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Reports of Cases in the High Court of Chancery of Maryland 1846-1854
Volume 200, Volume 3, Page 550   View pdf image (33K)
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550 HIGH COURT OF CHANCERY.
in lot No. 2, and which, according to said division, was assigned
to Thomas and John Purdy, in 1845, and of which they have
been in the undisturbed possession and enjoyment from that
time until this bill was filed, in November, 1850 ?
If the deed from Stockett and wife to Thomas and John
Purdy created a resulting trust in favor of Galen, to the extent
of the purchase-money paid by him, still, if he consented to
the mortgage executed by the grantees to the Bank, to secure
the payment of the money bound to pay for the land (and that
he did BO consent there is no room to doubt), he thereby parted
with his equitable title, and his widow, to whom he was not
married until September, 1850, can have no claim to dower,
because, in that case, he not only did not hold the equitable
title at the time of his death, but never had it during the
coverture. It is true, the answer of the defendants admits,
that so much of the debt due the Bank, as, according to the
understanding between these parties, Galen and Henry Purdy
were required to pay, has been paid, but still a portion of the
mortgage debt to the Bank is due, and the equitable title of
Galen is held by the Bank as security for such payment.
In the case of Hopkins vs. Frey, the Court of Appeals say:
" Our State adheres to the English law (which declares a
widow shall not be endowed of an equity of redemption), except
when and so far as it may be changed by our Legislature."
And it was decided in that case, and in the subsequent case of
Miller vs. Stump, that the widow shall not be endowed of such
equity, if the husband parts with it in his lifetime. It is not
a very easy matter to determine what sort of an interest Galen
Purdy had in the land purchased from Stockett and wife.
He certainly bad no legal title, because the land was conveyed
by the vendors to his brothers, Thomas and Henry Purdy;
and upon the facts as exhibited by this record, there might be
some difficulty in saying there was a resulting trust in his
favor, implied by law, from the manifest intention of the
parties. There can be no doubt, that if an estate is purchased
in the name of one, and the consideration-money is actually
paid at the time by another, that there is a resulting trust in

 
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Reports of Cases in the High Court of Chancery of Maryland 1846-1854
Volume 200, Volume 3, Page 550   View pdf image (33K)
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