Taylor v. Gorman

126 A. 897, 146 Md. 207, 1924 Md. LEXIS 129
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 10, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 A. 897 (Taylor v. Gorman) 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
Taylor v. Gorman, 126 A. 897, 146 Md. 207, 1924 Md. LEXIS 129 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 20th of June, 1922, a judgment by confession was entered in the Superior Court of Baltimore City in favor of Carrie M. Gorman against Walter L. Taylor for $16,-166.28, with interest from date and cost of suit, on the following promissory notes of the Flax Products Corporation in favor of the plaintiff and endorsed by Herbert B. Stimpson and the said Walter L. Taylor: one dated December 10th, 1920, for $6,250, payable on demand with interest; one dated December 21st, 1920, for $2,200, payable sixty days after date with interest; one dated January 28th, 1921, for $1,813.34, payable on demand with interest, and one dated *209 December 29th, 1920, for $1,600, payable sixty days after date witli interest. Eaeb of said notes contained an authority to any attorney to' appear and confess judgment for the amount of the note, costs of suit “and attorney’s commission of 25 per cent, for collection,” and each bore the following endorsement: “It is hereby agreed that all the terms and conditions regarding the power of attorney .and confession of judgment appearing on the face of this note shall apply to me as endorser in any suit on said note against me, and I also waive all necessity or notice of protest if note be not paid at maturity. Herbert B. Stimpson (Seal), Walter L. Taylor (Seal).”

On March 22nd, 1923, the defendant filed a motion to strike out said judgment for the following reasons: 1. That he signed the notes upon which the judgment was obtained upon the express condition that Allen B. Gorman and George M. Zingsheim would also sign them as endorsers; that Allen B. Gorman was authorized by the plaintiff to act as hex agent in procuring his endorsement, and that the notes were delivered to him as the agent of the plaintiff “in escrow upon the condition aforesaid”; that the said Allen B. Gorman and George M. Zingsheim did not sign the notes as endorsers, and that Allen B. Gorman delivered them to the plaintiff in violation of said condition, “and that the plaintiff, with due notice through him as her agent, accepted them.”

2. That before' the notes were signed by the defendant said Allen B. Gorman, agent for the plaintiff, advised him that the .Flax Products Corporation “would receive immediately from other sources $3,500” to be used by it in liquidation of certain indebtedness, and that he signed the notes upon condition “that $3,500 be received” by said corporation for the purpose mentioned, and that the notes were given to the plaintiff by said Gorman before the $3,500 was received, and that as to -the defendant the delivery of said notes was unauthorized.

3. That at the time the notes were signed by him it was understood and agreed that the blank form printed in the *210 notes “should not be filled in to authorize the collection of attorneys’ fees or commissions in any amount whatever,” but that after he signed the notes, and without his consent a provision was inserted allowing the payee’s attorney a collection fee of 25 per cent., “of all of which the plaintiff, through her duly authorized agent, Allen B. Gorman, had due notice.”

4. “That as a reason for the delay in filing this motion the defendant says that he resides in West Virginia and was advised that the defenses set forth herein could be presented when suit on said judgment was instituted against him in West Virginia; that a suit at law was so instituted and was not decided until January 26th, 1923, when the District Court for Southern District of West Virginia held therein that the merits of the case upon which the judgment of this Court was based could not be raised in that Court.

In her answer to the motion the plaintiff alleged that the statement of the defendant that he endorsed the notes upon condition that said Gorman and Zingsheim would also become endorsers was not true, and it was not until some time after her demand for payment that she first heard that the defendant intended to set up such a claim; that when she accepted the notes she had no reason to suppose that the endorsement of the defendant was not unconditional; that Allen B. Gor-man was not her agent in procuring said notes, and they were not delivered to him as her agent; that in all transactions relating to the loans made by her fox which the notes were given, Allen B. Gorman, who was the vice-president of the Flax Products Corporation, was acting solely as the officer and agent, and in the interest of said corporation, and was never authorized to act as her agent-; that the notes sued on bearing the endorsement of the defendant and Herbert B. Stimpson were given to her as an inducement for an extension of the time of the loans made to the corporation, and that the defendant, knowing that she granted such extension in consideration of said endorsements, left the plaintiff under the impression that his endorsement was valid until after *211 she demanded payment of the notes. In answer to the second paragraph of the motion, she further denied that Allen B. Gorman acted as her agent in the transaction mentioned, and averred that she had no knowledge of his representing to the defendant that the corporation would receive $3,500, and that if such statement was made by him she was in no way responsible therefor. Answering the fourth paragraph of the motion, she alleged that promptly after the entry of said judgment a transcript of the record was sent to attorneys in West Virginia with instructions to enforce payment as soon as possible; that said attorneys promptly notified the defendant that they had received the judgment and of the instructions given them, and that in less than thirty days from the date of the judgment the defendant replied to said attorneys that he had already instituted proceedings in Baltimore to have the judgment annulled, and that the defendant, therefore, knew that if he had any grounds upon which to attack the judgment, such attack would have to be made promptly in the court in which the judgment was entered. Further -answering said motion, the plaintiff alleged that, at the time the notes were delivered to her, Taylor and Stimp-son were extensively interested in and were officers of said corporation, which controlled a patent which they hoped to dispose of in a short time and in such manner as would yield them a very large profit; that in February, 1921, she demanded payment of her loans, and that, on March 1st, 1921, Stimpson, Mr. Slingluff, her attorney, and Mr. Goldsmith, attorney for 'Charlotte J. Gorman, held a conference for the purpose of ascertaining if payment of her notes and the note of Charlotte J. Gorman could not be secured without litigation; that at said conference Stiinpsou asked that she and Charlotte J. Gorman refrain from litigation, as he was confident that the corporation would be able to pay their notes in full within a short time, and stated "that if suits were instituted his and Taylor’s efforts to dispose of the ’patent would be frustrated; that at said conference Stimpson also stated that if suits were instituted against him or Taylor *212

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pioneer Oil Heat, Inc. v. Brown
16 A.2d 880 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1940)
Commercial Savings Bank, Inc. v. Quall
142 A. 488 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)
Fick v. Towers
136 A. 648 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1927)
Adams v. Gillespie
133 A. 831 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 A. 897, 146 Md. 207, 1924 Md. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-gorman-md-1924.