76 Md. 567 | Md. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The deficiencies of this record have been somewhat supplied by agreement of counsel. There are no objections made, however, to the regularity of the proceed
Proceeding’s were taken in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, by the committee and trustees of a lunatic, the late Thomas E. Berry, together with the appellants, Jackson Brother & Company, and other creditors, to have his real estate sold for the purpose of paying his debts, and supplying means for his maintenance. By virtue of a decree passed in these proceedings, the ¡property of the lunatic was sold; and the contention here is in regard to the distribution of the fund arising from such sale, and as to the disposition of certain rents collected by one of the parties to this suit. There are two appeals in this record — that of Jackson Brother & Company from the order ratifying account Q, and rejecting accounts N and P, so far as they reject or disallow certain claims for interest on'notes held by Jackson Brother & Company, and that of Mrs. Rosa P. Suit, in her own right, and as executrix and trustee, from the order ratifying certain accounts charging her, as assignee of T. Owen Berry, with certain rents collected by him.
The appellants Jackson Brother & Company contend that they are entitled to ten per cent, interest on their claim from the date of the promissory notes on which it is based to the day of sale, the order appealed from having allowed interest at the rate of tender cent, perannum only to the date of the decree, and thereafter to the day of sale, at the rate of six per cent. By the two notes produced in the cause as evidence of the claim of Jackson Brother & Company it appears that they were to receive interest at the rate of tender cent, per annum until the payment of the principal.
Although it is often said, in general terms, that a simple contract is merged in a judgment or decree rendered upon it, and that all its powers to sustain rights and enforce liabilities terminated in the judgment or decree, (15 Am. Eng. Encyl., 336,) yet it is also recognized as one of the limitations of this doctrine of merger, that the original contract is not in all cases to be entirely ignored subsequent to the rendition of a judgment or decree. Freeman on Judgments, (3 Ed.) sec. 244.
In the Bank of the United States vs. Merchants Bank of Baltimore, 7 Gill, 431, it is said that: “It is an acknowledged and familiar principle of the common law, that the original cause of action is considered as extinguished or merged by a judgment, when the judgment is held to be not merely prima facie, but conclusive evidence of the indebtment between the parties, and final, unless reversed, with respect to the subject-matter adjudicated.”
Subsequently this Court in Owens, Evans & Co. vs. Sprigg, et al., 2 Md., 457, fully recognize and approve the general doctrine of merger as limited by Mr. Freeman, ante; and while it is true that the application of the rule as stated in Owens, Evans & Co. vs. Sprigg, et al.,
The decree does not appear to have been passed only for the purpose of paying the claims mentioned in the petition, but to pay those and all that should be filed in accordance with the notice given by the trustees, and afterwards proven by satisfactory evidence.
But, as we have already said, we cannot accept the view that the decree for sale merged the claim of the
What we have said disposes of’this appeal, and it will not he necessary to consider the question raised under the provisions of the Constitution of the United States, Art. 1, sec. 10; for the appellants get by this ruling all they claim under their own construction of their contract. Nor need we consider what rate of interest the decree would have been subject to if it had been a final and conclusive decree, ascertaining the amounts of the debts of creditors.
In regard to the appeal of Mrs. Suit little need be said. It appears that T. Owen Berry was one of the two children of the late Thomas E. Berry, and as such would have been entitled to participate in the distribution of the fund which is here the subject of controversy. Mr. Berry, the father, died in 1886; and in the years 1887 and 1888 by deeds duly executed and recorded, T. Owen Berry sold and conveyed to Samuel T. Suit all his interest in the real estate in question.
T. Owen Berry collected at various times, from two of the tenants occupying portions of the land, rent amounting to the sum of $1095. We are unable to ascertain whether this rent was or was not collected by the permission or knowledge of the trustees. The. record shows only that the rent was collected as above stated. Nor is there any proof whatever that Suit, the grantee of T. Owen Berry, ever knew or had any notice of such collection by him. Under such circumstances, the question is whether the interest of Mrs. Suit, the devisee of Samuel T. Suit, in the proceeds of sale of the real estate can be charged with the rents collected by T. Owen Berry.
But the claim here is based upon nothing of this kind. While it may be admitted, perhaps, as contended by the appellees in this appeal, that, if T. Owen Berry had not conveyed his interest in the real estate of his father to the devisor of the appellant, his share of this fund should he charged with the rents collected by him, and not accounted for, yet having in fact conveyed to a grantee who, it is conceded, had no notice whatever of the facts upon which this supposed equity is based, we think it was error to have charged such rents against the share of the appellant, Mrs. Suit. The land having descended to T. Owen Berry as heir-at-law, the title conveyed to Suit was a legal title, and he took the land subject to the debts of his grantor’s father. In the case of a purchase of a devisee of a deceased debtor, “the purchaser is hound to take notice of the existence of claims against the deceased and the state of the personal assets.” Green vs. Early and Townshend, 39 Md., 231. And such was the case here. But it has never been held, as now contended, that when the heir conveys his Interest in real estate, his grantee takes it subject not only to the debts of the deceased ancestor, but to the debts of the heir, as well.
Such a view ignores our registry laws, and would make it impossible for any one to ascertain with certainty the liens and charges to which land, or an interest like the one here sought to be charged, might be subject. The order appealed from must he reversed, and the cause
Reversed and remanded.