Warwick v. Harvey

148 A. 592, 158 Md. 457, 68 A.L.R. 284, 1930 Md. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 24, 1930
Docket[No. 91, October Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 148 A. 592 (Warwick v. Harvey) 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
Warwick v. Harvey, 148 A. 592, 158 Md. 457, 68 A.L.R. 284, 1930 Md. LEXIS 56 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

*458 Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Blanche W. Warwick appeals in this case from an order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in equity, requiring the clerk to issue the writ of habere facias possessionem to the sheriff of said county, directing him to deliver possession of a certain lot held by her to- Harry A. Harvey, the petitioner. The lot in question is part of a tract known as Cedarwood, in Baltimore County on the Frederick road near Baltimore City. On August 10th, 1927, Harvey sold the tract to William 0. Moxley, who proceeded to develop it, ran a road through it, and divided the land on the east and west sides of the road into lots. On lots Hos. 13 to' 21, inclusive, Moxley gave Harvey a mortgage for $10,000. This included lot Fo. 19, which is the subject of controversy in this suit. The mortgage contained a provision that the mortgagor, his heirs or assigns, could obtain partial releases, at any time before maturity of the mortgage or before default thereunder, by paying thirty dollars per front foot for each lot to be released, with the exception of lot number 19 “which may be released upon payment of the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars; interest on the amount so prepaid to be paid to the date of such prepayment.”

Mrs. Warwick in 1928 informed' Mr. Walter G-anster, - whom she had known for a long time and who was connected with the Provident Building Association of Baltimore, of which her deceased husband had been treasurer, of her desire to buy a house. At his suggestion she looked ast the Cedarwood property, which resulted in a contract by which Moxley agreed to sell her lot number 19 in fee, and to erect thereon before May 1st, 1928, a house, at the price of $6,500 for the house and lot. Certain extras later agreed on brought the total to be paid by Mrs. Warwick to $8,000. The house had been started at the time; Mrs. Warwick testified: “The frame work of the house was up-. There was enough finished so that one could walk upstairs. It was not lathed but the frame work of the roof was on. The timber and flooring and stairs were in the house.” She moved in in September, 1928, and the house was not completed until a month later. Five *459 hundred dollars was paid by her at the time of signing the contract, and it provided that all payments should be made upon the completion of the house, and that “as an aid to the financial completion of same the vendee agrees to- guarantee the payment of materials and labor to- the extent of two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars.” Mrs. Warwick employed Ganster to look after the transfer of title and the release of the mortgage as to said lot, and he told her a deed and a release had been executed and duly recorded. It appears that a deed -was executed by Moxley to Mrs. Warwick and her daughter about the middle- of June, 1928, but it was, never recorded, and seems to have been lost. The uncontradicted evidence shows that more than $8,000 of Mrs. Warwick’s, money went into the construction of this house, and that it added $4,000 to the value of the lot. Harvey and his agent testified, and there is no evidence to the contrary, that they knew nothing of this contract or of Mrs-. Warwick’s connection with the property, until after the suicide -of Ganster in September, 1928. Although money was given him for this purpose, Ganster paid nothing on account of the mortgage to secure the release of lot number 19, and of course- did not obtain a release, but this was not discovered by Mrs. Warwick until after his death.

The mortgage was in default at the- date of the above mentioned contract by reason of the failure of Moxley to- make a payment of $500 on account of the principal on Hovember 10th, 1927, and interest due on that date. There was an additional default in payment of principal and interest due on February 10th, 1928, but the mortgagee did not foreclose because of the improvements being made on the property. He testified: “I knew this improvement was going on the land. I thought the more improvements Moxley had there, the more likely Moxley was to make a profit and be able to pay me. I would not change the terms of the mortgage when Moxley wrote- me on July 11th, 1928. I thought, until after Mr. Ganster’» death, that Mr. Moxley was making the improvements.” Mo-xley’s request in the- letter referred to was for a release of lot Ho-. 19 on payment of $1,000. He was *460 told, he could not get a release of the lot unless he paid the principal and interest then due, amounting to $1,450, in addition to the $2,500 partial release charge.

After Mrs. Warwick discovered that the lot had not been released she offered to pay $2,500 for a release but the offer was refused, but the mortgagee offered to assign his mortgage to her.

The mortgage was subsequently foreclosed and the entire mortgaged property bought in by the mortgagee for $3,500, the sale was finally ratified, and the property conveyed to him. On refusal of Mrs. Warwick to deliver possession of lot No. 19, a petition for the writ of possession was. filed, to which an answer was filed, alleging that it would be inequitable and against the conscience of the court to allow the petitioner to obtain the benefit of the improvements made by the respondent in good faith upon land which she believed to be hers, and to eject her from the possession of her home, and to- use this process of the court to take an unfair advantage of her and work a hardship' upon her, without requiring the petitioner to compensate her, when by acceptance of respondent’s offer to pay the sum provided in the mortgage for the release of said lot the petitioner would suffer no loss but would be placed in the same position that he would have held if the mortgagor had carried out the terms of said mortgage. The prayer of the answer is: (1) That the application for the writ be denied. (2) That the petitioner be required to execute a deed to1 the respondent for said lot upon payment to him of $2,500 or such sum as the court may deem just and equitable. (3) That petitioner be enjoined from interfering with respondent’s quiet possession of said lot and the improvements erected thereon by her unless he shall compensate her for said improvements in such amount as the court shall determine to be fair and equitable. (4) That petitioner be required to pay respondent 'such compensation for said improvements as the court shall determine to be fair and equitable. (5) For general relief.

We think the chancellor was in error in refusing relief to the appellant.

*461 The equitable doctrine of “melioration” or compensation for improvements has for a long time been recognized in chis state. Mr. Perkins in a note to McLaughlin v. Barnum, 31 Md. at pag’e 427, says: “There is no doctrine of equity better established than that a bona fide purchaser is entitled to an allowance for improvements when he is the defendant, and the rightful owner seeks the aid of a court of equity to recover rents and profits, or to enforce his title”, And he is fully supported by the cases cited by him, viz: Union Hall Association v. Morrison, 39 Md. 281; Eichelberger v. Hawthorn, 33 Md. 588; Evans v. Horan, 52 Md. 602; Broumel v. White, 87 Md. 521.

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Bluebook (online)
148 A. 592, 158 Md. 457, 68 A.L.R. 284, 1930 Md. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warwick-v-harvey-md-1930.