Wilmer v. Placide

84 A. 491, 118 Md. 305
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 12, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 84 A. 491 (Wilmer v. Placide) 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
Wilmer v. Placide, 84 A. 491, 118 Md. 305 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Susan E. Plaeidle, the appellee in this case, filed her bill in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, alleging', among *307 other things, that she was the owner of a house and lot of land, LTo. 1300 Madison Avenue, Baltimore, Md., which was sold and conveyed to her by the appellant, Edwin M. Wilmer and George W. Lindsay, trustees, by deed dated the 16th day of June, 1887, and duly recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore City. That on the 3rd day of LTovember, 1890, she executed nnto her sister, Alice B. Wilmer1, a mortgage, which was assigned by her to the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company, and by it assigned to Edwin M. Wilmer on the 28th of December, 1897, and which the bill alleges has been fully paid.

The bill alleges that ,the appellant is largely indebted to her for moneys collected as rents from her various properties, covering a long period of time, and for money entrusted to him to be paid upon said mortgage, and which he failed to apply thereto, but while so indebted to her wrongfully took an assignment of said mortgage to himself. That after the death of her sister she took charge and control of and cared for her three infant children hereinafter mentioned, and that in, 1897 she allowed the defendant to bring to the Madison Avenue home, where the defendant, his children and the plaintiff then lived, his two sisters and two nieces, and permitted them to occupy the greater part of her house, under an agreement that “he would pay all expenses on said house, taxes, repairs and any interest that might accrue from any money due and owing on said mortgage, and further, that he would recompense her for any money that she might expend in clothing for his children, and would provide suitable meals, and generally that she need have no concern for said property, except to live in same, he to pay all and singular the expenses of said property.”

That the mother and sisters are still occupying the greater part of said home against the protest of and to the prejudice of the rights of the plaintiff. That the appellee has failed to pay the taxes upon said property, permitting four years of such taxes to remain unpaid and in arrear, and has failed to maintain and keep in repair the house and premises *308 as he agreed to do in the agreement above mentioned. That by his failure to pay said taxes, .the property was about to be sold for the payment of the same. It was then that she called upon him for an accounting, and in answer thereto, she was told that he would foreclose the mortgage then held by him, which he thereafter proceeded to do, and which proceedings are now pending. That after repeated requests, the appellant finally handed her a partial and pretended statement of various accounts, which, as alleged in the bill, are false, incomplete and misleading. The bill alleges that she cared for the children of 'the defendant and has expended large sums of money for their clothing, for which she has not been.repaid.

The prayer of the bill asks: (1) that the said mortgage be annulled; (2) that it be released; (3) that an order be passed enjoining and restraining the defendant from foreclosing the mortgage or from selling or assigning his interest or claim therein; (4) that he be required to. state an account, under oath, of all monies received by him belonging to the plaintiff; (5) that the said defendant be required to vacaite the premises.

The appellant in his answer to the bill denied the plaintiff’s ownership of the property, and alleged that after the conveyance to her by the trustees she deeded her property avray. He denied! the alleged indebtedness from him to the plaintiff, but alleges that she is indebted to. him. He also denied that he has refused and still refuses to give her an accounting, but alleges that she is in possession of the book wherein he correctly entered with great particularity, ait the times they should have been entered, the debits and credits of said account, and that- they were so made with the full knowledge of the plaintiff. He denied any agreement with the plaintiff in relation to the occupancy of the Madison Avenue home by his relatives mentioned in the bill. He further denied that the plaintiff ever entrusted -any money to. him to be applied to the payment of the mortgage, or that he had misappropriated any funds collected for her to. his own uses, *309 and. alleged that the assignment of the mortgage to him was for a full valuable consideration paid by him. He also denied that he was indebted Itio the plaintiff for moneys expended by her in tbe purchase of clothing for the children, but admitted that the plaintiff had been kind and affectionate towards bis children. He admitted the execution of the mortgage and the alleged respective assignments •thereof, but denied that the plaintiff or anyone for her had paid any part of the mortgage except the amount for which credit was given, which reduced the amount owing thereon at the time of the assignment to him to $3,959.89.

A general replication was filed to this answer and after-wards on December 28th, 1910, the appellee filed her bill in said Court against the said Edwin M. Wilmer and Henry Placide Wilmer and E. Placide AVilmer, sons of Edwin M. AVilmer, and one Harmon Y. Morse, husband of Albalshenl Morse, deceased daughter of Edwin M. AVilmer, in which she alleges that BdNvin M. Wilmer, one of the defendants, left for record in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court of Baltimore City a deed dated the 28th day of July, 1887, by which tbe said appellee was said to have conveyed to her sister, Alice B. Wilmer, the said house and lot of ground known as Ho. 1300 Madison Avenue. The bill further alleges that while the above named deed purports to be signed by the appellee and recites a consideration of nine thousand dollars, that no part of said sum was ever paid to her or did she sign said deed, or did she authorize anyone to sign said deed for her, and that she never saw or heard of it until at or about the time it was filed for1 record. The bill also alleges 'that although tbe said Wilmer claims to have had possession of the said deed since its execution, that neither his wife, while living, nor he, since her death, claimed ownership of the property therein described, until a short time before the filing of the deed, when Wilmer claimed there was a secret deed and that as his wife died intestate, seized of the property, he was entitled to a life estate therein, and then for *310 the first time he demanded payment of the appellee for the use and occupation of those parts of the Madison Avenue property that were and had been for years occupied by the appellee, and threatened to take legal action against. her unless payment for such part was made by her therefor, and not until after the plaintiff had refused to pay the mortgage aforesaid and not until the bill had been filed in said Court, asking, among other 'things, that said mortgage be annulled •and set aside, did the defendant speak of this deed.

The bill further alleges that Alice B. Wilmer died June 29, 1891, intestate, leaving surviving her Edwin M. Wilmer, her husband, and the children above named. That Alblasheul Wilmer, after marrying with Harmon Y. Morse, Jr., died on the 8th day of June, 1910, intestate and without issue, leaving her husband surviving her, ■ and leaving E.

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Related

Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Foster
129 S.E. 629 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1925)
Wilmer v. Placide
91 A. 561 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
84 A. 491, 118 Md. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmer-v-placide-md-1912.