Stanhope v. Dodge

52 Md. 483, 1879 Md. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 17, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 52 Md. 483 (Stanhope v. Dodge) 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
Stanhope v. Dodge, 52 Md. 483, 1879 Md. LEXIS 127 (Md. 1879).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William Dodge, of Washington County, on the tenth day of February, 1877, executed a deed conveying all his property to trustees, with power to sell the same, and to •apply the .balance of the proceeds, after the payment of costs and commissions, to the payment of all the just debts of the grantor, u without any preference or priority, •except such as may have already been obtained by law.”

Upon the petition of the trustees, the Circuit Court passed á decree by consent, directing them to proceed in the execution of the trust, and to sell the lands described in the deed. A sale thereof having been made and ratified, the cause was referred to the auditor, who stated an ■account distributing-the proceeds of sale amongst certain preferred creditors. To this account, designated in the record as (iAc. No. 2,” the appellants, creditors of William Dodge, excepted, and have appealed from the pro forma order ratifying the accounts.

The fund in Court was derived from the sale of the land conveyed to William Dodge by the deed dated March 20th, 1854, executed by his brothers and sisters, children of Francis Dodge, deceased; in which it was recited that Francis Dodge died seized of several parcels of land, and by his last will devised all his estate to his children in fee simple and in undivided shares ; and that they, “ by mutual consent and agreement, made a fair and equal partition of the real estate of their deceased father, among themselves, and upon such partition the tracts and parcels of land hereinafter mentioned were set apart and allotted to William Dodge, one of the said devisees, and party hereto of the second part, to be held by him, his heirs and [488]*488assigns in severalty, and his portion of the said real estate; hut in order to produce equal ity among the said distributors in the division of the said estate, charged loith the payment of the following sums of money to the several, persons, hereinafter named, that is to say, the sum of six thousand dollars to the trustees of Mary B. Marbury, the sum of three thousand dollars to the trustees of Emily Dodge, the sum of five thousand four hundred dollars to-the trustees of Adeline Lauman,” &c.

Said Mary B., Emily and Adeline are children of Francis Dodge, and parties to the deed.

As a further security for the payment of the several, sums of money named in the deed, with interest thereon semi-annually, William Dodge, on the first day of January 1854, executed his three several bonds in favor of Francis, Robert P. and Allen Dodge, as trustees of the said Mary B., Emily and Adeline; and afterwards on the 12th day of July 1854, executed a deed of trust, whereby he conveyed to the same trustees the same* lands to secure the payment of the same several sums of money and interest thereon.

The interest was paid by William Dodge down to July 1st 1869; but the whole principal, and interest from the last mentioned date, remain unpaid, and constitute claims Nos. 1, 2 and 3 allowed in the auditor’s account as preferred claims. The exceptions to their allowance are,

1st. That the bonds are barred by the Statute of Limitations.

2nd. That the deed of July 12th 1854 is to be oonstrued as a mortgage, and that the same is barred by limitation, being of more than twenty years standing, and further that it is defective for the want of an affidavit to the consideration as required by the Code, Art. 24, sec. 29.

These several exceptions are not material to be considered, because by the deed of March 20th, 1854, the several sums of money payable to the trustees of Mrs. Marbury,. [489]*489Emily Dodge and Mrs. Lauman, were expressly charged upon the land. This charge is not in the nature of a vendor’s lien resting only upon the interest or share conveyed hy the grantors respectively, hut hy the terms of the deed it is charged upon the whole estate therein described, and which was held by William Dodge subject to the charge thereby created.

In Johnson vs. Johnson, 40 Md., 189, the charge created by implication was supported in equity, here it was created by the express words of the deed. There is no ground for asserting that it has been waived or relinquished; no agreement to that effect has been proved. The bonds and deed of trust, even if the latter was in all respects valid in law, upon which we express no opinion, were mere collateral securities for the same debts; and would not have the effect of impairing the charge created by the deed. Taking another security of the same grade does not operate as a waiver or extinguishment of a valid subsisting lien. Polk vs. Reynolds, 81 Md., 111; Brengle vs. Bushey, 40 Md., 141.

It follows that claims Nos. 1, 2 and 3 were properly allowed as preferred liens on the fund. Claims Nos. 4, 5, 6 and 7 are next to be considered; these were allowed as preferred claims, and paid in full out of the fund. They are upon promissory notes of William Dodge, dated January 24th 1863, secured hy deed of trust made February 14th 1863, by William Dodge and wife to Alexander and Allen Dodge, trustees, and recorded August 25th 1869. The land thereby conveyed is the same, from the sale of which the fund distributed in the auditor’s account was derived.

The deed was executed in Washington County, District of Columbia, and acknowledged in due form before Henry Reaver, a Commissioner for the State of Maryland. Is the instrument a mortgage within the provisions of the Code ?

[490]*490It is very similar in its provisions to the deed which was under consideration in Charles vs. Clagett, 3 Md., 82, and which was held not to he a mortgage within the meaning of the Act of 1846 (Code, Art. 24, sec. 29.) That decision, though made hy a divided Court has since been followed and approved in Carson’s Adm’r vs. Phelps, 40 Md., 96; Snowden vs. Pitcher & Wilson, 45 Md., 260; Bank of Commerce vs. Lanahan, 45 Md., 396, and in The Annapolis and Elkridge Railroad Co. vs. Harrison and Brown, 50 Md., 490. The result of those decisions is that the provisions of the Code relating to the execution and recording of mortgages, are to he construed as referring to deeds of mortgage, technically such, and do not apply to-deeds of trust such as the deed of February 14th 1863. This being so, the only objection to this instrument is that it was not recorded within six months from its date. There is no evidence that it was withheld from record with any fraudulent intent, and under Art. 24, sec. 19, of the Code, not being a mortgage, it might be recorded at any time, and when recorded it has “ as against the grantor, his heirs or executors, and against all purchasers with notice of such deed or conveyance, and against all creditors of such grantor and his heirs, who shall become so after the recording of such .deed or conveyance, the same validity and effect as if recorded within the time prescribed.”

■The saving clause in sec. 19, in favor of creditors, is not to be construed as applicable only to creditors who may have acquired liens upon the land, as contended by the appellees; but embraces all creditors who come within the terms of the saving clause.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Md. 483, 1879 Md. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanhope-v-dodge-md-1879.