll of the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, at a salary of Two Hundred Eight Dollars and Thirty-four Cents ($208.34) a month, for which payments the defendant, Mary Louise Hall Spangler, also known as Louise Hall Spangler and L. H. Spangler,. performed no services whatsoever for, or for the benefit of the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company.

“That all of the aforegoing payments of funds of the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sjprosty Bag Company, whereby said funds were diverted to and fraudulently, illegally, unlawfully and wrongfully, transferred to the defendant, Mary Louise Hall Spangler, also known as Louise Hall Spangler and L. H. Spangler, which are known to the plaintiffs, were made by checks of the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, drawn on its funds on deposit with the National Marine Bank and said checks were signed by the said Dan A. Sprosty, in his capacity as president of the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company. That the defendant, Mary Louise Hall Spangler, also known as Louise Hall Spangler and L. H. Spangler, when she received said checks, well knew that the funds so diverted and transferred to her were the funds of the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, and said defendant further well knew and had full notice that no consideration passed from her to the plaintiff, The Dan A. Sprosty Bag Company, for any and all of said payments.”

The bill then alleges that the defendant, Spangler, has disposed of and deposited the said funds as fol *171 lows: Purchased the leasehold interest in property-located at 618 Highland Avenue, Towson; purchased the fee simple interest in other property in Baltimore County, known as Lot No. 9, Normal Terrace; deposited a substantial portion thereof in checking and savings accounts with the defendants, Maryland Trust Company, The Towson National Bank, and The Second National Bank of Towson; deposited a substantial portion thereof in safe deposit boxes or vaults, registered in her name only or jointly with others, under the custody.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 685, 183 Md. 166, 1944 Md. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spangler-v-dan-a-sprosty-bag-co-md-1944.