167 Md. 461 | Md. | 1934
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The sole question in this case is whether the trial court erred in withdrawing the case from the jury on the plea of limitations.
The facts of the case, briefly stated, were as follows:
In December, 1928, a woman representing herself as Blanche May Glenn Glaseo, through Mortimer E. Bell, a real estate and loan broker, applied for a loan of $450 on a second mortgage on property No. 934 North Gilmor Street, Baltimore. The application was submitted to the Elliott Building & Loan Association, which made the loan, and the mortgage executed by the applicant, who impersonated the person who owned the property. In December, 1929, the same woman came into Mr. Bell’s office for the purpose of securing a new mortgage on the same property for $800, out of which was to be paid to the Elliott Building & Loan Association the balance due on the previous mortgage. The appellant agreed to make said loan and thereafter, on December 16th, 1929, the new mortgage was executed by the applicant to the ap
This appeal is from the judgment on a verdict for the defendant.
By Code, art. 57, sec. 14, Act of 1868, ch. 357, it is provided: “In all actions where a party has a cause of action of which he has been kept in ignorance by the fraud of the adverse party, the right to bring suit shall be deemed to have first accrued at the time at which such fraud shall or Avith usual or ordinary diligence might have been known or discovered.”
The appellant relies on this statute. In its brief it quotes from Wear v. Skinner, 46 Md. 265, and Reeder v. Lanahan, 111 Md. 384, 74 A. 575, “that where a party has been injured by the fraud of another, and such fraud is concealed, or is of such character as to conceal itself, whereby the injured party remains in ignorance of it without any fault or want of diligence on his part, the bar of the statute does not begin to run until the fraud
It will be found, upon an examination of the cases in Maryland where the statute has been found applicable, that the fraud complained of was a moral wrong, and not an act without any element of wrong-doing on the part of the defendant. Wear v. Skinner, 46 Md. 264; State v. Henderson, 54 Md. 332; New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Swain, 100 Md. 572, 60 A. 469; Peoples v. Ault, 128 Md. 401, 97 A. 711.
But this is not even a case of constructive fraud. It cannot be said, on the record in this case, that, because the defendant failed to make further inquiry as to the identity of the applicant, after the iiitroduction by a broker against whose good repute no question is raised (if it did so fail, and that does not appear), it was omitting any duty which it owed to the public. Defendant’s mortgage was not even purchased by the plaintiff,'ánd
Judgment affirmed, with costs to appellee.