Western National Bank v. National Union Bank

46 A. 960, 91 Md. 613, 1900 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 16, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 46 A. 960 (Western National Bank v. National Union Bank) 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
Western National Bank v. National Union Bank, 46 A. 960, 91 Md. 613, 1900 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed to procure a sale of certain lands, of which Lewis Turner died seized, and a distribution of the proceeds among his six daughters and the issue of a deceased daughter in equal shares under the terms of his last will. Before the sale was made Catherine L. Horner, one of the daughters, made two mortgages on her interest in the land and also executed jointly with her husband the promissory notes hereinafter mentioned.

Before the proceeds of sale had been distributed the two mortgagees of Mrs. Horner’s interest and also the parties to the present appeals, who are the four banks holding her notes, intervened in the partition case by appropriate petitions asking to be allowed her share of the fund. The mortgagees were paid off without objection, leaving as the residue of her share of the fund $3,139.52, to which the four banks made conflicting claims. The sole issue presented by these appeals is the question of the respective rights of the four banks to priority in the distribution of the $3,139.52.

The decree for the sale of the land was passed in the partition case on October 9th, 1888, but the sale was not made until December 16th, 1896. The petition of the Western National Bank was filed on December 23rd, 1895, and it asked to have the entire fund awarded to it without noticing the existence of other creditors. The petitions of the National Union and Marine Banks were filed on November 3rd, 1897, and that of the National Bank of Baltimore on March 3rd, 1900. These three banks in their petitions asked for a distribution of the fund among all of Mrs. Hor *619 ner’s creditors according to their legal priority. Each petition set up the alleged lien relied on by the party filing it.

The Western National Bank claimed that the notes held by it amounted by reason of their terms to an equitable mortgage, which gave to it a specific lien upon the fund. The other banks claimed the fund under attachments issued on the notes held by them, and levied as per schedule upon Mrs. Horner’s interest in the land after the decree for its sale but before the sale had been made. The attachments were also laid in the hands of the trustee appointed to make the sale. The Circuit Court admitted all four banks as parties to the suit, but held that neither the alleged equitable mortgage nor the attachments created liens upon the fund and directed it to be divided among them pro rata; whereupon they all appealed.

None of the banks had direct dealings with Mrs. Horner, but each of them acquired, by discount, negotiable promissory notes which were either signed or endorsed by her jointly with her husband. The notes were all drawn to the order of J. D. Horner & Co., that being the title under which her husband conducted the straw goods business, or to the order of the Horner Miller Straw Goods Manufacturing Co., of which he was president. Each bank in discounting this paper relied in part upon Mrs. Horner’s ownership of an interest in the land already mentioned.

All of the notes held by the Western National Bank, amounting in the aggregate to $18,700, were signed by Mrs. Horner and her husband as makers ; she signing last and adding after her signature the words “for the payment of which I bind my separate estate.” These words do not appear upon the notes held by the other banks which bear simply the joint signatures of Mrs. Horner and her husband as either makers or endorsers. The Western National Bank claims in its petition that the presence of the words just mentioned upon the notes held by it constituted all of them equitable mortgages upon Mrs. Horner’s interest in the fund and entitled it to receive the entire fund, but in the *620 argument of -the case it only claimed for its notes precedence over all prior general creditors of Mrs. Horner with ■the right to share pari passu with subsequent ones. As one of the notes held by this bank for $2,000, drawn to the order of the Horner, Miller Straw Goods Manufacturing Co. and dated September 6th, 1895, post-dates all of the other claims, the precise contention of the bank is that it is entitled to have this note paid in full out of the $3,139.52 and to share pro rata with the other banks in the distribution of the balance of that sum. ■

We will first consider this contention of the Western National Bank and will subsequently -discuss the effect of the attachments issued by the other banks.

It is conceded by all parties that if the notes held by this bank constitute equitable mortgages on Mrs. Horner’s interest in the land sold, the result claimed for them follows under the authority of Pannell v. Farmers' Bank, 7 H. & J. 206; Dyson v. Simmons, 48 Md. 220, and Textor v. Orr, 86 Md. 399. But the other banks deny that these notes are equitable mortgages and contend that the effect of the words appearing on the face of the notes is simply to make Mrs. Horner’s separate estate liable in equity for their payment, and is not to make the notes liens on her estate. They claim that these notes are nothing more than contracts enforceable against her separate estate in equity, just as the notes held by them are enforceable against her separate estate at law, and they insist that the only difference between the notes is, that those held by the Western National Bank, by reason of the special clause appearing on their face, may be enforced against the separate estate either at law or in equity, while the others are enforceable only at law.

- Whatever may be the precise operation of these notes held by the Western Bank, they do not seem to us to amount to equitable mortgages. An equitable mortgage results from different forms of transactions in which there is present an intent of the parties to make a mortgage, to which intent, for some reason, legal expression is not given in the form of *621 an effective mortgage; but in all such cases the intent to create a mortgage is the essential feature of the transaction. Thus, an equitable mortgage has been held to result from a defectively executed legal mortgage (Dyson v. Simmons, supra, Saunders v. McDonald, 68 Md. 503); or from an agreement to execute a mortgage, if the agreement be certain in terms and clearly proven (Nelson v. Hagerstown Bank, 27 Md. 242; Gill v. McAttee, 2 Md. Chy. 255; Textor v. Orr, 86 Md. 398); or from a deed absolute in form shown to have been in fact intended to operate as a mortgage. Thompson v. Banks, 3 Md. Chy. 138; Artz v. Grove, 21 Md. 456; Brown v. Reilly, 72 Md. 489. Although the notes now under consideration manifest a purpose to make her separate estate liable for their payment, it cannot be said that they show an intent to create a mortgage on that estate.

In ascertaining the true effect of the declaration by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A. 960, 91 Md. 613, 1900 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-national-bank-v-national-union-bank-md-1900.