Grafflin v. State, Use of Ruckle

63 A. 373 | Md. | 1906

This appeal brings up a record from the Court of Common Pleas. It appears that in January, 1897, Lewis F. Grafflin, one of the appellants, was appointed by Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, committee of the estate of Thomas C.C. Ruckle, who had been adjudged by the inquisition of a jury to be a lunatic: That Grafflin thereupon gave bond to the State of Maryland in the penalty of thirteen thousand dollars with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, a body corporate, as surety, conditioned for the faithful performance of the trust reposed in him by the decree which appointed him, or which might "be reposed in him by any future decree or order in the premises:" That on October the 27th, 1898, Grafflin, the committee, secured an exparte order from the Circuit Court permitting him to invest the sum of three thousand dollars belonging to the lunatic, in afirst mortgage on a certain parcel of land lying in Baltimore County: That Grafflin, instead of complying with the requirements of the last-named order, took, on October the twenty-eighth — (the day following the date of the order) — a second mortgage on the designated property for three thousand dollars, though *174 there was then outstanding, as a first lien on the property, a prior mortgage securing the payment of a debt of fourteen hundred dollars: That Grafflin did not in fact invest the sum of three thousand dollars in the second mortgage, but prior to the date when he obtained the order authorizing the investment, he had advanced to the mortgagor a considerable part of the sum, and that he retained fourteen hundred dollars of the three thousand dollars with which to pay off the first mortgage: That he alleges he was taken sick before he could pay off the first mortgage, and during his sickness was robbed of the fourteen hundred dollars so retained: That on February 14th, 1901, the lunatic by his next friend Oliver J. Whildin, filed a petition in Circuit Court No. 2 calling to the attention of the Court, amongst other things, the fact that Grafflin had disregarded the order of October, 1898, and had invested the lunatic's money in a second mortgage, and that thereupon an order was passed requiring Grafflin to show cause on or before March eighth, 1901, why he should not be compelled to bring into Court the sum of three thousand dollars which he had been previously authorized to invest in a first mortgage, but with which authorization he had not complied: That Grafflin showed cause which was deemed by Circuit Court No. 2 wholly insufficient; and that on June 14th the Circuit Court passed a decretal order removing Grafflin from his trust, and appointing the Continental Trust Company in his place, and directing him to bring into Court on or before the twenty-fifth day of June the sum of three thousand dollars with interest from October 27th, 1898: That Grafflin failed to bring into Court the money mentioned in the Court's order, and thereafter on October the twelfth the pending suit was brought against Grafflin and the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company for the use of the lunatic on the bond given by Grafflin at the time of his appointment. To the declaration which assigned as breaches of the bond the failure of Grafflin to bring the three thousand dollars into Court, and his neglect to account for a further sum of thirteen hundred and odd dollars, the defendants filed several pleas, and later on the Fidelity *175 and Guaranty Company interposed a further plea by way of defense on equitable grounds, which raises the important and the main question in the case. The plea was demurred to, the demurrer was sustained; and then the same question was again presented in an offer of testimony which, upon objection, was excluded, and finally was for the third time insisted on in the defendant's fourth prayer which was rejected.

The plea by way of defense on equitable grounds is quite lengthy and only the substance of it need be stated. It alludes to the order of October, 1898, authorizing the investment of three thousand dollars in a first mortgage; it avers that a mortgage was executed, and that the Fidelity and Guaranty Company learned on January 14th, 1901, that a prior mortgage for fourteen hundred dollars existed on the property and thereupon the company, before any action was taken on behalf of the lunatic against Grafflin and at least nine months before the institution of this suit, commenced proceedings to acquire title to the fourteen hundred dollar first mortgage, and on the maturity of the said first mortgage made a tender to the assignee and holder thereof, of all sums due thereon, which tender was refused; that the company did subsequently acquire the first mortgage, and on July the tenth, 1901, caused the same to be released whereby the three thousand dollar mortgage became and still is a first lien on the land "the same in every respect as if said prior mortgage of fourteen hundred dollars had never been executed:" That the order requiring Grafflin to bring three thousand dollars into Court was passed without the knowledge of or any notice to the defendant company; and that it was obtained at a time when the company was engaged in the litigation which resulted in procuring the assignment and the ultimate release of the first mortgage; that the order to bring the money into Court was not a final order, and is not such as the defendant could have appealed from even if it had been a party to the proceedings with notice. The plea further alleges that the defendant company was never called on by Circuit Court No. 2 to pay the three thousand dollars into Court; that it has never had an opportunity to *176 show to said Court the purchase and release of the first mortgage; that the pending suit was not authorized by Circuit Court No. 2, nor was it brought in the name of the substituted committee in pursuance of any order of Court, but was brought for the use of the lunatic himself. And finally that the defendant company is ready, upon proper order, to pay into Circuit Court No. 2 the sum of three thousand dollars with interest thereon to await the decision of said Court upon the question of the company's liability under the aforegoing facts; and that by reason of those facts the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain this suit as to said sum of three thousand dollars.

Does this plea set up a valid defense on the part of the surety to the suit on the bond? Assuming for the purposes of this discussion, and for those purposes only, that it is competent for a Court of law in a suit on a delinquent committee's bond to inquire, at the instance of a surety on that bond, into the propriety of an order or decree requiring that committee to bring into the Court under whose supervision he is administering his trust, the funds which form part of the lunatic's estate; do the facts set out in the plea show that the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction to pass the order, or that it committed an error in passing it? In other words, do those facts indicate that the order was wrong when passed? because if it was right whenpassed subsequent events could not make it wrong. Now, the plea admits that the Committee Grafflin had been authorized to invest the three thousand dollars on a first mortgage and it also admits that in disregard of the Court's order a second mortgage was taken. Those admissions, in effect and in fact, concede that Grafflin was in default, that he had failed to comply with the Court's order, and for that default and failure was removed from his fiduciary position and was required to bring the money into Court. There can, of course be no dispute as to the power of a Court of equity to remove a defaulting committee, or as to its authority to require him to bring into Court the trust money which he has neglected to invest according to the instructions which the Court has given him. The effect of the order which was *177 passed by Circuit Court No. 2 on June 14th, 1901, in addition to its operation as a rescission of the antecedent order authorizing an investment in a first mortgage, was to impose a duty on the committee which was explicitly within the terms of the bond; and as that order bound him to bring the money into Court his surety became liable to the lunatic's estate for the sum which the committee failed to pay into Court, inasmuch as by reason of that failure the committee did not "well and faithfully perform the trust reposed in him" by a "decree or order in the premises." The order of June 14th fastened a liability on Grafflin and that liability is prima facie binding on the surety. The principle is well settled in this State that a recovery against a principal in a bond, even though the sureties are not parties to the suit is prima facie binding on the sureties, and they can only relieve themselves from the binding effect of the recovery against the principal by showing that the amount recovered was in excess of the amount which the plaintiff in the judgment or decree was really entitled to recover, or that he was not entitled to recover at all. Parr v. State, c., 71 Md. 220;Iglehart v. The State, c., 2 G. J. 235; Owens v.Collinson, 3 G. J. 35; Roberts, c., v. Woven WireMattress Co., 46 Md. 385.

Now, the facts relied on in the plea by way of defense on equitable grounds to repel or rebut the prima facie case made against the surety by the decretal order of June 14th, 1901, against Grafflin, are simply these, viz., that, first, the tender by the Guaranty Company to the holder of the first mortgage of the amount due thereon extinguished the first mortgage before the proceedings to compel Grafflin to bring the money into Court were commenced; secondly, that the release of the first mortgage on July 10th, 1901, advanced the three thousand dollar mortgage to the position of a first mortgage and thus gratified the requirements of the order of October, 1898, which authorized the investment of three thousand dollars on a first mortgage; thirdly, that the order of June 14th was not a final and not an appealable order; fourthly, that the Circuit Court did not authorize the institution of the pending suit; *178 and finally, that the Guaranty Company is ready, upon a proper order, to bring into Court the sum of three thousand dollars with interest to await a decision of the company's liability under the facts recited in the plea. Not one of these facts tends to show that the sum of money which the Court ordered Grafflin to bring into Court was in excess of the amount which the lunatic's estate was entitled to recover from the defaulting committee; and much less do all of them combined, tend to show that the estate was not entitled to recover at all against Grafflin. In the first place the plea does not aver that the Guaranty Company was the owner of the equity of redemption in the mortgaged property, or that the company occupied any other relation to the property or the liens upon it that would entitle it to tender to the holder of the first mortgage the amount due thereon. The plea sets up simply the fact that the Guaranty Company, a mere stranger, tendered to the holder of the first mortgage the amount due thereon, whereby upon the holder's refusal to accept payment, the lien of the first mortgage was extinguished and the second mortgage thereupon became the first mortgage. It may be conceded that if there is a tender of the mortgage money at the time and in the manner prescribed in the condition of the mortgage, and the mortgagee refuses to receive it, the condition is complied with and the mortgagee must lose his security upon the land, which was merely collateral to the debt; although the mortgagor may be still liable for the money. Merritt v. Lambert, 7 Paige, 344; 28 Am. Eng. Encyl. L., 13. But to produce such a result the money really due must be tendered by a person having a right to make the tender, because a valid tender can only be made by the person, or the agent of the person, who has a right to pay the debt, as the debtor himself or his representatives, or the holder of the title to the estate or property on which the debt is a lien, or the holder of some subsequent lien having an equity of redemption; a tender by a stranger is not good. 28 Am. Eng. Ency. L., 34. The Guaranty Company was merely a surety on the bond of the lunatic's committee. It did not owe the mortgage debt upon *179 the property, it did not own the property and had no interest of any kind in it. It was a total stranger. It could not, therefore, as a volunteer make a valid tender of the money due on the first mortgage, and the tender which it did make had no effect of any kind on the lien or priority of that mortgage. That portion of the plea which relied on the alleged tender presented no bar to the plaintiff's right to recover.

Secondly. The release of the first mortgage on July 10th, or nearly a month after the order of June 14th, was passed, does not show that the latter order was erroneous when passed. The money was required to be brought into Court because the committee had disobeyed the Court's decree of October, 1898. If the subsequent release of the first mortgage, gave to the investment the security which was originally contemplated, perhaps upon an appropriate application to Circuit Court No. 2 it might have modified the order of June 14th, and might have sanctioned the investment though not made in the first instance according to the terms prescribed by it. But that was a matter for the equity Court having the management of the lunatic's estate to determine, and it was not a subject over which a Court of law in a suit on the committee's bond had any jurisdiction. The release of the first mortgage presented no defense to the suit on the bond.

Thirdly. It is not perceived how the fact that the order of June 14th, 1901, was not final and appealable can in the most remote way reflect upon its propriety or correctness. Nor do we see how the circumstance that the suit on the bond was instituted without first obtaining an order of Circuit Court No. 2, can affect the right of the plaintiff to recover, if a valid cause of action exists. The offer by the Guaranty Company to bring the money into Court to await the final result of the pending action interposes no legal obstacle to the prosecution of the suit.

Inasmuch, then, as the facts relied on in the plea furnished no defense, the trial Court did right in sustaining the demurrer to that plea; and for the same reason its ruling in the fifth exception excluding evidence of the facts stated in the plea, and *180 its ruling in the sixth exception rejecting the defendant's fourth prayer founded on the same facts, were both correct.

The first exception was taken to the ruling of the Court in admitting in evidence the petition of the lunatic by his next friend, Oliver J. Whildin, the answer of Grafflin thereto and the decree thereon of June 14th. These were the proceedings under which the liability of Grafflin was established. They were therefore admissible against him and against his surety.

The second exception was taken to the ruling of the Court in admitting in evidence an auditor's report showing the amount which went into Grafflin's hands from the sale of certain securities of the lunatic. Inasmuch as a part of those amounts are conceded to be in the possession of Grafflin and for which he ought to account to the plaintiff there was clearly no error in permitting the evidence to go to the jury.

The third exception brings up the rulings of the Court in refusing to allow the defendant to show that the first mortgage was released after the order of June 14th, had been passed. We have considered that matter in disposing of the demurrer. There was no error in the ruling.

The fourth exception was taken to the ruling on the demurrer. That is not the proper method to bring up such a question, but as it appears in proper form in the docket entries we have already considered it.

The defendant's first prayer, to the effect that there was no legally sufficient evidence to entitle the plaintiff to recover was properly rejected. What we have said in dealing with the demurrer is all that need be said in disposing of this prayer. The second prayer was withdrawn. The third prayer was rightly rejected. The proposition which it presented was not involved in the case.

The omission from the declaration of the name of the substituted committee, the Continental Trust Company, was remedied by an amendment made with leave of the trial Court.

We have gone into all the questions raised on the record, and as we have discovered no error in the rulings excepted to, the judgment, which was in favor of the plaintiff for the *181 three thousand dollars with interest plus a sum in cash conceded to be in Grafflin's hands, must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed with costs above and below.

(Decided February 13th, 1906.)