55 Md. 105 | Md. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a single question for our decision. It is a controversy between lien holders in the distribution of an insolvent’s estate. The Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, whence the appeal comes, certifies, that “ the only question raised and decided by him sitting as a Court of insolvency, was whether the judgment, the docket entries whereof were filed in the cause by the Consolidated Real Estate and Eire Insurance Company, or the mechanics’ liens, filed by the several claimants, were entitled to priority upon the agreed statement of facts filed therein, in the distribution of the fund in the hands of the trustee in insolvency, amounting to the sum of $693.00.” The judgment was, by the decision of that Court, awarded priority and the audit so allowing was ratified; and the only question before us is, was that determination right as a question of law.
The judgment, so awarded priority, was rendered by confession in the Baltimore City Court on the 3rd day of October, 1814, for $4500, with interest until paid and costs. Eiled with the judgment was this agreement: “It is agreed, that judgment shall be entered in this case in favor of the plaintiff for forty-five hundred dollars, with interest from this date and costs. The said judg
It is admitted that the proceeds of sale, in the hands of the trustee ($693.00) for distribution, arise from the sale of the insolvent’s leasehold interest in certain lots leased for ninety-nine years, renewable forever, to the insolvent, by the appellee. “ It is also admitted, that the said Jones (the insolvent) contemplating borrowing money from the said Consolidated Real Estate and Fire Insurance Company of Baltimore, a body corporate, and duly incorporated under the laws of Maryland, and in pursuance of an agreement whereby the said company was from time to time, to make certain advances to said Jones for the erection of certain buildings and improvements on said lots, and to secure the same, confessed the judgment in favor of said company, prior to the commencement of the said buildings, and upon the terms filed with said judgment, a copy of which terms is herewith filed, and marked ‘ terms of judgment, A No. 1,’ and which it is agreed shall be taken as a part of this statement of facts.” It is admitted also, “that there was a mortgage of even date with the lease and the judgment, executed and recorded prior to the commencement of the buildings to secure the advances and loans mentioned in the terms of the judgment, which advances were to be made to the said Jones, to be used in the construction of the said buildings and improvements, in the amounts, and at the times fixed therefor in the said mort
The appellants contend, that as their lien by the law commences with the commencement of the building, and the advances of the appellee to Jones, the insolvent, by concession, were not made until after the building was actually begun, and by' the terms of the agreement as specified in the mortgage mentioned in the agreement, were not to be made until after the building was commenced, the mechanics’ liens are entitled to priority, notwithstanding the judgment antedates the commencement of their lien. To sustain this contention, he cites us to numerous cases, and among them to Hopkinson vs. Holt, 9 House of Lords Cases, 514, wherein the case of Gordon vs. Grahame, 7 Vin. Abr., 52, and 2 Eq. Cases Abr., 598, has been overruled ; which case, being as it is argued, the basis of this Court’s decision in Wilson, et al. vs. Russell, et al., (13 Md., 495,) the appellants insist should now he overruled also.
The decision in 13th Maryland does not rest, and was not placed solely on the case of Gordon and Grahame; for this Court, mentioning the conflict of authority existing on the subject, and citing the various authorities upon both sides of the question, said that “the weight of authority sustained the principle established in Gordon and Grahame.”
It is now the settled law of this State, and it may be regarded as the settled law almost everywhere, that a judgment may be taken to secure future advances and liabilities where there is an agreement to make those advances; “ and any future advances not exceeding the amount of the judgment made thereunder will be covered thereby.” Neidig, Adm’r Neidig vs. Whiteford, 29 Md., 188. In the present case it is admitted there was such an agreement. All we know on that subject, is derived from the admission of facts, upon which the case was considered and decided by the Court of Common Pleas. Hot only by a fair construction of that admission, are we warranted in supposing there was an agreement on the part of the appellee to make the advances contemplated by the judgment; it is the only and unavoidable conclusion the Court below, or we could draw from the admission of facts. The agreement of facts not only says there was “ such agreement,” but it also admits that the mortgage, which was also taken for securing the same advances, fixed the precise times at which the advances were to be made. If there was no admission on the subject, it is not absolutely clear that the terms of the judgment subscribed by the parties, and filed as its basis, does not by necessary implication import such an agreement on the part of the appellee to make the advances, as Neidig’s
The 15th sec. of Art. 61, expressly postpones to such liens all mortgages, judgments, liens and encumbrances which attach upon such building or the grounds covered thereby, “ subsequently to the commencement thereof.” This judgment is not embraced within the letter of the statute, for it was confessedly entered before the building was commenced; hut it is insisted, that it is embraced within the spirit of the statute, and is to he postponed to the appellants’ liens. The contention of the appellants involves this assumption, that, while the appellee’s judgment was a lien when they did the work and furnished the materials, their lien for work and materials is superior in equity, though dating subsequently, because the statute favors them over the judgment; notwithstanding, in point of fact, the advances may have been made before the work was all done, or the materials were all furnished.
It does not appear at what dates the advances were made, though it is admitted, for the purposes of this decision, that they were all made after the building was actually begun. Eor aught that appears, therefore, the advances may have been made, in fact, before the hulk of the materials was furnished, and the work was hut partially done. If the rights of the parties are to he adjusted according to the dates when the liens by law, became such, the judgment being earlier in date was properly
Order affirmed with costs.