61 Md. 1 | Md. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The undisputed facts of this case are as follows: Joseph B. G-irault, a professor in the Naval'Academy at Annapolis, in August, 1877, purchased a vacant lot of ground, in Annapolis, for eight hundred dollars, which he paid for
The testimony consists entirely of the evidence given by the parties in their own behalf, and on cross-examination ; and before considering the questions arising upon its legal effect, we will dispose of an exception to a portion of it. Exception was taken by complainant to the re-examination and testimony given therein, upon the 15th of February, 1882, after the parties had been examined and cross-examined and discharged without any reservation of the right to recall, or agreement for further examination. This exception was sustained by the Circuit Court and we think properly, and for sufficient reasons, which we adopt, in the language of the Circuit Court: “These witnesses had been examined on the 12th day of January, 1882. Mrs. Adams, the complainant, had testified, on the Ith of October, 1881, before they were examined; and when they were subsequently examined was the time for them to have given, in their examination-in-chief, any testimony in their power to give in contradiction of what she had said, ifo questions specially directed to her testimony were then propounded to them, and after cross-examination, they left the commissioner’s office. If the same state of case had occurred in a trial at law, they could not have been thus recalled, without the special leave of the Court, for the purpose of contradicting what a previous witness had stated; and the rule is the same in the examination of witnesses before a commissioner in a case in equity. (Heise’s Case, 44 Md., 453.) - It is important this rule should be observed, not only for the orderly conduct of an equity suit, but for the purpose of justice. A witness and a party to a cause, who had been examined and cross-examined, after his opponent had testified, ought not to be recalled after he has had three months to reflect upon his adversary’s testimony, for the purpose of contradicting that
It is abundantly clear from the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Girault, that Mr. Girault had been .authorized, by his wife, to borrow money on mortgage upon the property, for the purpose of erecting a house on Mrs. Girault’s lot. Application had been made to a building association for it, with the oifer of a mortgage in security for the loan. Thus far his authority is admitted. The negotiation with the building association was discontinued, because, and only because, the money could be secured from the sister. Now, Mr. Girault states in his testimony that the interest on all was to be secured by a mortgage ■on this’very property; but he insists that only a portion of the principal was to be so secured. This qualification of the agreement the sister denies; so that his averment is not made good; while he> establishes the receipt of the money, and its application to the building of the house on his wife’s property. Manifestly, he considered himself fully authorized to borrow money from any source, on the faith of that property, or he would not have engaged to mortgage it to his sister. Mrs. Girault says the money was to be borrowed from the building association and was
It appears that, at the time the money was loaned, Mrs. Adams did not know the property had been conveyed to Mrs. Girault, but the brother knew it, and Mrs. Girault knew it; and as the negotiation was with reference to it as. security, the loan must, in equity, be. regarded as made to the.person actually getting the benefit, and on the faith of the property designated, and really owned by the person benefited. The failure to disclose the true state of the title, and the misapprehension of the lender about it, only commends the case more strongly to the ear of a Court of equity. We think there is abundant proof to justify this Court in preventing the wrong which the appellants, by their resistance of this claim, seek to inflict upon Mrs. Adams. The well considered cases of Bowie vs. Stonestreet, 6 Md., 418; Green vs. Drummond, 31 Md., 71; and Powel vs. Young, 45 Md., 494, fully establish that where specific performance cannot be decreed, because of uncertainty in the terms of the agreement, insufficiency of proof to clearly establish the precise contract alleged, or by reason of the Statute of Frauds being relied on in defence, a Court of equity will, when there is no remedy at law, render relief by way of compensation to the extent of money actually paid upon the alleged contract. An unreported case in this Court, decided in July, 1858, Jacob Eackle vs. George W. Smith and others, also maintains this doctrine. We agree with the Circuit Court, that it is perfectly competent for a husband and wife to make a binding agreement for the improvement of the wife’s
liemanded, without affirmance or reversal, under Art. 5, sec. 28, of the Gode.