Greenholtz v. Haeffer
Greenholtz v. Haeffer
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 8th of September, 1866, Mrs. Anna Greenholtz, then and now the wife of James W. Greenholtz, executed to Emanuel Burns two single hills each for $450, one payable on the 1st day of September, 1868, with interest from the 1st of September, 1866, and the other payable on the 1st of September, 1869, with interest also from the 1st of September, 1866.
To secure the payment of these notes she executed to said Burns at the same time what purports to he a mortgage upon certain lots belonging to her as her separate property and lying in Manchester, Carroll County. The husband did not join in the execution of the notes or mortgage.
The weight of the testimony establishes the fact that the only consideration of these notes was a balance due by the husband for a milk route, which he, some time before, had purchased.
After assignments and re-assignments the claim against Mrs. Greenholtz finally came into the hands of the appellee, who filed his hill to subject the lots mentioned to its payment.
We do not understand that it is contended on the part of the appellee that the paper signed by Mrs. Greenholtz can he enforced as a mortgage. On the contrary the allegation in the hill of complaint is, “ that whilst said paper purporting and intended to he a mortgage is not, and the said single hills are not, binding on and enforceable against the said Anna Greenholtz as such, by reason of her coverture, yet the same are evidence of a contract on her part, enforceable against said parcel of land and premises, as her separate estate in equity.”
To hold that the claim of the appellee could be enforced against the separate property of Mrs. G-reenholtz, upon the ground of a contract, as set up in the bill of complaint, would present the anomaly of giving to supposed obligations, confessedly invalid and not binding upon her, the same effect that could be accomplished if they were ever so valid and binding.
This cannot be ; and we see no ground upon which the bill of the apjsellee can be maintained.
The case of Tiernan vs. Poor & Wife, 1 G. & J., 215, is a very different case from the present. There the husband had united with the wife in the execution of the mortgage. It contained all the apt terms and necessary parties to make valid such an instrument, and was liable to the objection only of informality in the acknowledgment by the wife. While the Court did not uphold it as a mortgage, in the legal and technical sense of that term, they treated it as evidence of a contract, which would be enforced under proceedings for a special performance.
Here the husband is no party to any contract to convey, and a special performance by the wife alone would not satisfy the requirements of the 11th section, or give to the
The decree helow will he reversed and the hill dismissed.
Decree reversed, and bill dismissed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Anna Greenholtz and James W. Greenholtz v. William Haeffer
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- 1 case
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- Published