State Ex Rel. Horsey v. Maryland Casualty Co.

163 A. 856, 164 Md. 69, 1933 Md. LEXIS 7
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 18, 1933
Docket[No. 80, October Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 163 A. 856 (State Ex Rel. Horsey v. Maryland Casualty 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
State Ex Rel. Horsey v. Maryland Casualty Co., 163 A. 856, 164 Md. 69, 1933 Md. LEXIS 7 (Md. 1933).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A certain Gordon C. Piley, who was an automobile dealer, was indebted to one Marjorie P. Coffone in the sum of $4,000, and, for the purpose of giving her a lien to secure the payment of this indebtedness, executed and delivered to her, on July 24th, 1925, what was in form a bill of sale, but what was in reality and in equity a mortgage, whereby he bargained and sold certain goods and chattels for a purporting consideration of $4,000. The instrument was duly recorded and assigned for value by the mortgagee to T. Clayton Horsey on January 3rd, 1927. The goods and chattels, which were not sold in the course of business, remained in the possession of Gordon C. Piley until his death intestate in Wicomico County, where he was a resident. Letters of administration upon his estate were granted on February 23rd, 1926, to Horace Piley, a nonresident of the State of Maryland, who, on the same day, qualified and gave a duly approved bond as such administrator, with the Maryland Casualty Company as surety, in the penalty of $1,500.

The administrator assumed the discharge of his duties and took possession of the goods and chattels in the garage, including such as remained of those bargained and sold by the *72 mortgage (bill of sale); and had them inventoried and appraised, pursuant to the warrant of the Orphans’ Court of Wicomico County, and, on March 23rd, 1926, made return of the inventory and appraisement, which embraced certain of these mortgaged goods and chattels. On the last-named day, the administrator filed a petition in the orphans’ court reciting that the personal estate of the intestate consisted of a large number of automobile parts, automobiles, and their accessories, in a building where the intestate had, in his lifetime, carried on a garage, and that it would be for the advantage of all persons interested in the estate that these articles be sold promptly; and praying that the court pass an order authorizing and empowering the sale. The order sought was immediately granted by the court; and a list of the sales accordingly made by the administrator was returned to the court on October 27th, 1927. The aggregate of the sales, which were approved by the orphans’ court and which constituted all the estate of the decedent, was $917.65.

Marjorie R. Coft'one had filed in the Orphans’ Court of Wicomico County her mortgage (bill of sale) claim of $4,000 against the estate of the intestate, and on October 29th, 1926, it had been approved, passed, and placed on the claim docket in the office of the register of wills of Wicomico County as a • claim against the estate. The assignment indorsed on the back of this mortgage (bill of sale) was on January 3rd, 1927.

The administrator stated his first and final administration account, with the approval of the court, on December 13th, 1927. By this account he charged himself with $917.65, the proceeds of sale of the decedent’s goods and chattels, which embraced such of those bargained and sold in the mortgage (bill of sale) as remained at the death of the intestate. After an allowance for costs, expenses, commissions, and other disbursements, there was a residue of $655.97, which was distributed, in the words of the account, “to T. Clayton Horsey, assignee of Marjorie R. Coffone, as a credit upon Bill of Sale dated July 24, 1925, as per order of Orphans’ Court dated Uov. 15, 1927.”

*73 After the account was stated, the assignee demanded of the administrator the payment of $655.97, less a credit of $80 for a chattel received, and the administrator declined to pay. The administrator is a resident of Delaware, and has no property in Maryland or elsewhere. The action at bar was accordingly instituted in the Circuit Court for WicomicoCounty by the State of Maryland, at the instance and for the use of T. Clayton Horsey, against the Maryland Casualty Company, a corporation of the State of Maryland, on the bond of Horace 0. Riley as administrator of Gordon 0. Riley, deceased, with the said company as the surety thereon. The case was tried by the court, sitting as a jury, and the verdict and judgment were for the defendant.

The course which the nisi prius court adopted in granting the motion to exclude the testimony taken subject to exception, and the prayer of the defendant denying the plaintiff’s right to recover, which are the two rulings to- which an exception was taken, was based upon the theory that the assets which had come into the hands of the administrator were not assets of his intestate, because the decedent had bargained and sold them by a duly executed and recorded bill of sale to Marjorie R. Coffone, the assignor of the plaintiff.

It is true that personalty bargained and sold by a decedent, while living, are not assets of his estate for administration by his personal representative. The basis upon which this statement rests is that where a party has parted by sale with both title and interest in property, neither his next of kin nor his personal representatives can acquire therein either title or interest by his death. Dorsey v. Smithson, 6 H. & J. 61; Allein v. Negro Jim Sharp, 7 G. & J. 108; Kinnemon v. Miller, 2 Md. Ch. 407; Salmon v. Clagett, 3 Bland, 172; Biemuller v. Schneider, 62 Md. 558. See valuable note to Chester County Trust Co. v. Pugh, 241 Pa. 124, 88 A. 319, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 211, as reported 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 320 et seq.

The record at bar does not, however, present such a case. It is true that the intestate had executed and delivered a document of title, purporting to be a bill of sale, to one *74 Marjorie E. Coffone, but it- is always permissible to show that the true nature of the transaction was the giving and taking of security for a loan, and that the document was to serve as a mortgage, and that the real relation of the parties was that of mortgagor and mortgagee. Ing v. Brown, 3 Md. Ch. 521; Farrell v. Bean, 10 Md. 217, 228; Laeber v. Langhor, 45 Md. 477, 481; Booth v. Robinson, 55 Md. 419, 449-451; Artz v. Grove, 21 Md. 456, 474; Dudley v. Roberts, 144 Md. 155, 161, 124 A. 883.

It is upon equitable principles that a bill of sale is transformed to an equitable mortgage, and, while the remedy is in equity, the parties or their legal representatives may accept the instrument as an equitable mortgage, and govern and conform the assertion and settlement of their respective rights and liabilities with reference to the actual relation between them of debtor and of creditor, with a pledge of property having been given, and received as security for the debt. See Code, art. 21, sec. 54; Seighman v. Marshall, 17 Md. 550, 570. So, while relief is in equity, when the parties are not in agreement or cannot agree because- of some incapacity, and the orphans’ court has no jurisdiction to decide and declare a bill of sale to be an equitable mortgage, yet the orphans’ court does have jurisdiction to consider and pass an equitable claim against the decedent. Code, art. 93, secs. 85, 88, 99, 102, 103, 105, 118; State v. Reigart, 1 Gill, 1, 28, 29; Stevenson v. Schriver, 9 G. & J.

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Bluebook (online)
163 A. 856, 164 Md. 69, 1933 Md. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-horsey-v-maryland-casualty-co-md-1933.