Thompson v. Williams

60 A. 26, 100 Md. 195, 1905 Md. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 13, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 A. 26 (Thompson v. Williams) 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
Thompson v. Williams, 60 A. 26, 100 Md. 195, 1905 Md. LEXIS 31 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

*196 McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a decree of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. By that decree, dated on the 7th day of July, 1904, a bill of complaint filed by the appellants was dismissed and the relief sought thereunder was denied. The proceedings were instituted to procure the annulment of a deed executed on the 3rd day of August, 1900, by Dr. William G. Williams and his wife, Matilda D. Williams, and which conveyed to their daughter, Carrie G. Williams, about four hundred and sixty acres of land. The grantors and the grantee are the defendants in the suit. It was alleged that the deed was fraudulent and void as against the complaining creditor and that the consideration was pretended and not real. It appears that in February, 1884, the above-named grantors being indebted to William H. Thompson in the sum of two thousand dollars secured the payment thereof by mortgage upon two hundred and seventy-five acres of land other than that conveyed to their daughter; and that after the death of Thompson, the mortgagee, the executrices of his estate, sold the mortgaged property under a power of sale contained in the mortgage, for eleven hundred dollars, and on the 21st of February, 1901, procured a decree in personam against the mortgagors for the sum of fourteen hundred and thirteen dollars, the amount of the deficiency after crediting the net proceeds of sale upon the mortgage indebtedness. This decree in personam was entered up after the date of the conveyance to Carrie G. Williams, and it is that indebtedness which the plaintiffs aver the deed was intended to prevent the creditor from collecting.

The deed which is assailed purports to be founded on a consideration of one thousand dollars and love and' affection. In point of fact there was-a money consideration of three thou-. sand three hundred and sixty-three dollars and sixty cents to support it. The undisputed testimony adduced by the plaintiffs themselves quite satisfactorily establishes the following state of facts: Carrie G. Williams taught school in Anne Arundel county for fourteen years and. received a salary of *197 three hundred and fifty dollars a year, except for two years during each of which there was a reduction of one month’s pay. She deposited her earnings in the Eutaw Savings Bank of Baltimore. She was evidently a very economical, thrifty and prudent girl. Her father was a practicing physician with considerable landed property; but his practice fell off, his land deteriorated and his resources bécame greatly reduced. He was finally forced to borrow money and the mortgage for two thousand dollars was placed upon one parcel of his real estate. Conditions did not improve thereafter and he then began to borrow from his daughter. , The first loan she made him was the sum ol one hundred dollars on May 12th, 1895, for which he gave his promissory note of that date. The accrued interest on that sum up to the date of the deed to her was thirty-one dollars and thirty-five cents. The next loan she made him was on May the 4th, 1896, and the amount was fifteen hundred dollars, which was secured by a mortgage on the real estate subsequently conveyed to her by the deed which these proceedings seek to impeach. No interest was paid by the mortgagor and the amount thereof which had accrued up to the date of the deed was three hundred and eighty-two and twenty-five cents. In 1897, 1898 and 1899 she advanced to her father four hundred and fifty dollars with which to pay taxes and other pressing claims, and she took his promissory note therefor. A certain Sophia Kaiser held a mortgage dated July 14th, 1897, for eight hundred and fifty dollars on two tracts of land described in the deed of August the third, 1900, and she instituted proceedings to foreclose in the summer of the year just named. Thereupon Carrie G. Williams advanced the sum of nine hundred dollars to prevent a sale, and took an assigment of the mortgage. Thus, the total amount of actual cash which Miss Williams had loaned to her father was two thousand, nine hundred and fifty dollars; fifteen hundred dollars of which were secured by a mortgage and eight hundred and fifty dollars more were secured by the Kaiser mortgage which she held by assignment. The accumulated interest on the whole indebtedness due by *198 her father to Miss Williams increased the sum he actually owed her to three thousand, three hundred and sixty-three dollars and sixty cents. The difference between the principal sums thus secured and the total amount due was just about one thousand dollars. As the mortgages which she held were liens on the property subsequently conveyed to her, and were merged in the title she acquired under the deed unless she elected, and manifested an intention, to take the estate and keep up the charge, Polk v. Reynolds, 31 Md. 111; it was entirely accurate to set forth the consideration in the deed at one thousand dollars, that sum being the amount due over and above the principal of the debts named in the two mortgages.

But was the consideration adequate? Much stress was laid in the argument upon the assessed valuation of the land for the purposes of taxation; but an assessment for such purposes is by no means controlling as a standard by which to ascertain actual values of property. The two hundred and seventy-five acres sold under the Anderson mortgage were assessed at $3,300 and the improvements at $610, or a total of $3,910 and yet the whole property, land and improvements, brought at public sale only eleven hundred dollars, or, considerably less than one-third of the assessment. The testimony of Benjamin Watkins values the three hundred acre, tract at seven dollars per acre or twenty-one hundred dollars for the whole; and he estimates the one hundred and sixty acres to be worth eight dollars per acre, or twelve hundred and eighty dollars. According to his testimony the whole four hundred and sixty acres are worth only three thousand, three hundred and eighty dollars. Edward Hall of B valued the property at three thousand dollars. One witness, it is true, places a value of $6,24o on the land — that is the sum at which it was assessed; but the actual sale made under the Anderson mortgage demonstrates the unreliability of that assessment.

The father being incontestibly indebted to the daughter in the amount already named, he had a clear legal right, apart from the provisions of the insolvent laws, to prefer her to any *199 other creditor by conveying the property to her, if that conveyance was made in good faith. A debtor has the right, at common law, to prefer one creditor to another by a bona fide conveyance of his property. Cole v. Algers & Runge, 1 Gill, 142; Cunningham v. Dwyer, 23 Md. 219; Totten v. Brady, 54 Md. 170. It is a fallacy to assume that a sequence of events, of necessity, indicates an interdependence of the one upon the other or a causal relation between them. It would be an error to insist that merely because the deed to the daughter ante-dated the in personam

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Bluebook (online)
60 A. 26, 100 Md. 195, 1905 Md. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-williams-md-1905.