Stockett v. Taylor

3 Md. Ch. 537
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Md. Ch. 537 (Stockett v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockett v. Taylor, 3 Md. Ch. 537 (Md. Ct. App. 1849).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

The pleadings in this- case are voluminous, and present a [541]*541variety of questions; but upon the argument the complainant’s counsel narrowed the questions down, so as to limit the inquiry to the proper application of the sum of §1,897 22, received by the defendant, Taylor, from Robert Sinclair, on the 1st of October, 1845, in discharge of the mortgage of the 28th of August, 1848, executed by Sinclair and wife to Taylor, to secure the payment of §1,607 81, which the mortgage recites was due from the mortgagor to Gustavus R. Barber, and by him assigned and transferred to the defendant, Taylor.

The bill alleges that Taylor, in consideration of this assignment, agreed to assume upon himself the payment of a note discounted and held by the Farmers’ Bank of Maryland, the money so assigned being, as is alleged, the proceeds of land pledged and bound for tho payment of said note.

This agreement Taylor, in his answer denies, and avers, on the contrary, that he received the money from Sinclair in payment of debts due from Barber to him at the date of the mortgage, amounting to the sum of $1,550, and that he has long since paid to Barber the difference between the sum paid by Sinclair and the debt of Barber to him.

There is certainly no proof in the case of a positive nature establishing tho agreement, as stated in the bill, though there are circumstances from which it is difficult to escape the conclusion that some such understanding did exist. That Welch and Whittington, who were endorsers upon the note held by the Bank, and to whom David Ridgely, the assignee of the mortgagee, Ann Ridgely, had assigned the mortgage for their indemnity as such endorsers, should have permitted or consented to any other appropriation of the money, is in the highest degree improbable.

But conceding that tho case is destitute of direct evidence of such an agreement, and that the circumstances are not strong-enough to establish it in the face of the denial in the answer, still it appears to me to be very clear, upon principle and authority, that tho money should be so applied.

The mortgaged premises were unquestionably and confessedly bound for this debt to the Bank, the mortgage having been as[542]*542signed to Welch and Whittington, the endorsers of David Ridgely, for their indemnity as such.

Taylor says in his answer, that he was induced to take this debt upon himself, because he ascertained that Welch and Whittington were about to sell the town property to pay the Bank and exonerate themselves; and it appears that he did give his note to the Bank, with Welch and Whittington as endorsers. It is true the sale by the sheriff to Sheckell, and by Sheckell to Sinclair, preceded this assumption of the Bank debt by Taylor; but the money due from Sinclair to Barber had not then been paid to Taylor, his assignee. It still remained to be paid; and the mortgage from Sinclair to Taylor, dated 28th August, 1843, recites, that Sinclair was indebted to Barber in the sum of $1,607 81, payable on the 1st of October, 1845, for that part of the purchase-money due the said Barber, for the tract or parcel of land sold by him and his wife to Sheckell, and by the latter to Sinclair.” This land thus sold by Barber to Sheckell, and by the latter to Sinclair, formed a .part of the property previously mortgaged by Barber to Mrs. Ann Ridgely. It was sold to satisfy the purchase-money due from Barber to his vendors, and by an arrangement between him and Sheckell, the said sum of $1,607 81, being part of the price agreed to be paid by Sinclair upon his purchase from Sheckell, was to be paid to Barber. This money then, in the hands of Barber, being a portion of the proceeds of the mortgaged estate, was equally bound by his mortgage with the land itself. When he mortgaged this property to Ann Ridgely, it was bound by the prior lien of the vendors, and after the payment of that prior lien, the surplus proceeds of the sale represented the mortgagor’s interest in the land mortgaged, and was subject to the mortgage ; the equitable principle being, that under such circumstances the mortgage becomes a lien upon the fund, instead of the interest of the mortgagor in the land. According to the decision of the Chancellor, in Astor vs. Miller, 2 Paige, 68, the rights of the mortgagees are not altered by turning the estate into money, for the Court directs the money to be applied according to the rights of redemption. The same prin[543]*543ciple was asserted and enforced by the Court in the case of Bartlett vs. Gale, 4 Paige, 504, in which it was held, that the lien of the mortgage attached upon the surplus money in the hands of the sheriff, who sold under an elder judgment, and that he could not pay such surplus to the mortgagor.

If, to be sure, Taylor had received the money from Barber, for a valuable consideration paid him, without notice that it was a part of the purchase-money of the mortgage premises, the ease might be subject to different considerations; but the very deed under which he claimed, advertised him of the fact that the money was due Barber, as part of the purchase-money of the land sold by him to Sheckell,’ and by the latter to Sinclair and the registry of the deeds and thejadmissions of the answer are sufficient to bring homo to him, in fact or constructively, knowledge that this land was included in the mortgage, and had been pledged for the payment of the debt to the Bank. Certainly, if the defendant Taylor had not actual knowledge of these circumstances, (he had information enough to put him on inquiry, and that is sufficient notice in equity. Magruder vs. Peter, 11 G. & J., 243. He knew that in fact, or he is to be treated as knowing, that this land was mortgaged by Barber to Ann Ridgely for $2,000 ; that the mortgage, with a limited reservation, was assigned by Ann Ridgely to David Ridgely, and by the latter ( to Welch and Whittington, to secure them as his endorsers in Bank to the same amount, and that this surplus remained to Barber, the mortgagor, after paying prior incumbrances upon the land. Knowing all this, the mortgage unquestionably fastened upon the money in his hands and bound it as effectually and firmly as it did in the hands of Barber his,assignor. His subsequent conduct is strong to show that he so regarded it. He took the mortgage from Sinclair on the 28th of August, 1843, to secure the payment of this money; and on the 9th of January following, he actually did assume the debt to the Bank, by substituting his note for that of Ridgely, endorsed by Welch and Whittington, the same persons becoming his endorsers. It is true that Taylor in his answer says (and it also appears by [544]*544copies), that he took an assignment of the judgments which the Bank had recovered against Welch and Whittington, as the-endorsers upon the note of Ridgely; and he alleges that he looks to these parties primarily to secure him against his responsibility to the Bank, though the mortgage may ultimately be responsible to him for the debt.

It does appear that this judgment was so assigned to Taylor by the Bank, but it certainly does not appear that Welch and Whittington had agreed, as between Taylor and themselves, to become primarily bound for this debt; and such an agreement is so improbable, not to say irrational, that it is impossible to presume it.

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Related

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142 A. 529 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Md. Ch. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockett-v-taylor-mdch-1849.