45 A.2d 106 | Md. | 1945
This suit was brought by Union Trust Company of Maryland to obtain specific performance of a contract for the sale of land situated on Massachusetts Avenue in the City of Baltimore. On February 2, 1945, complainant agreed to sell the land to Ralph A. Garner and his wife, defendants, for $4,200 and to give a "good and merchantable title." Defendants made a partial payment of $500, but subsequently refused to accept the title.
The record in this case shows: (1) that a deed executed by Daniel A. Leonard on December 22, 1919, purported to convey the land to Linthicum Realty Company in fee simple, but actually the land was subject to an annual ground rent of $75.15, and the deed recited that the ground rent would be extinguished by a deed from Charles J. Bonaparte to Linthicum Realty Company "to be recorded" among the land records; (2) that on the same day Linthicum Realty Company executed a mortgage on the land to West Baltimore Bank; (3) that on August 15, 1920, Charles J. Bonaparte and others conveyed the fee to Linthicum Realty Company so that "the *389 leasehold estate may be merged in the fee"; (4) that on July 13, 1933, the Circuit Court of Baltimore City appointed a trustee to sell the property in accordance with the mortgagor's assent in the mortgage and the statute regulating sales under decrees pursuant to mortgagor's assent (Baltimore City Charter, 1938 Ed., Secs. 840-855); and (5) that on November 10, 1933, the trustee sold the property at foreclosure sale to complainant. Upon this state of facts the chancellor ordered defendants to accept the title and pay the balance of $3,700 due on the purchase price. From that decree defendants appeal to this Court.
It is a well established principle that a vendor of real estate, in order to maintain a suit for specific performance of the contract of sale, must show that the title tendered by him is marketable. A marketable title may be defined as a title without encumbrances and free from reasonable doubt as to any question of law or fact that may call it in question in the future and subject the purchaser to the hazard of litigation. It is recognized that the term "merchantable" title is synonymous with "marketable title." Genske v. Jensen,
However, a title, to be marketable, need not be free from every conceivable technical criticism, but only from those possibilities of defect which are sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt. It is not every possibility of defect or even threat of contest that will be sufficient to make a title unmarketable, for it may be practically impossible for a vendor to anticipate all imaginable objections which, if they existed, would defeat his title. Levy v. Iroquois Building Co.,
Since a purchaser is not bound to accept any title less than an unencumbered legal title to the fee (Gill v. Wells,
The test for determining the marketability of a title claimed under a foreclosure sale, like any other title, is whether there is any color of outstanding title or any doubt sufficient to raise a reasonable probability that the purchaser may be subjected to litigation to defend his title. Larson v. Thomas,
In this case the foreclosure sale was made by a trustee appointed by the Court in a suit between Union Trust *392
Company, complainant, and Linthicum Realty Company, defendant, and the sale was finally ratified by the Court. The statute regulating sales under decrees pursuant to mortgagor's assent contains the following provision: "Such sales and the conveyances thereupon shall have the same effect, if finally ratified by said court, as if the same had been made under decrees between the proper parties in relation to the mortgages, and in the usual course of said court." Baltimore City Charter, 1938 Ed., Section 843. Ordinarily a foreclosure sale passes only the title which the mortgagor had in the property at the time of the recording of the mortgage. Carroll v. Kershner,
In this case the record does not show any equities superior to the equitable lien of the mortgage. According to the stipulation in the case, judgments were entered against Linthicum Realty Company after August 15, 1920, when the legal title to the fee was acquired. But the title of the purchaser at the foreclosure sale is not affected by these judgments, because they are not superior in right or lien to the equitable lien of the mortgage. The law is clear that a judgment is a general lien relating to the time when it is recorded and is subordinate to the *393
superior equity of a prior specific lien. Dyson v. Simmons,
As complainant has tendered a good and merchantable title to defendants, we will affirm the decree of the chancellor ordering specific performance of the contract.
Decree affirmed, with costs.