Watson v. Calvert Building & Loan Ass'n

45 A. 879, 91 Md. 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 45 A. 879 (Watson v. Calvert Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Watson v. Calvert Building & Loan Ass'n, 45 A. 879, 91 Md. 25 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal brings before us for consideration the question of the liability, under the circumstances of the present case, of an attorney at law for the omission to discover the presence upon the public records of a judgment which was a lien upon a lot of ground the title to which he had been employed to examine. The judgment was not upon the record at the time when the title was in fact examined by the attorney, but it was entered by confession in the interval between his examination and the execution of a mortgage upon the lot to his client.

The testimony tended to prove the following facts:

The appellee is a building association located in Baltimore City and, as is usual in such cases, its principal business is lending money upon mortgage. It does' not confine its loans to the place of its location but extends its transactions to other localities.

*30 A short time prior to October 4th, 1897, one Mary A. Loar applied to it for a loan of $700 on mortgage of a lot of land lying at Midland in Allegany County. The appellee then, through D. Ross Metzger, its agent at Frostburg, requested the appellant, who resides at Frostburg, to examine the title to the lot. On October 4th the appellant went to Cumberland and made an examination of the title and made to Metzger a written report, which stated that the title was good and the property free from incumbrances, except a mortgage to the Fidelity Building Association. This report correctly set forth the state of the title at that time.

Metzger forwarded the report upon the title to the home office of the appellee at Baltimore, where it was. discovered that the appellant had omitted to sign and date his report, which was thereupon returned to Metzger to have the appellant fully execute it and also furnish an abstract of the title. The appellant, on being applied to by Metzger, objected to making an abstract, saying that he was not paid for that, that he was only to receive $5, and that was for searching the title. Metzger then said, “ you have your notes made when you examined the title, write it up from them; ” and thereupon the appellant, on October 8th, in the presence and with the knowledge and assent of Metzger, forthwith made up the abstract at Frostburg from his notes of title which had been made at Cumberland on the 4th of October, and dated both the abstract and report as of the 8th of October and handed them to Metzger who transmitted them to the appellee.

The preparation of the mortgage from. Mrs. Loar to the appellee was not entrusted to the appellant, but it was prepared at the home office of the appellee in Baltimore and forwarded to Metzger at Frostburg with directions to him to turn it over to the attorney and instruct him to see that the prior mortgage to the Fidelity Building Association was released before the new mortgage was recorded. The letter containing these directions closed with a request to Metzger to “ Look after the insurance, see that the taxes are paid *31 up to date and any other liens, if any, are cleaned off the record.”

At the request of Metzger the appellant on October 21st went with him and Mrs. Loar to the bank at Frostburg, where the prior mortgage was paid off and released. The new mortgage was then executed by Mrs. Loar and her husband and was taken in charge by Metzger who transmitted it to Cumberland for record. There is no evidence that Metzger, before accepting the Loar mortgage and placing it on record, requested the appellant to bring his investigation of the title down to that time or to make any further search for taxes or incumbrances. On the contrary, the evidence indicates that he did not do so, although he must have been aware of the fact that no examination of the title had been made subsequent to October 4th, and must have relied upon the investigation made on that date.

Some time afterwards it was discovered that on October 6th, after the search of the title had been made, but before the execution of the mortgage, and even before the abstract of title had been made up at Frostburg and it and the report on the title had been signed and dated, Mrs. Loar, the mortgagor, had confessed a judgment in favor of a third party for $1,300.

The lien of this judgment, of course, took precedence over that of the appellee’s mortgage, and it so reduced the value of the mortgage that when it was foreclosed the proceeds of sale proved insufficient to pay the mortgage debt in full. The-appellee then instituted the present case against the appellant for alleged negligence in failing to report the judgment.

The testimony of Hutchins, the appellee’s agent at its home office in Baltimore, tended to prove that in the spring of 1897 he had visited Frostburg and employed the appellant to act as attorney, generally, for the Frostburg branch of the appellee’s business, his compensation to be paid by the borrower as each loan was made, and that the appellant had accepted the employment, and that he had undertaken *32 as such general attorney to examine and report upon the title in question.

The appellant denied any employment as the attorney, generally, at Frostburg of the appellee and also offered the testimony of Metzger upon cross-examination tending to show that he was not such general attorney and had been employed by it in only one other case, when he was employed through Metzger; that in the present case he had been employed by Metzger as the appellee’s agent simply to search the title, which he did and reported correctly thereon at the time ; that he was not given general charge or supervision of the Loar mortgage loan transaction, but that it was put by the appellee in the charge of its Frost-burg agent, Metzger, through whom all of its communications to him were made, and that the appellant did correctly all that Metzger requested of him in reference to it.

The plaintiff offered but one prayer and it was granted by the Court. This prayer, although a very long one, presented in a correct manner the proposition that if the jury found that at and for sometime prior to the making of the loan to Mi-s. Loar the appellee had employed the appellant as its local attorney for Allegany County and he had accepted the employment, and that the appellee had referred Mrs. Loar’s application for a loan to him as its attorney to examine and report upon the title and attend to the matter of the mortgage loan, he was liable for the loss sustained by reason of his failure to discover and report the judgment for $1,300, even though they should find that Metzger, when he asked for an abstract of title on October 8th, assented that it might be made up from the appellant’s notes of the search already made.

The appellant, as defendant, offered two prayers, both of which were rejected by the Court.

The first of these prayers asserted the proposition that if the jury found that the appellee’s agent, Metzger, employed the appellant for the single purpose of examining Mrs, Loar’s title to the lot to be mortgaged, and he thereupon, *33

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 A. 879, 91 Md. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-calvert-building-loan-assn-md-1900.