Stallings v. Annapolis Savings Institution

172 A. 283, 167 Md. 4, 1934 Md. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 26, 1934
Docket[No. 6, April Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 A. 283 (Stallings v. Annapolis Savings Institution) 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
Stallings v. Annapolis Savings Institution, 172 A. 283, 167 Md. 4, 1934 Md. LEXIS 78 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants, Elmer S. Stallings and Lyda R. Stallings, his wife, were in the year 1931 seised and possessed of a number of tracts of land lying and being in Anne Arundel County, upon which they, on the 6th day of March of that year, executed a mortgage to the Annapolis Savings Institution, a body corporate, to secure *6 the repayment of a loan of $30,000, made to them by said institution. The mortgagors defaultéd in the payment of the mortgage indebtedness, and the property was, under the mortgage, advertised to be sold upon the premises on the 21st day of June, 1932. Upon that day, James M. Munroe, the attorney named in the mortgage, sold five of the lots for $26,000 unto one Pierce J. Flanagan, he being, at that price, the highest bidder therefor. The sale of these lots was reported to, and finally ratified and confirmed by, the court. In the report of sales it is shown that lot No. 4, consisting of 7.92 acres of land, at the request of the mortgagors was not sold, in order that they might pay the balance due on the mortgage, after applying the proceeds of the sale of the lots sold to the payment of the mortgage debt, taxes, costs, and expenses of sale.

By an account stated, it is shown that the amount owing on the mortgage debt and interest, after applying thereto the proceeds of sale of the said five lots, less expenses, taxes, and costs of sale, was $7,271.89. This amount was. not paid, and lot No. 4 was again advertised to be sold, this time at the courthouse door in Annapolis, on October 25th, 1932. On this occasion, as alleged in the attorney’s second report of sale, the property was offered “in the presence of a large concourse of people,” and the highest bid received therefor was $26,000, made by one Byer, who stated, after the other bidders had dispersed, that he had bought the property for one Logisky of Brooklyn, New York, “who would be on hand at twelve o’clock to make the necessary arrangements to pay for the property.” Mr. Munroe, the attorney, “waited until two o’clock in the afternoon” of that day, but “no Mr. Logisky appeared to consummate the sale. The bidder, Byer, professed to be very indignant at the failure of his principal to appear * * * as promised, and said that he would go immediately to Baltimore and take up the matter and produce the purchaser in a day or two.” Mr. Munroe “proceeded at once to write to Mr. Logisky according to the name and address given to him, informing him of the state of the facts, but has never received any *7 answer to said letter, although the same was sent in an envelope with the address of the sender duly printed thereon.”

After this unsuccessful attempt to sell the property, it was again advertised to be sold at the courthouse door in Annapolis, on November 29th, 1932, at 11 o’clock a. m. When offered on that day, the highest bid received therefor, $10,200, was made by Pierce J. Flanagan, to whom the property was sold at that sum, and reported to the court.

To the ratification of this sale, the mortgagors filed exceptions on the grounds (1) that the price offered therefor was grossly inadequate; (2) that the property was improperly advertised as a “peremptory” sale, which was not authorized by the provisions of the mortgage; (3) that several persons, presumably the purchaser, and his father and brother, under the pretense “that they were interested only in helping the mortgagors in their efforts to repurchase their home, * * * combined to bid upon the property and to obtain the same at a price much less than one-half its real value for themselves or for some one of them”; (4) “that at the attempted sale of this property on the 25th day of October, 1932, this same combination of persons bid $19,000.00 for this identical property, while at the peremptory sale of November 29th, 1932, the same persons purchased the same property for Ten Thousand and Two hundred dollars ($10,200). An answer was filed to the exceptions, and, after a hearing thereon, the court passed the order finally ratifying and confirming the sale so made. It is from that order this appeal was taken.

It was said in Johnson v. Dorsey, 7 Gill, 294: “Inadequacy of price * * * standing alone * * * is insufficient to authorize an interference with the sale, unless * * * it is so inordinate, as to indicate some mistake or unfairness in the sale, for which the purchaser is responsible, or misconduct or fraud in the trustee, to whom the management of the sale has been committed.” This statement of the law has been consistently followed by this *8 court in its many decisions since rendered. Warfield v. Ross, 38 Md. 92; Gould v. Chappell, 42 Md. 473; Bank of Commerce v. Lanahan, 45 Md. 412; Loeber v. Eckes, 55 Md. 3; Dircks v. Logsdon, 59 Md. 178; House v. Walker, 4 Md. Ch. 63; Garritee v. Popplein, 73 Md. 326, 20 A. 1070; Chilton v. Brooks, 69 Md. 584, 16 A. 273; Boyd v. Smith, 127 Md. 364, 96 A. 526; Shirk v. Soper, 144 Md. 276, 124 A. 911; Hunter v. Highland Land Co., 123 Md. 644, 91 A. 697.

The evidence offered as to the value of the property differs widely, as in most of these cases. Stallings testified that he gave $6,000 for the land and expended $15,-000 in the erection of the dwelling house and other buildings thereon, including the garage. The evidence is that the buildings erected by Stallings in 1929 and 1930 could have been built at the time of the sale for one-half of that amount, $7,500. It was testified by others that the actual value of the property at the time of the sale was so much as $20,000. But all of those testifying stated that there was little or no sale for property at that time. This being so, it was difficult, if not impossible, to find sale for it at its value, and we do not think that the sale of this property, at the amount returned by the attorney named in the mortgage, was so grossly inadequate, or inordinate, as to warrant us in holding that it indicated some mistake or unfairness in the sale for which the purchaser was responsible, or misconduct or fraud in the attorney to whom the management of the sale had been committed.

It therefore follows that the court should not interfere in the sale so made, unless, in addition thereto, facts and circumstances be shown which are calculated to cast a doubt or suspicion upon the correctness of the sale. As was said in Johnson v. Dorsey, supra: “Inadequacy of price is to be regarded as a strong auxiliary argument, in combination with circumstances calculated to cast doubt or suspicion upon the correctness of a sale.” To justify the court in setting aside this sale, something must be found in the acts or omissions of the attorney *9 making sale of the property, or the purchaser of it at such sale, or in some fact or circumstance connected therewith, causing the property to sell for less than it would have otherwise sold for. The record does not, we think, disclose any acts or omissions of the parties named, or any facts or circumstances, having the effect mentioned.

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172 A. 283, 167 Md. 4, 1934 Md. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stallings-v-annapolis-savings-institution-md-1934.