Williams v. Harlan

41 A. 51, 88 Md. 1, 1898 Md. LEXIS 186
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 41 A. 51 (Williams v. Harlan) 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
Williams v. Harlan, 41 A. 51, 88 Md. 1, 1898 Md. LEXIS 186 (Md. 1898).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Certain real estate consisting of a farm of one hundred and twenty acres and the buildings thereon, located in Harford County, Maryland, constitutes the subject of this controversy. By the will of the late Elizabeth B. Williams the farm in question was devised to her daughter, Maria B. Greenway, for life, with remainder in fee to her children. Mrs. Greenway the life-tenant died intestate in 1893 leaving four children, Mary, Elizabeth, William H. and Edward. The latter conveyed all his interest in the farm to his sister Mary,, and William H. Greenway conveyed his interests in the same to the appellee W. Beatty Harlan in trust for the benefit of his creditors.

The ‘ bill in this case was filed in the Circuit Court for Harford County by the executor of the will of the late George Hawkins Williams of Baltimore City in his own behalf and in behalf of all other creditors of said William H. Greenway in like condition with himself. It alleges that the life-tenant Mrs. Greenway and her two daughters and her son William being anxious to occupy the premises as a home and residence, and the same being without buildings or improvements of any [3]*3kind upon it, applied to the plaintiff’s testator, who was the brother of Mrs. Greenway, to assist them in raising the necessary money to make the desired improvements. Being willing to aid them, but unwilling to assume the entire liability for the large amount of money requisite, he endorsed at their request five promissory notes of said William H. Greenway amounting in the aggregate to the sum of eight thousand five hundred dollars, the whole of which has been paid, partly by the said testator, Williams, and the balance by the appellant, his .executor. It is further alleged that the money so procured from, and in fact advanced by, said Williams and his executor, was used by the said Wm. H. Greenway and his co-tenants “ with full knowledge on their part from whence the said money was derived, and that the same was simply a loan, in the erection of a dwelling-house, barn, stable and other out-buildings ” upon the land mentioned in the bill. The bill charges that the co-tenants, Elizabeth W. and Mary B. Greenway and W. Beatty Harlan, trustee of William H. Green way, intend and are about to make a specific partition of the said land by which the latter as such trustee is to have one-fourth of said 120 acres, which partition, if consummated, will be, it is alleged, grossly inequitable to the plaintiff and to all the other creditors of said Green-way, as they will, by reason of such partition, “ receive from said property a much smaller proportion of its value than the share of Wm. H. Greenway, and will thereby suffer great loss.” It is also distinctly alleged that the farm as a whole, together with the improvements thereon placed with the money advanced by the plaintiff and his testator, represents a larger value than the several parts thereof would realize if sold in smaller portions, at the same time setting forth the facts upon which this allegation is based. In addition to this there is also an allegation that the land is not capable of partition in kind without loss and injury, accompanied with a claim on the part of the plaintiff that he is entitled to have the land sold as a unit, and an account taken of how and to what extent the same has been benefited by [4]*4the expenditures of the money advanced as we have described, and asking that the sum so ascertained, with the value of Wm. H. Greenway’s share in the land itself, may be paid over to his trustee to be distributed according to law, to the payment of his debts. An injunction is also prayed to restrain the defendants, from attempting to make the alleged contemplated partition until the rights of the plaintiff and other creditors of said Greenway can be determined.

We have thus at length set forth the substantial averments of the bill, because the defendants demurred to it,, and their demurrer was sustained. From.the order of the Court below sustaining the demurrer the plaintiff appealed.

The question presented is whether on the facts set forth in the bill the plaintiff is entitled to the relief prayed, namely, a sale of the whole property, together with the improvements, and to an ascertainment of the share of Wm. H. Greenway as set forth in the bill, and also to the injunction as prayed.

It may be observed that the demurrer, as appears from the argument of counsel for the defendants, was based largely on a misconception of the theory of the bill. A sale is not asked by the plaintiff for the purpose of partition or division of the proceeds of sale, because the land is incapable of division without loss or injury, as was suggested, but the whole contention of the plaintiff now is, whatever may have been his contention in the Court below, that he is entitled to have a sale so as to work out his equitable lien for the money alleged to have been advanced and used for the purpose of enhancing the value of the land. And therefore while it is true •that the plaintiff would have no standing under 'the provisions of Art. 16, sec. 116 of the Code, because he is neither a joint tenant, tenant in common, parcener nor a concurrent owner, yet the question remains whether under all the circumstances of this case he has not an equitable lien on the land and improvements, and if so, whether he may not work out such lien in the manner he is now attempting to do under this proceeding.

[5]*5There can be no question that as between Wm. H. Greenway, and his co-tenants he would be entitled to a lien for the amount expended by him on improvements and repairs made upon the joint property with their knowledge or at their request or in good faith for the benefit of all. This doctrine is fully settled by all the authorities. Mr. Pomeroy in his Equity Jurisprudence, section 1239 says: “ When two or more persons are joint-owners of real or other property, and one of them in good faith for the joint benefit, makes repairs and improvements upon the property which are permanent, and add a permanent value to the entire estate, equity may not only give him a claim for contribution against the other joint-owners with respect to their proportional shares of the amount thus expended, but may also create a lien as security for such demand upon the undivided shares of the other proprietors.” To the same effect 13 Am. and Eng. Encyl. of Law, p. 602; Green v. Putman, 1 Barbour 500; Hall v. Piddock, 21 N. J. Eq. 311; Gavin v. Carling, 55 Md. 530.

But it is not the joint tenant or owner himself who in this case is claiming the benefit of the equitable lien; but it is his creditor who advanced the money which made it possible to make the improvements, and thereby create the enhanced value. It seems to us that this creditor has a strong equity as against these defendants. There is no question here as between the plaintiff and other creditors of the defendants or bona ñde purchasers without notice of his equitable lien, but the claim is that inasmuch as there is no such question involved the plaintiff is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of William H. Greenway, who as we have seen, beyond doubt has a lien on the land for the amount expended in improvements and repairs.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 51, 88 Md. 1, 1898 Md. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-harlan-md-1898.