Tarr v. Veasey

93 A. 428, 125 Md. 199, 1915 Md. LEXIS 198
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 26, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 93 A. 428 (Tarr v. Veasey) 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
Tarr v. Veasey, 93 A. 428, 125 Md. 199, 1915 Md. LEXIS 198 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

An agreement in writing under seal, dated “this-day of Eovember,” 1910, between Oliver D. Collins and William O. Tarr, of Worcester County, provided for the sale of a tract of six hundred and forty acres of land in that county by Mr. Collins to Mr. Tarr in consideration of the sum of eleven thousand dollars. It was recited that the property sold under the agreement had been purchased by Mr. *200 Collins on or about November 15, 1910, from the L. J. Houston Company. The transfer of the property to Mr. Tarr was agreed to be made on or before December 15, 1910, and the purchaser covenanted that simultaneously with the conveyance he would execute and deliver to the vendor a mortgage for the full amount of the purchase money based upon a bill obligatory payable on demand. It was further stipulated that Mr. Tarr should present for discount to the First National Sank of Snow Hill his demand note for $10,-000.00, which Mr. Collins agreed to endorse and the proceeds of which were to be placed to his credit. The note was stated to be for the same indebtedness to be represented by the mortgage. The agreement then provided: “That in the event of a sale of said property that the said William C. Tarr shall be entitled to the proceeds thereof up to' thirteen thousand dollars plus interest on eleven thousand dollars from the date of the execution of the mortgage aforesaid to the date from such resale thereof and that the said Collins and Tarr shall divide equally the profits thereover in the proportion of forty per cent, to the said Oliver D. Collins and of sixty per cent, to the said William C. Tarr. The proceeds from such to be applied forthwith to the payment of said note and mortgage. And it is further agreed that no sale of said property shall be made except by the consent of the said Oliver D. Collins.”

According to the terms of the purchase from the L. J. Houston Company, as shown by its receipt to Mr. Collins dated November 15, 1910, acknowledging the payment of $1,000.00 on account of the total price of $10,000.00, the balance of the purchase money was to be paid on or before • December 15, 1910, and the vendee was then to receive a deed for the property. In view, however, of tlie agreement between Collins and Tarr the latter was substituted for the former as the grantee in the deed from the Company when the transaction was consummated. The conveyance was made on December 15, 1910, the remaining $9,000.00 of the purchase money having been paid at that time out of the pro *201 ceeds of the $10,000.00 note to which we have referred, the balance of the fund produced by the discounting of the note being used to pay a note previously discounted by the same maker and endorser to provide the first payment on the purchase. Simultaneously with the delivery of the deed to Mr. Tarr he and his wife executed a mortgage to Mr. Collins which recited that it was given in consideration of the sum of eleven thousand dollars advanced by the mortgagee for the purchase of the property thereinafter described, and represented by the bill obligatory of the mortgagors dated December 15, 1910, and payable on demand with interest from date.

The $10,000.00 note discounted in bank was made payable in four months instead of being drawn as a demand note as originally intended. There were four renewals of the note for like periods and for the same amount. The last renewal matured on April 15, 1912, but about two months prior to that date Mr. Collins, by an instrument under seal, and in consideration of the sum of $1,500.00, assigned to Milton L. Yeasey all his rights and interests under his contract with Mr. Tarr of 1STovember, 1910, and further agreed to assign to Mr. Yeasey the $11,000.00 mortgage for the sum of $10,-291.80 to be paid on or before April 15, 1912. Shortly before the execution of this instrument Mr. Collins had notified Mr. Tarr that he intended to sell out his interest under their contract and, to use his language: “Wash my hands of the whole thing.” The agreement between Collins and Veasey provided that if the former should be obliged by law to accept payment of the mortgage, prior to its transfer to Mr. Veasey, by any one legally entitled to malee such payment and demand its assignment, the sum of $1,000.00 out of the consideration of $1,500.00 paid by Mr. Yeasey should be refunded. Within a few days after the date of this agreement the $10,000.00 note in bank was paid by Mr. Tarr with the proceeds of a new note discounted by the bank upon which he had secured the endorsement of Mr. Emerson Gr. Polk. On the date of this transaction, which relieved Mr. Collins *202 of liability on his endorsement, he assigned to Mr. Polk the mortgage on the property in question to the amount of $10,-000.00 of the principal and some accrued interest. The remaining $1,000.00 of the mortgage debt was transferred to Mr. Yeasey as an equivalent performance of the agreement to repay him that amount upon the contingency stated. This interest in the mortgage was later satisfied by payment to Mr. Yeasey from the mortgagor. Mr. Polk assigned his portion of the. mortgage debt to the Eirst Rational Bank of Snow Hill as collateral security for the note bearing his' endorsement.

On February 20, 1912, Mr. Yeasey filed the pending bill of complaint against Mr. Tarr alleging that the plaintiff, as the assignee of the right of Mr. Collins under the agreement of Rovember, 1910, is the owner of an equitable interest in the tract of land to which it refers, and is entitled to a due proportion of the profits which may be derived from a sale of the property, and charging that the defendant, without the plaintiff’s consent, was preparing to cut down and remove and convert to* his own use the growing timber which covers the greater part of the land and constitutes its principal value. It was averred that such action on the part of the defendant would cause irreparable injury to* the plaintiff, and relief was sought by way of injunction. A preliminary writ was granted in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The defendant filed a demurrer, but before the questions it sought to* raise were heard and determined, the plaintiff, after obtaining leave of Court for the purpose, amended the bill by alleging in substance that the provision in the contract between Collins and Tarr to the effect that no sale of the property should be made except by consent of Collins was of doubtful validity, but that the agreement was entered into not only for the purpose of a resale of the land as a whole, as stated in the original bill, but also with a view to a reasonably early sale, in order that the parties might participate in the profits arising from such resale in the proportions designated, and that the defendant was attempting to treat the *203 land as his exclusive property and was denying to the plaintiff any interest therein, notwithstanding the execution of the assignment under which he claims, and that the defendant was undertaking to remove the timber from the land under the pretense of being the sole owner.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 428, 125 Md. 199, 1915 Md. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarr-v-veasey-md-1915.