James B. Nutter & Co. v. Black , 225 Md. App. 1 ( 2015 )


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  •                REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1563
    September Term, 2013
    JAMES B. NUTTER & CO.
    v.
    EDWINA E. BLACK ET AL.
    Kehoe,
    Berger,
    Nazarian,
    JJ.
    Opinion by Kehoe, J.
    Filed: September 30, 2015
    This opinion is about the scope of legal protections afforded to individuals who
    are unable to handle their financial affairs in a responsible manner because of a physical
    or mental condition. We will use the terms “disabled,” “under a disability,” and “subject
    to guardianship proceedings” to refer to persons who have been adjudicated by a court to
    be unable to manage their property and for whom a guardian of the property has been
    appointed.1 We will employ the descriptors “incompetent” and “non compos mentis” for
    individuals who may be unable to manage their property, but who are not subject to
    guardianship proceedings. As we will explain, the distinction between an incompetent
    person and a disabled person is critical to the outcome of this appeal.
    James B. Nutter & Co. (“Nutter”) appeals from a judgment of the Circuit Court
    for Baltimore County in favor of Edwina E. Black and David L. Moore, Esquire. Nutter
    describes itself as “one of the leading reverse mortgage lenders[2] in the [United States].”
    1
    This terminology is consistent with Estates and Trusts (ET) Article § 13-101(e),
    which defines a “disabled person” as an adult who:
    (1)(i) Has been judged by a court to be unable to manage his property . . . ;
    and
    (ii) As a result of this inability requires a guardian of his property; or
    (2)(i) Has been judged by a court to be unable to provide for his daily
    needs sufficiently to protect his health or safety . . . ; and
    (ii) As a result of this inability requires a guardian of the person.
    2
    Commercial Law Article § 12-1201(h) defines a “reverse mortgage loan” as:
    [A] nonrecourse loan that:
    (1) Is secured by the borrower's principal dwelling;
    (2) Provides the borrower with purchase money proceeds, a lump sum
    payment, periodic cash advances, a line of credit, or any combination of
    those payment plans based on the equity in or value of the borrower's
    principal dwelling; and
    (3) Requires no payment of principal or interest until the full loan becomes
    (continued...)
    Ms. Black is a disabled person. Moore has been the court-appointed guardian of her
    property since 1994. In 2009, Nutter entered into a reverse mortgage loan with Ms.
    Black. This took place without Moore’s knowledge or consent. When Moore learned of
    the transaction, he refused to ratify it.
    Nutter filed suit seeking a judgment requiring Moore to ratify the transaction or,
    alternatively, granting various forms of restitutionary relief. The circuit court concluded
    that there was no legal or factual basis for any of Nutter’s claims and entered judgment
    accordingly. Nutter presents five issues, which we have consolidated and reworded:
    I. Did the circuit court err when it held that the loan transaction was void, as
    opposed to voidable?
    II. Is Nutter entitled to the restitution of any part of the money it paid to Ms.
    Black?
    III. Is Nutter entitled to subrogate its interest to that of the previous lender?
    We will affirm the circuit court’s judgment.
    2
    (...continued)
    due and payable.
    In Bennett v. Donovan, 
    703 F.3d 582
    , 584–85 (D.C. Cir. 2013), the Court
    described reverse mortgages:
    Unlike a traditional mortgage, in which the borrower receives a lump sum
    and steadily repays the balance over time, the borrower in a reverse
    mortgage receives periodic payments (or a lump sum) and need not repay
    the outstanding loan balance until certain triggering events occur (like the
    death of the borrower or the sale of the home).
    2
    Background
    This case came to the circuit court on cross-motions for summary judgment. Both
    parties relied upon a joint stipulation of relevant facts, which we summarize and
    supplement as necessary.
    A. Ms. Black’s Disability
    More than 25 years ago, Ms. Black sustained permanent and significant
    neurological injuries after she was deprived of oxygen during a surgical procedure. In
    1989, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City determined that Ms. Black was disabled, and
    appointed guardians of her person and her property.3 In 1994, the Circuit Court for
    3
    ET §§ 13-201(c) and 13-705(b) provide for the appointment of guardians for the
    disabled. Section 13-201(c), which provides for the appointment of a guardian of the
    property, states:
    (c) Disabled persons. – A guardian shall be appointed if the court
    determines that:
    (1) The person is unable to manage his property and affairs effectively
    because of physical or mental disability, disease, habitual drunkenness,
    addiction to drugs, imprisonment, compulsory hospitalization,
    confinement, detention by a foreign power, or disappearance; and
    (2) The person has or may be entitled to property or benefits which require
    proper management.
    Section 13-705(b), providing for the appointment of a guardian of the person, states:
    (b) Grounds. – A guardian of the person shall be appointed if the court
    determines from clear and convincing evidence that a person lacks
    sufficient understanding or capacity to make or communicate responsible
    decisions concerning his person, including provisions for health care, food,
    clothing, or shelter, because of any mental disability, disease, habitual
    drunkenness, or addiction to drugs, and that no less restrictive form of
    (continued...)
    3
    Baltimore City appointed Moore as the substitute guardian of Ms. Black’s property.
    In 1995, Moore, acting in his capacity as guardian of the property, purchased a
    home (the “Stuart Mills property”) located in Baltimore County for Ms. Black’s use. To
    pay for the purchase, Moore, again in his capacity as guardian, borrowed $119,200 and
    signed a deed of trust note and a purchase money deed of trust. The note was eventually
    acquired by Bank of America. The deed of conveyance and the deed of trust were
    recorded in the land records of Baltimore County.
    The deed of conveyance identified the grantee as “Edwina E. Black” and stated in
    pertinent part:
    See Order in the Matter of Edwina Black for the appointment of a Guardian
    as filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Case No.
    89200059/CE100323. Said Order having appointed David L. Moore,
    Attorney at Law, as Substitute Guardian.
    The deed of trust was executed as follows: “Edwina E. Black by David L. Moore,
    Guardian of the Property of Edwina E. Black.” In 2007, Ms. Black’s guardianship action
    was transferred from the Circuit Court for Baltimore City to the Circuit Court for
    Baltimore County.
    B. The Reverse Mortgage Transaction
    In April 2009, Ms. Black, acting on her own and without the knowledge or consent
    of Moore, entered into a reverse mortgage transaction with Nutter regarding the Stuart
    3
    (...continued)
    intervention is available which is consistent with the person’s welfare and
    safety.
    4
    Mills property. Before closing, Nutter engaged a title agent to examine the title to the
    residence, and to perform the typical closing services. The joint stipulation states that
    “[Nutter] and the title agent that handled the closing failed to properly identify the
    guardianship action in the Court record.” The stipulation does not address whether Nutter
    or the title agent realized that Ms. Black was a disabled person based upon the
    information contained in the deed and deed of trust.
    Most of the documents that Ms. Black signed as part of the reverse mortgage
    transaction are not in the record. What is clear is that Ms. Black executed two deeds of
    trust4 encumbering the Stuart Mills property to secure repayment of the loan. At closing,
    Nutter paid $154,317.13 as follows: $80,651.96 to Bank of America to satisfy the existing
    loan and to extinguish the existing deed of trust; $57,132.01 directly to Ms. Black; and
    $16,533.16 for settlement expenses. Moore knew nothing about any of this. Ms. Black
    deposited the proceeds into her personal account.5
    Moore first became aware that something was amiss when he received a notice
    from Bank of America stating that its loan had been satisfied and its deed of trust
    released. He made inquiries and learned of the reverse mortgage transaction. Moore then
    4
    Ms. Black signed a deed of trust to Nutter and a second deed of trust to the
    Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
    5
    The transcript of Moore’s deposition was attached as an exhibit to the stipulation.
    Moore testified that he had established a bank account in Ms. Black’s sole name in which
    he deposited $500 monthly for her personal use. Moore stated that this arrangement was
    “pursuant to the direction of the court[.]”
    5
    withdrew from Ms. Black’s account $34,106, that is, what was left of the money that had
    been paid to Ms. Black at closing. Moore deposited this money into a separate
    guardianship account.
    On July 17, 2009, Moore notified Nutter of Ms. Black’s disability and requested
    that Nutter provide him with the documents relating to the transaction. Nutter complied
    with this request. Thereafter, Nutter, and its agents, attempted to contact Moore over a
    period of several months, but received no response.
    Finally, in November 2009, Nutter sent Moore a letter asking him (1) to ratify the
    reverse mortgage transaction or (2) to disaffirm it and reimburse Nutter in the amount of
    $137,738.97, that is, the sum of the Bank of America pay-off and the money paid to Ms.
    Black at closing. Approximately eight months later, Moore, through counsel, took the
    position that the reverse mortgage transaction was void as a matter of law and that he was
    under no duty to return any portion of the loan proceeds.6
    C. The Circuit Court Litigation
    Nutter initiated this action on June 17, 2011, when it filed a complaint for a
    declaratory judgment and related relief against Ms. Black and Moore. Nutter asserted that
    it had entered into the reverse mortgage transaction with Ms. Black “without actual
    knowledge that [she had been] declared disabled and that [Moore] had been appointed
    6
    Although Moore placed what was left of the money paid to Ms. Black in a
    separate account, he has withdrawn funds from that account to pay for counsel fees and
    litigation expenses. As of January 1, 2011, the balance in the account was $25,792.
    6
    Guardian of the Property of Ms. Black.” Nutter presented three theories of relief relevant
    to this appeal. First, Nutter sought a judgment ratifying the reverse mortgage agreement
    between Ms. Black and Nutter. Second, Nutter asserted that Ms. Black and Moore had
    been unjustly enriched in the amount of $137,783.97, that is, its disbursements at closing
    less settlement expenses, and requested a judgment against Ms. Black and Moore in that
    amount. Third, Nutter sought to subrogate its interests to those enjoyed by Bank of
    America under the prior lien.7
    Moore and Ms. Black filed an answer which sought, as additional relief, a
    judgment that the reverse mortgage was void, a declaration of title to the property in
    favor of Moore, as guardian of Ms. Black’s property, attorney’s fees, and any other relief
    necessary.
    After the completion of discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary
    judgment. After oral argument on the motions, the circuit court, in a thorough and well-
    considered memorandum opinion and order, denied Nutter’s motion for summary
    judgment and granted Ms. Black and Moore’s cross-motion.
    In summary, the court concluded that the reverse mortgage transaction was void,
    rather than voidable, and that Nutter was on constructive notice of Ms. Black’s disability.
    The court denied Nutter’s claim for restitution because it was premised solely upon its
    contention that the reverse mortgage transaction was voidable.
    7
    Nutter also asked the court to remove Moore as guardian. Nutter does not assert
    on appeal that the circuit court erred in denying this request.
    7
    As to Nutter’s claim for subrogation, the court noted that subrogation in this
    context is available “when there is a debt or obligation owed by one person which
    another person, who is neither a volunteer nor an intermeddler, pays or discharges under
    such circumstances as in equity entitle him to reimbursement to prevent unjust
    enrichment[.]” The court explained that “[a] volunteer is a party who has paid the debt of
    another without any assignment or agreement and is not under legal obligation, or
    compulsion to do so for the preservation of his own rights[.]” The court reasoned that,
    because the reverse mortgage transaction was void, Nutter had no rights in the Stuart
    Mills property and “thus was not compelled to pay the mortgage in order to preserve any
    rights.”
    After the court’s memorandum order and opinion was issued, both parties filed
    motions to alter or amend the judgment on essentially the same grounds, i.e., that both
    parties had requested declaratory relief but that the court had failed to issue a declaratory
    judgment. The court denied Nutter’s motion but entered a supplemental order declaring
    null and void “the Second Deed of Trust (to Secure a Reverse Mortgage Loan) . . . in
    favor of the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development,” as well as “the Deed of
    Trust in favor of [Nutter].”
    Analysis
    We review the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, Harford County
    v. Saks Fifth Ave. Distrib. Co., 
    399 Md. 73
    , 82 (2007), determining, first, whether there
    8
    exists a dispute as to any material fact and, second, whether the circuit court was legally
    correct in granting judgment in favor of the prevailing party. Lombardi v. Montgomery
    County, 
    108 Md. App. 695
    , 710 (1996).
    I. Void or Voidable?
    The parties agree that Ms. Black did not have the legal capacity to enter into the
    reverse mortgage transaction, but they disagree as to the implications of her condition.
    Moore asserts that Ms. Black’s lack of capacity rendered the reverse mortgage
    transaction void. If the contract is void, Nutter has no right to enforce the terms of the
    reverse mortgage transaction and Nutter’s remedies, to the extent that it has any, lie in
    subrogation and restitution.
    For its part, Nutter contends that the reverse mortgage transaction was voidable.
    Nutter argues that, when Moore learned of the reverse mortgage transaction, he could
    have rescinded the transaction but was required to do so within a reasonable time period.
    Moreover, Nutter asserts that if Moore had opted to rescind, he would have been
    required to pay Nutter $137,783.97, representing the pay-off amount of the Bank of
    America loan plus the money paid to Ms. Black at closing. Because none of this
    occurred, Nutter contends that Moore, through his inaction, constructively affirmed the
    reverse mortgage transaction and that the circuit court erred in failing to enter a
    declaratory judgment to that effect.
    In considering the parties’ contentions, we will first examine the concepts of void
    9
    and voidable contracts, focusing on two recent and representative decisions of the Court
    of Appeals that approach the question from somewhat different perspectives. These
    decisions instruct that, in considering whether a contract should be treated as void or
    voidable, the Court plays particular heed to the degree to which a judicial conclusion that
    a conveyance is void might affect the interests of good faith third parties. We will review
    Maryland’s statutory provisions for the protection of disabled persons as well as a series
    of earlier decisions of the Court of Appeals on which Nutter relies. Finally, we will
    consider the rights of third parties and how those rights might be affected by a judgment
    that the deeds of trust in question are void.8
    A. The Distinction Between Void and Voidable Contracts
    “A void contract is ‘not a contract at all’ . . . and all parties, present and future,
    would be equally allowed to avoid the contract.” Julian v. Buonassissi, 
    414 Md. 641
    , 666
    (2010) (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 7 cmt. a (1981)). In contrast,
    a voidable contract is one in which one or both of the parties have the right to “avoid the
    relations created by the contract, or by ratification of the contract to extinguish the power
    of avoidance.”’ 
    Id. at 666–67
    (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 7
    (1981)). The distinction between a void and a voidable transaction is particularly
    important with regard to deeds and other instruments conveying interests in real property.
    As the Julian court noted:
    8
    Our analysis is limited to whether an attempt by a disabled person to convey an
    interest in real property is voidable or void.
    10
    once a deed is considered void ab initio or of no legal effect, there are
    lasting consequences to everyone in the subsequent chain of title. As a
    result, we have been circumspect at common law in finding a deed void ab
    initio and have limited our rulings regarding voidness to circumstances that
    go to the face of the deed, e.g., forgery.[9]
    
    Id. at 668
    (footnote omitted). In this context, the Court cited two of its earlier decisions
    that dealt with “grantors suffering from mental infirmities,” Riley v. Carter, 
    76 Md. 581
    ,
    595–96 (1893), and Evans v. Horan, 
    52 Md. 602
    , 610–11 (1879). In both of those cases,
    the Court concluded that such deeds were voidable, but not void. (We will discuss Riley
    and Carter, as well as some related decisions, later in this opinion.) Maryland’s appellate
    courts have not definitively addressed whether a conveyance by a disabled person is
    voidable or void.
    B. Maryland’s Guardianship Statute
    Maryland’s first comprehensive statute for the protection of disabled persons was
    first enacted at Chapter 72 of the Laws of 1785. That statute replaced a patchwork quilt
    of common law remedies and granted Maryland’s Chancellor the “full power and
    9
    Maryland courts have recognized another class of void deeds, namely, those
    involving a “lack of delivery.” Scotch Bonnett Realty Corp. v. Matthews, 
    417 Md. 570
    ,
    583 (2011). Failure of delivery can be actual, i.e., when a deed is not recorded and the
    grantor retains control over it after its execution and acknowledgment. Fike v.
    Harshbarger, 
    20 Md. App. 661
    , 665 (1974), aff’d, 
    273 Md. 586
    (1975). An actual failure
    of delivery does not affect the title of a good faith third party because recordation passes
    title. See Real Property Article § 3-101. A failure of delivery can also be constructive, as
    when a deed purports to convey property to a non-existent entity. See Zulver Realty Co.
    v. Snyder, 
    191 Md. 374
    , 382 (1948). Such a defect would not affect good faith third
    parties because a title examination would disclose that the grantee was not incorporated
    when the deed was recorded.
    11
    authority in all cases to superintend, direct, and govern [incompetent persons’] affairs
    and concerns, both as to the care of their persons, and management of their estates[.]” In
    re Estate of Rachel Colvin, 3 Md. Ch. 278, 282 (1851). Maryland’s guardianship statute
    has been modified on numerous occasions, and is now codified at Title 13 of the Estates
    and Trusts Article.10
    We are primarily concerned with Subtitle 2, which pertains to the protection of the
    property of disabled persons. A circuit court may appoint a guardian of the property upon
    a finding that:
    (1) The person is unable to manage his property and affairs effectively
    because of physical or mental disability, disease, habitual drunkenness,
    addiction to drugs, imprisonment, compulsory hospitalization,
    confinement, detention by a foreign power, or disappearance; and
    (2) The person has or may be entitled to property or benefits which require
    proper management.
    ET § 13-201(c).
    Appointment and qualification of a guardian of the property “vests in him title to
    all property . . . of the protected person that is held at the time of appointment or acquired
    later.” ET § 13-206(c)(1)11 ; Buxton v. Buxton, 
    363 Md. 634
    , 647 n.2 (2001) (“Under
    10
    A very useful discussion of the historical development of Maryland’s
    guardianship statutes may be found in Joan L. O’Sullivan and Diane E. Hoffman, The
    Guardianship Puzzle: Whatever Happened to Due Process? 7 MD. J. CONTEMP. LEGAL
    ISSUES 11, 13–24 (1996). What is essentially Maryland’s current guardianship statute
    was enacted as Chapter 768 of the Acts of 1977. 
    Id. at 24.
           11
    A guardian is qualified when he or she posts the bond required by the court. ET
    (continued...)
    12
    current law, a guardian for the property of an incompetent person does hold title to the
    protected person’s property.” (emphasis in original)). The guardian is required to use
    those resources “as needed for the clothing, support, care, protection, welfare, and
    rehabilitation of the disabled person.” ET § 13-214(b)(2). In so doing, the guardian must
    “give consideration to the support and care of the disabled person during the probable
    period of the estate and the needs of persons dependent upon the disabled person.” 
    Id. Consistent with
    these statutory provisions, a disabled person lacks the capacity to
    enter into a contract. Gillet v. Shaw, 
    117 Md. 508
    , 512 (1912) (“According to the
    established law in this state . . . the contract of a person adjudged to be insane cannot be
    enforced against him.”). Similarly, a disabled person is unable to convey an interest in
    real property. Supreme Council of Royal Arcanum v. Nicholson, 
    104 Md. 472
    , 479
    (1906) (When adjudicated to be non compos mentis, an individual “is divested of his
    property[.]”); Law v. John Hanson Sav. & Loan, 
    42 Md. App. 505
    , 512–13 (1979) (After
    appointment, the guardian “was vested with title to [the disabled person’s] property and
    was the only person who validly could execute . . . a deed of trust[.]” Moreover, the
    disabled person “had no power” to do so.).
    Additionally, an order appointing a guardian of the property is constructive notice
    of the limitations upon the disabled person’s ability to enter into legally-binding
    contracts. Flach v. Gottschalk, 
    88 Md. 368
    , 376 (1898) (A guardianship proceeding
    11
    (...continued)
    § 13-206(b).
    13
    “furnish[es] notice—actual in some instances, constructive in others, but in both a
    sufficient notice—of the lunacy, and this would preclude an averment that the party
    dealing with the lunatic was ignorant of the latter’s mental incapacity.”); Seaboard
    Surety Co. v. Boney, 
    135 Md. App. 99
    , 117 n.3 (2000) (“‘[G]uardianship proceedings are
    treated as giving public notice of the ward’s incapacity and establish his status with
    respect to transactions during guardianship even though the other party to a particular
    transaction may have no knowledge or reason to know of the guardianship[.]’” (quoting
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 13 cmt. a.)).12
    12
    Nutter makes a notice argument which we can dispose of quickly. ET §
    13-217(a) provides that:
    Letters of guardianship may be recorded in the land records of the county of
    residence of the minor or disabled person and of any other county where
    there is real estate in which the estate has an interest. The recordation has
    the same effect as notice as recording a conveyance from the minor or
    disabled person to the guardian.
    Moore did not record letters of guardianship in the land records of Baltimore
    County. Nutter asserts that, because he failed to do so, it cannot be charged with
    constructive knowledge of the guardianship. This contention is unpersuasive for three
    reasons.
    First, both the deed of conveyance to Ms. Black and the purchase money deed of
    trust disclosed that Ms. Black was a disabled person, so the land records indisputably
    provided notice. Second, that the guardianship action is pending in the circuit court of the
    county in which the property in question is located provides constructive notice. See
    
    Flach, 88 Md. at 376
    ; 
    Boney, 135 Md. App. at 117
    n.3.
    Finally, Nutter’s proposed construction of § 13-217(a) is inconsistent with ET §
    13-206(c)(1) which, as we have noted, provides that appointment and qualification
    “vests” the guardian with title to “all property . . . of the protected person[.]”
    (continued...)
    14
    Finally, we recognize that guardianship proceedings implicate one of the most
    fundamental values of our society. As the Court of Appeals explained:
    a court . . . assumes jurisdiction in guardianship matters to protect those
    who, because of illness or other disability, are unable to care for
    themselves. In reality the court is the guardian; an individual who is given
    that title is merely an agent or arm of that tribunal in carrying out its sacred
    responsibility.
    Kicherer v. Kicherer, 
    285 Md. 114
    , 118 (1979).
    C. Atkinson v. McCulloh and Related Decisions
    Nutter’s contention that the deeds of trust are voidable, instead of void, is largely
    based upon its interpretation of the Court’s analysis in Atkinson v. McCulloh, 
    149 Md. 662
    (1926). Nutter views this case as standing for the proposition that a deed by a
    12
    (...continued)
    If, as Nutter claims, a guardianship adjudication does not affect the interests of
    third parties until a notice of appointment is filed in the land records, then the provisions
    of § 13-206 regarding when title vests in the guardian are, for most purposes,
    meaningless. We cannot accept such an interpretation. See Ray v. State, 
    410 Md. 384
    ,
    404 (2009) (Statutes should be construed so that “no word, clause, sentence or phrase is
    rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or nugatory.”) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    Having explained what § 13-217(a) does not mean, we turn, very briefly, to what
    it does mean. Section 13-217(a) provides that a guardian “may” file a notice of
    appointment in the land records. When used in a statute, “may” is “generally permissive
    rather than mandatory.” See, e.g., Brodsky v. Brodsky, 
    319 Md. 92
    , 98 (1990). In our
    view, the legislature’s use of “may,” in the context of the statutory scheme, indicates that
    § 13-217(a) was intended to provide an optional means by which guardians can clarify
    the chain of title. In cases in which the disabled person owns real property in several
    counties, such a filing, or something similar in either the land records or the court
    records, may be necessary to provide constructive notice in counties other than the one in
    which the guardianship action is pending.
    15
    disabled person is voidable. Nutter misreads the opinion.
    Atkinson is the capstone of a relative handful of Maryland cases that dealt with
    conveyances,13 or in some cases contracts,14 by incompetent individuals who had not
    been adjudicated to be disabled at the time of execution of the document in question. In
    these decisions, the Court, either by holding or in dicta, established that such transactions
    were (1) voidable but not void; and (2) could not be attacked by, or on behalf of, the
    incompetent person, unless the contractual terms were objectively unfair or the
    counterparty knew of the incompetent party’s mental state when the contract was
    executed. 
    Flach, 88 Md. at 372
    –74.15
    In Atkinson, the Court was confronted with a case in which the counterparty
    (McCulloh) was aware, or should have been aware, of the incompetent’s (Atkinson’s)
    13
    Riley v. Carter, 
    76 Md. 581
    , 595–96 (1893); Evans v. Horan, 
    52 Md. 602
    ,
    610–11 (1879); Key’s Lessee v. Davis, 
    1 Md. 32
    , 39 (1851). In Julian, the Court cited
    Riley and Evans as two decisions holding that deeds executed by “grantors suffering
    from mental infirmities” were voidable but not 
    void. 414 Md. at 668
    n.16.
    14
    
    Flach, 88 Md. at 370
    , and Chew v. Bank of Baltimore, 
    14 Md. 299
    , 320 (1859).
    15
    In Flach, after surveying Maryland and English decisions on the subject, the
    Court concluded:
    the effect [of those decisions] has been to . . . fix[] a liability upon the
    lunatic when there has been, at the time the contract was made, no judicial
    ascertainment of his lunacy and when the contract is fair and bona fide,
    unless the other party to the contract knew at the time it was entered into
    that the lunacy 
    existed. 88 Md. at 374
    .
    16
    mental 
    status. 149 Md. at 673
    . Three years after the deed in question was recorded, and
    after McCulloh entered into a contract to convey the property to a third party, Atkinson’s
    heirs filed an action to set the deed aside. 
    Id. at 665–66.
    After considering the Maryland
    cases which we discussed in the previous paragraph, as well as out-of-state decisions and
    scholarly authorities, the Court concluded as follows:
    it seems to us the sounder view, and one more nearly in accord with the
    decisions of this court, is that the contract of a lunatic, made with a sane
    person who had, or could by the exercise of reasonable prudence have had,
    knowledge of his disability, may be avoided at the option of the lunatic
    when of sound mind, or by his guardian, heirs, or devisees . . . provided
    they exercise that option within a reasonable time, and surrender whatever
    benefit they have received from the transaction.
    
    Id. at 674.
    In its brief, Nutter asserts that the Atkinson analysis “does not distinguish between
    contracts made by individuals already declared incompetent by a court versus contracts
    made with individuals not declared incompetent by a court. It simply refers to ‘lunatics.’”
    The problem with Nutter’s argument is that it takes the above-quoted passage from
    Atkinson out of context. Earlier in its analysis, the Court noted that “[i]n this state the
    contract of a person who has not been adjudicated non compos mentis is not void but
    voidable.” 
    Id. at 672.
    Moreover, there is nothing in the Court’s opinion that suggests that
    Atkinson had been adjudicated as an incompetent either before, or after, the relevant
    conveyance. The same is true for the other decisions holding that deeds by incompetent
    persons were voidable but not void. See 
    Riley, 76 Md. at 591
    –92 (the court’s summary of
    17
    the pertinent facts); 
    Evans, 52 Md. at 605
    –06, 609 (same); Key’s 
    Lessee, 1 Md. at 37
    –38
    (same); see also Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Tait, 
    54 F.2d 383
    , 385 (D. Md. 1931)
    (“[T]he Maryland cases very clearly hold that contracts and conveyances by persons non
    compos mentis, before adjudication and not under guardianship, are merely voidable, and
    not void.” (citing Atkinson, Flach, Riley, and Evans)).
    In this line of cases, only Flach v. Gottschalk addressed the significance of an
    adjudication of disability. Flach entered into a contract for the purchase of whiskey and,
    after having taken delivery, refused payment based on his assertion that he was
    incompetent at the time the contract was made. The issue before the Court of Appeals
    was whether Flach could repudiate the contract. 
    Id. at 370.
    The Court began its analysis
    by noting that:
    Speaking generally, the contracts of a lunatic, who has not been found by
    an inquisition to be insane, do not belong to the class that are absolutely
    void, but fall within the group that is described as voidable. This is
    certainly the law in Maryland.
    
    Id. (citations omitted).
    After reviewing relevant Maryland and out-of-state authority, the Court
    commented:
    As the lunatic’s contract at best is only voidable it would be unjust and
    inequitable to allow him to repudiate it if it had been made fairly and in
    good faith when the other party was ignorant of the disability, unless both
    parties upon a rescission of it can be restored to the situation they originally
    occupied.
    ****
    18
    The inconvenience which it is supposed may result from this doctrine can
    easily be averted by a formal inquisition of lunacy. Such an inquisition
    would furnish notice—actual in some instances, constructive in others, but
    in both a sufficient notice—of the lunacy; and this would preclude an
    averment that the party dealing with the lunatic was ignorant of the latter’s
    mental 
    incapacity. 88 Md. at 375
    –76 (citations omitted; emphasis added).
    In short, the Atkinson line of cases provides no support for Nutter’s contention
    that the reverse mortgage transaction is voidable, as opposed to void.
    D. The Rights of Good Faith Third Parties
    We fully recognize that Maryland courts “have been circumspect at common law
    in finding a deed void ab initio and have limited . . . rulings regarding voidness to
    circumstances that go to the face of the deed, e.g., forgery.” 
    Julian, 414 Md. at 668
    (footnote omitted). This circumspection arises out of a concern for the rights of innocent
    third parties because “once a deed is considered void ab initio or of no legal effect, there
    are lasting consequences to everyone in the subsequent chain of title.” 
    Id. In considering
    whether the deed executed by Ms. Black should be treated as the
    effective equivalent of a forged deed, two recent decisions of the Court of Appeals are
    instructive. The first is Julian itself; the second is Scotch Bonnett Realty Corp. v.
    Matthews, 
    417 Md. 570
    (2011). In Julian, the Court considered when a violation of a
    statute could render a deed void; in Scotch Bonnet, the issue was whether a forged
    signature that was part of a larger scheme of misrepresentation rendered a deed void.
    Julian did not involve an allegation of forgery. Instead, Julian asserted that the
    19
    deed in question was void because she had signed it without having been given a notice
    of a right of rescission that was required by the Protection of Homeowners in Foreclosure
    Act (“PHIFA”), Real Property §§ 
    7-301–7-321. 414 Md. at 666
    . The Court noted that
    various provisions of PHIFA explicitly provided that certain activities undertaken in
    violation of the statute were void. 
    Id. at 675.
    However, the Court found no indication in
    the language of the statute that the legislature intended that a failure to provide the right
    of rescission notice rendered a subsequent deed void. 
    Id. at 674.
    The Court concluded:
    In the present situation, the Legislature has spoken clearly when a
    provision was to be voided for violation of PHIFA. With respect to the
    notice of rescission language, the Legislature failed to include a reference
    to “void[.]” . . . To declare a deed void because of lack of notice could and
    would radically alter the protection of all bona fide purchasers in a
    subsequent chain of title.
    
    Id. at 677.
    Scotch Bonnett involved a deed that was obtained by a forgery but was not itself
    forged. Johnson, a mere acquaintance of the sole director of Scotch Bonnett Realty
    Corporation (“SBRC”), submitted corporate articles of amendment to the Maryland
    Department of Assessments and Taxation that designated him as an “officer” of 
    SBRC. 417 Md. at 573
    . The articles of amendment were purportedly signed by the corporation’s
    resident agent and attorney but the signature was forged. 
    Id. at 572–73.
    Johnson then
    sold a property owned by SBRC to an innocent third party. 
    Id. at 574.
    Johnson signed his
    own name to the deed purportedly as an officer of SBRC. 
    Id. Litigation ensued
    and,
    eventually, the following question was certified to the Court of Appeals by the United
    20
    States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland:
    Does the use of a deed that is neither a forged document, nor signed with a
    forged signature, but which derives its transactional vitality from forged
    corporate articles of amendment, render a conveyance of land void ab
    initio, or, is good title transferred to bona fide purchasers for value without
    notice?
    
    Id. at 572.
    The Court concluded that such a deed was not void ab initio because, among other
    reasons, an affirmative answer:
    would inject uncertainty into the law of conveyancing, beyond that already
    existing under the present rule under which a forged deed is void ab initio.
    Such a rule would turn into a jury question whether fraud in the
    inducement voided a deed ab initio and destabilize the predictability of
    result for bona fide purchasers for value. Stability of the law is particularly
    desirable in the field of real property law. A property owner’s title should
    not be at risk that a grantor in the chain of title decides that the act of
    granting has been induced by a written misrepresentation, even if the
    misrepresentation includes a forged signature.
    
    Id. at 587–88.
    Both Julian and Scotch Bonnett cited with approval this Court’s opinion in
    Harding v. Ja Laur Corp., 
    20 Md. App. 209
    (1974). In Harding, we noted that a “forger,
    having no title can pass none to his vendee.” 
    Id. at 214–15.
    From this premise, we
    concluded that:
    Consequently, there can be no bona fide holder of title under a forged deed.
    A forged deed, unlike one procured by fraud, deceit or trickery is void from
    its inception. The distinction between a deed obtained by fraud and one that
    has been forged is readily apparent. In a fraudulent deed an innocent
    purchaser is protected because the fraud practiced upon the signatory to
    such a deed is brought into play, at least in part, by some act or omission on
    21
    the part of the person upon whom the fraud is perpetrated. . . . A forged
    deed, on the other hand, does not necessarily involve any action on the part
    of the person against whom the forgery is committed.
    
    Id. at 215.
    Returning to the case before us, no provision in Maryland’s guardianship statute
    explicitly provides that a deed by a disabled person is void. However, ET § 13-206(c)(1)
    provides that upon appointment and qualification, a guardian is vested with “title to all
    property of . . . the protected person that is held at the time of appointment or acquired
    later[.]” Thus, a disabled person, like a forger, holds no legal title to property. Owning
    nothing, she can convey nothing. 
    Harding, 20 Md. App. at 214
    –15.
    Additionally—and to address the policy concern raised in Julian and Scotch
    Bonnett—concluding that a deed by an adjudicated disabled person is void poses no
    threat whatsoever to subsequent good faith purchasers. A good faith purchaser is one
    who “acquires property for valuable consideration, in good faith, and without notice of
    another’s prior claim to the property.” Fishman v. Murphy, 
    433 Md. 534
    , 546 (2013). All
    potential purchasers of real property are on constructive notice of properly indexed
    information in the land and court records of the county in which the property is located.
    See Greenpoint Mortgage Funding v. Schlossberg, 
    390 Md. 211
    , 228–30 (2005). Thus, a
    court order appointing a guardian of the property is constructive notice to the world that
    the disabled person is without authority to convey his or her property. 
    Flach, 88 Md. at 374
    ; 
    Boney, 135 Md. App. at 117
    n.3. To be sure, a would-be purchaser or lender may
    22
    choose to forego a title examination, or to hire a negligent examiner, or to decline to take
    the trouble to look at the information generated by the title search, but imprudence of this
    sort bears its own risks. There is no reason for us to treat a deed by an adjudicated
    disabled person any differently from any other readily-recognizable title flaw. For us to
    do so, “would invite a ‘head in the sand’ approach, or create an exception that would
    ‘swallow the rule’ and undermine the protective purpose of guardianships.” 
    Boney, 135 Md. App. at 117
    n.3.
    Even from the scanty facts in the record, it is easy to conclude that treating the
    reverse mortgage transaction as void furthers the purposes of Maryland’s guardianship
    law. Before the transaction occurred, the guardianship estate had more than $200,000 in
    equity in the Stuart Mills property—an asset that could be used to meet Ms. Black’s
    future needs. After the transaction, the guardianship estate’s equity in the property was
    significantly reduced and, over time, would have been eliminated altogether. Moreover,
    any future increase in value of the Stuart Mills property would inure to Nutter’s, and not
    to Ms. Black’s, benefit. Were we to conclude that the transaction was voidable, Moore
    would be required either to (1) ratify the transaction, a decision which, over time, would
    deprive Ms. Black of all equity in the property; or (2) rescind the transaction and make
    Nutter whole, a process which would require the effort and expense of obtaining
    substitute financing, as well as scraping money together to reimburse Nutter for the
    money that Ms. Black had herself spent.
    23
    In our view, neither of these outcomes furthers the purposes of Maryland’s
    guardianship law. The court assumed jurisdiction over Ms. Black’s property in the first
    place to protect her because she is unable to care for herself. 
    Kicherer, 285 Md. at 118
    .
    As the court’s agent, Moore is obligated to “discharge his duties for the best interest of
    the . . . disabled person or his dependents.” ET § 13-206(c)(1). Those duties cannot be
    responsibly discharged by allowing the value of a major asset of the guardianship estate
    to disappear or by spending scarce guardianship funds16 to save Nutter from the
    consequences of a problem entirely of its own making.
    Our conclusion is squarely in accord with the scholarly authorities,17 as well as
    16
    The record contains no information as to the value of the guardianship estate.
    However, Moore testified in his deposition that Ms. Black’s annual income from all
    sources varied between $45,000 and $65,000, and that it was not unusual for her
    expenses to exceed her income.
    17
    See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 13 (1981) (“A person has no
    capacity to incur contractual duties if his property is under guardianship by reason of an
    adjudication of mental illness or defect.”); 2 JOYCE PALOMAR, PATTON AND PALOMAR
    ON LAND TITLES § 336 (3d ed. 2003) (“If a mentally incompetent person has been placed
    under guardianship, the general rule is that any conveyance by her is void, not merely
    voidable. This is not only because of her incapacity, but because she does not have the
    legal control of her property.”); 2 THOMPSON ON REAL PROPERTY § 12.05(c) (David A.
    Thomas, N. Gregory Smith, eds., 3d Thomas ed. 2014) (“An attempted conveyance by an
    incompetent person after . . . a committee has been appointed is usually void, either
    according to statute or by judicial decision.”); 1 POWELL ON REAL PROPERTY § 6.04
    (Michael Allan Wolf ed., 2014) (same); 5 HERBERT THORNDIKE TIFFANY, THE LAW OF
    REAL PROPERTY § 1370 (Basil Jones ed., 3d ed. 1939) (A conveyance by a grantor after
    an adjudication of incompetency “is ordinarily regarded as absolutely void.”). See also
    THOMPSON ON REAL 
    PROPERTY, supra
    , at § 12.05(c) n.183 (noting that only two states,
    Arkansas and Maine, treat such conveyances as voidable).
    24
    decisions by the courts of other states.18
    For these reasons, we hold that the reverse mortgage transaction between Nutter
    and Ms. Black was void ab initio. Moore was not required to take affirmative steps to
    ratify or rescind the transaction. Nutter’s remedies, to the extent that they exist, lie in
    subrogation and unjust enrichment, and we will turn to those topics.
    18
    See, e.g., First Interstate Bank of Sheridan v. First Wyo. Bank, N.A. Sheridan,
    
    762 P.2d 379
    , 382 (Wyo. 1988) (“While a contract made by one under guardianship by
    reason of incompetency has been held to be void, a contract made prior to an
    adjudication of incapacity and appointment of a guardian, but while the person is under
    mental disability, is only voidable.” (citations omitted)); Horton v. Lothschutz, 43
    Wash.2d 132, 137 (1953) (“The deed of an insane person, made prior to an adjudication
    of insanity, is voidable but not void. Of course, if the deed is executed after an
    adjudication of insanity, it is clearly void rather than only voidable.” (citation omitted));
    Tomlins v. Cranford, 
    227 N.C. 323
    , 326 (1947) (“A deed executed by a person who has
    been adjudged to be insane, sans proof of restoration of sanity, is void.”); Moore v.
    Coleman, 
    128 W. Va. 223
    , 227 (1945) (“After a person has been adjudged insane or to
    be a mental defective, and a committee has been appointed for him, a deed of conveyance
    made while the guardianship of such committee actively continues is void[.]”); Hughes v.
    Jones, 
    116 N.Y. 67
    , 72–73 (1889) (“All contracts of a lunatic, habitual drunkard or
    person of unsound mind, made after an inquisition and confirmation thereof, are
    absolutely void, until by permission of the court he is allowed to assume control of his
    property.”); Huntington Nat’l Bank v. Toland, 
    71 Ohio App. 3d 576
    , 578 (Ohio Ct. App.
    1991) (The rule in Ohio is that “once a guardian has been appointed for an incompetent,
    transfer of property thereafter is void and may be set aside.”);Cohen v. Crumpacker, 
    586 S.W.2d 370
    , 374 (Mo. Ct. App. 1979) (“While a contract made by one under
    guardianship by reason of incompetency is void, a contract made prior to adjudication
    but while the person is under mental disability is only voidable.”); Gibson v. Westoby,
    
    115 Cal. App. 2d 273
    , 276 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1953) (“An adjudication that a person is
    incompetent constitutes notice to all the world of the incapacity of such person to make a
    valid conveyance. . . . A conveyance by such a person is void, and not merely
    voidable.”).
    25
    II. Restitution – Unjust Enrichment
    “A successful unjust enrichment claim serves to ‘deprive the defendant of benefits
    that in equity and good conscience he ought not to keep, even though he may have
    received those benefits quite honestly in the first instance, and even though the plaintiff
    may have suffered no demonstrable losses.’” Hill v. Cross Country Settlements, 
    402 Md. 281
    , 295–96 (2007) (quoting 1 DAN B. DOBBS, DOBBS LAWS OF REMEDIES § 4.1 (2d ed.
    1993)). A claim of unjust enrichment consists of three elements:
    1. A benefit conferred upon the defendant by the plaintiff;
    2. An appreciation or knowledge by the defendant of the benefit; and
    3. The acceptance or retention by the defendant of the benefit under such
    circumstances as to make it inequitable for the defendant to retain the
    benefit without the payment of its value.
    
    Id. at 295
    (quoting County Comm’rs v. J. Roland Dashiell & Sons, Inc., 
    358 Md. 83
    , 95
    n.7 (2000)).
    Nutter contends that, if it is not entitled to ratification of the contract, it is entitled
    to restitutionary relief in the amount of $137,783.97, that is, the sum of payoff figure for
    the Bank of American loan and what was disbursed directly to Ms. Black at settlement.
    The circuit court denied this relief. Nutter contends that the circuit court erred in doing so
    because it:
    conflated the enforceability of the reverse mortgage loan with [Nutter’s]
    entitlement to equitable relief in the form of restitution to prevent unjust
    enrichment. . . . Moreover, even assuming arguendo that the reverse
    mortgage transaction was void (versus voidable), the concept of providing
    equitable relief in cases involving void transactions is established under
    Maryland law.
    26
    Moore and Ms. Black suggest that this contention is not preserved for appellate
    review. We agree.
    The thrust of Nutter’s argument before the circuit court was that the transaction
    was voidable, and that Moore failed to act in a timely fashion to rescind the transaction.
    At the conclusion of this discussion, Nutter stated “[a]lternatively, [Nutter] would be
    entitled to judgment against Defendants for restitution in the amount of $137,783.97.” In
    its opinion, the circuit court noted the following (emphasis added):
    [Nutter] argues that it is entitled to restitution because Defendant Moore
    failed to properly avoid the mortgage contract. In light of the court’s
    finding that the contract is void, that argument is moot and [Nutter] asserts
    no other grounds upon which restitution should be granted.
    The circuit court did not “conflate[] the enforceability of the reverse mortgage
    loan with [Nutter’s] entitlement to equitable relief in the form of restitution to prevent
    unjust enrichment” because Nutter did not assert that it was entitled to restitution if the
    transaction was void.
    On appeal, we generally consider only issues “raised in or decided by the trial
    court . . . .” Md. Rule 8-131(a). Before the circuit court, Nutter took the position that it
    was entitled to restitution because the transaction was voidable. On appeal, it argues that,
    even if the transaction was void, it is still entitled to restitution based on the theory of
    unjust enrichment. These contentions are by no means the same, and Nutter’s appellate
    argument is not preserved for our review. See Starr v. State, 
    405 Md. 293
    , 298–99 (2008)
    (“[T]he trial court is not required to imagine all reasonable offshoots of the argument
    27
    actually presented.”); Faith v. Keefer, 
    127 Md. App. 706
    , 737–38 (1999) (“As these
    contentions [as to why the trial court erred in granting summary judgment] have been
    raised for the first time on appeal, they are not preserved for appellate review, and we
    decline to consider them.”).19
    III. Subrogation
    As its final contention, Nutter asserts that the circuit court erred when it denied
    Nutter’s request to be subrogated to the lien of Bank of America against the Stuart Mills
    property. We do not agree.
    Subrogation simply means substitution of one person for another;
    that is, one person is allowed to stand in the shoes of another and assert that
    person’s rights against the defendant. Factually, the case arises because, for
    some justifiable reason, the subrogation plaintiff has paid a debt owned by
    the defendant. Having paid the defendant’s creditor, the plaintiff stands in
    the creditor’s shoes . . . and is entitled to exercise all the remedies which
    the creditor possessed against the defendant.
    
    DOBBS, supra
    , at § 4.3(4) (footnotes and quotation marks omitted). The leading cases in
    Maryland with regard to the closely-related topics of subrogation and unjust enrichment
    are 
    Hill, 402 Md. at 294
    –307, and Fishman v. Murphy, 
    433 Md. 534
    , 546–57 (2013).
    Hill involved a series of miscommunications between the seller of a home, Hill,
    the closing agent for the buyer, Cross Country Settlements, LLC, and the holder of a note
    19
    Looking past preservation, Nutter’s claim that it is entitled to restitution is
    unpersuasive because, as we explain in Part III of this opinion, Nutter is an “officious
    payor” and therefore is ineligible for the remedies of restitution and subrogation.
    Moreover, we can discern no reason why the guardianship estate should be required to
    expend its assets to rescue Nutter from a debacle entirely of its own making.
    28
    secured by a deed of trust encumbering Hill’s property, Provident 
    Bank. 402 Md. at 289
    –91. As a result, Cross Country conducted settlement on Hill’s property under the
    erroneous belief that the property was unencumbered. 
    Id. at 291.
    “Hill receiv[ed] the
    proceeds of the sale of the Property without deduction for any amount due on the . . .
    Provident loan,” and “Cross Country, as agent for Stewart Guaranty Company
    (“Stewart”), issued a title insurance policy to the Buyer.” 
    Id. After the
    settlement, Cross
    Country received a letter from Provident seeking payment on the loan encumbering the
    property. 
    Id. Cross Country
    sought payment from Hill, but was ignored. 
    Id. at 291–92.
    Stewart, as the title insurer, ultimately paid the amount due after foreclosure proceedings
    were initiated, and demanded reimbursement from Cross Country. 
    Id. at 292.
    Cross
    Country paid Stewart, and filed suit against Hill, seeking reimbursement under theories
    of unjust enrichment and subrogation. 
    Id. at 292–93.
    Although the Court was unable to
    resolve the merits of the claim on the record before it, it did address Hill’s contention that
    she was not liable to Cross Country because it was acting as “a volunteer” when it paid
    Provident. 
    Id. at 301.
    The Court explained that:
    It is undisputed that once properly yoked with the label of “mere volunteer”
    or "officious payor," a plaintiff is prohibited from recovering under
    theories of unjust enrichment or subrogation. It less clear, however,
    precisely when a plaintiff's payment to a third party satisfying the liability
    of the defendant renders a plaintiff a volunteer and casts him or her "into
    legal outer darkness." 
    DOBBS, supra
    , § 4.3. Palmer notes that "[w]hen one
    person, without request, knowingly pays the debt of another . . . restitution
    will normally be denied." GEORGE E. PALMER, THE LAW OF RESTITUTION §
    29
    10.2 (1978).
    402 Md. at at 301–02.
    In considering this question, the Court reached several relevant conclusions. First,
    the Court noted that, although different authorities use the terms “volunteer,” “officious
    payor,” and “intermeddler,” the terms have “identical meanings.” 
    Id. at 303
    n.13. Second,
    the Court concluded that, as a matter of public policy, the concept of “volunteer” should
    be the same for unjust enrichment and subrogation claims. 
    Id. at 305
    n.15. Finally, the
    Court noted that traditional definitions of “volunteer” and “officious payor,” etc. provide
    only limited guidance in cases “where it is asserted that a ‘plaintiff settled and paid a . . .
    claim asserted by a third party on which the defendant was solely liable.’” 
    Id. at 303
    . The
    Court concluded:
    The factual novelty of the present case requires us to adopt a rule to
    guide future unjust enrichment and subrogation actions. We agree with the
    Restatement (First) of Restitution (1937) § 79,[20] that a plaintiff may
    recover for a payment or payments to a third party as long as the plaintiff
    was not officious in making such payment or payments. Although we shall
    not supply an exhaustive list of situations where a plaintiff would not be
    deemed officious, generally a plaintiff is not officious when he or she acts
    under a legal compulsion or duty, acts under a legally cognizable moral
    20
    RESTATEMENT (FIRST) OF RESTITUTION § 79 (1937) provides the following:
    A person who entered into a transaction as an obligor, or who was claimed
    by the creditor to be an obligor, upon an obligation which, as between such
    person and another, the other had a primary duty to discharge, and who has
    paid the creditor in discharge of the obligation at a time when it existed
    against the other, is entitled to indemnity from the other, although
    originally or at the time of payment, the payor was under no duty to make
    the payment, unless his payment was officious.
    30
    duty, acts to protect his or her own property interests, acts at the request of
    the defendant, or acts pursuant to a reasonable or justifiable mistake as to
    any of the aforementioned 
    categories.[21] 402 Md. at 305
    (emphasis added).
    Applying this rule to the facts of the case before us, there is no contract to which
    Nutter can turn to demonstrate that it was acting pursuant to a legal duty, because, as we
    discussed above, the contract between Nutter and Ms. Black is void. Nutter does not
    assert that it was acting under any sense of moral duty, nor can it, because, from Nutter’s
    standpoint, this was strictly a business transaction. Nutter was also not acting to protect
    any property interest—the contract was void and Nutter did not have any interest in the
    Stuart Mills property. Moreover, Nutter cannot claim to have acted at the request of Ms.
    Black because she is a disabled person and only Moore had the authority to make
    21
    In a footnote appended to this passage, the Court stated:
    Public policy also is best served by liberally permitting a plaintiff to be
    subrogated to the rights of a third-party creditor. In traditional insurance
    subrogation cases, a narrow definition of the volunteer rule serves to
    encourage insurers to defend their insured even where there is a dispute
    over liability or coverage, thus avoiding unnecessary delay in the settlement
    of claims. “[P]ayment is not voluntary if it is made with a reasonable or
    good faith belief in obligation or personal interest in making that payment.”
    COUCH ON INSURANCE § 223:27 (3d ed. 2005). “If plaintiff pays
    defendant's debt under the mistaken apprehension that he was himself
    under a duty to do it . . . there is less reason to treat him as being officious,
    and the courts will usually grant restitution.” [John W. Wade, Restitution
    for Benefits Conferred Without Request, 19 VAND. L. REV. 1183, 1201
    (1996)].
    
    Id. at 305
    n.15.
    31
    business decisions on her behalf.
    In its brief, Nutter does not contest any of this. Instead, it argues, although it uses
    different terms, that it was acting “pursuant to a reasonable or justifiable mistake”
    regarding Ms. Black’s legal capacity. In this regard, it relies on Fishman v. Murphy.
    In Fishman, Street either (1) prevailed upon his elderly and terminally ill mother,
    Dorothy Urban, to sign a deed conveying her residence to him by abusing a confidential
    relationship that existed between them or (2) forged her name to the deed. At the time of
    the conveyance, the property was subject to a mortgage to 
    CitiFinancial. 433 Md. at 539
    .
    Ms. Urban passed away and her estate filed suit against Street, asserting that the deed to
    him was null and void, and asking the court to order Street to transfer the property to the
    estate. 
    Id. at 541–42.
    While this action was pending, Street refinanced the property with
    1st Chesapeake Home Mortgage, LLC, paying off the CitiFinancial loan, which had a
    balance of $59,086.72. 
    Id. at 539.
    Thereafter, the circuit court imposed a constructive
    trust upon the property in favor of the estate without deciding the deed was void ab
    initio.22 
    Id. at 542.
    While the action between the estate and Street was pending, but
    before the court entered judgment, 1st Chesapeake assigned the note and its rights under
    the deed of trust to Midfirst Bank. 
    Id. Street defaulted
    on the note and Midfirst filed a foreclosure action. 
    Id. at 542–43.
    Ms. Urban’s estate filed a motion to stay and dismiss the foreclosure action. 
    Id. at 543.
    22
    The deed would have been void if Ms. Urban’s signature had been forged but
    voidable if her signature had been the result of undue influence.
    32
    The estate asserted that (1) the judgment imposing a constructive trust on the property
    created a presumption that the deed to Street was void; and (2) alternatively, that the
    doctrine of lis pendens operated to provide Midfirst with constructive notice of the
    estate’s claim and thus it could not claim that it was a bona fide purchaser. 
    Id. As to
    the
    first issue, the Court of Appeals held that “the bare creation of a constructive trust,
    without a concurrent declaration that the underlying deed is void, renders the subject
    deed merely voidable.” 
    Id. at 548.
    As to the second issue, the Court concluded that the
    litigation between the estate and Street provided at least constructive notice of the
    estate’s claim and therefore Midfirst was not a bona fide purchaser. 
    Id. at 551.
    The Court of Appeals then turned to an alternative argument presented by
    Midfirst: that it was entitled to be subrogated to the CitiFinancial deed of trust. The Court
    concluded that subrogation was appropriate because:
    Petitioners’ predecessors in the chain were not volunteers or intermeddlers
    because they expended money to retire the existing loan in order to protect
    their interests. [1st Chesapeake], believing (mistakenly) that Street held a
    valid deed to the Pasadena property, expended $59,086.72 to pay-off the
    existing loan placed by Urban. Midfirst, as assignee of the note underlying
    the Street deed of trust, acquired an interest in the Pasadena property and
    became a lien holder as to that property. . . . Although Petitioners had
    constructive notice of another's claim on the land, constructive notice alone
    does not defeat the application of equitable subrogation. As we stated in
    [G.E. Capital v. Levensen, 
    338 Md. 227
    , 243 (1995)], equitable
    subrogation applies in the “absence of actual knowledge on the part of the
    subrogation claimant concerning the intervening lien.”
    
    Id. at 556
    (citation omitted).
    Nutter likens itself to the lenders in Fishman and asserts (citations omitted):
    33
    [T]he Court of Appeals in Fishman concluded that the lenders in that case
    were not volunteers or intermeddlers simply “because they expended
    money to retire the existing loan in order to protect their interests.”
    That is exactly what [Nutter] did. Like any other mortgage lender,
    and just like the lender in Fishman, [Nutter] retired the existing loan in
    order to protect its interests as the intended first mortgage lien creditor.
    [Nutter] lacked actual knowledge of the fact that Ms. Black had been
    adjudged incompetent. In fact, one of the parties’ stipulated facts was that
    “[Nutter] and the title agent that handled the closing failed to properly
    identify the guardianship action in the Court record.” All of the cases make
    it clear that constructive knowledge on the part of a creditor does not bar it
    from equitable subrogation.
    Nutter’s reliance on Fishman is misplaced because the deed in question in
    Fishman was voidable but not void. In contrast, as we have explained, the reverse
    mortgage transaction was void. A voidable deed extends varying degrees of protection to
    grantees and good faith third parties. A void deed does neither. Moreover, Nutter’s
    assertion that it was acting “[l]ike any other mortgage lender” rings singularly hollow.
    Because a disabled person lacks the capacity to enter into contracts and cannot encumber
    property, 
    Law, 42 Md. App. at 512
    –13, no mortgage lender exercising even an iota of
    diligence and prudence would extend a loan to an adjudicated disabled person. Finally,
    Nutter’s claim that we should afford some special significance to the fact that the parties
    had stipulated that it “failed to properly identify the guardianship action in the court
    record” ignores the fact that both the deed of conveyance to Ms. Black as well as the
    purchase money deed of trust unambiguously informed anyone who bothered to read
    them that she was under a disability and that Moore was the guardian of her property.
    34
    Hill and Fishman make clear that subrogation is a remedy that should be liberally
    applied to prevent unjust enrichment. However, these cases are equally clear that
    subrogation is not available to an officious payor.23 Those who seek equitable relief must
    first demonstrate that they deserve it. As a paradigmatic example of an officious payor,
    Nutter has failed to do so.
    THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE
    COUNTY IS AFFIRMED. APPELLANT TO PAY COSTS.
    23
    If Nutter were not an officious payor, that is, if Nutter fit into one of the
    categories described by the Court in 
    Hill, 402 Md. at 305
    , or something analogous,
    subrogation might be appropriate. However, Hill and Fishman are clear that subrogation
    and restitution are remedies that are not available to officious payors.
    Moreover, in an appropriate situation, other considerations might outweigh
    Nutter’s status as an officious payor. One example might be if the proceeds of the
    refinancing were used to purchase necessaries for Ms. Black. See, e.g., Johns Hopkins
    Hosp. v. Pepper, 
    346 Md. 679
    , 692 (1997) (“The doctrine of necessaries has long been a
    feature of Maryland law. It is as much a mechanism to protect minors as it is one to
    protect those who provide them with necessary services and goods.”); Flach, 
    88 Md. 368
    , 372 (1898) (The doctrine of necessaries is applicable to contracts made by
    incompetent persons.). Nutter does not suggest that the reverse mortgage transaction is
    subject to the doctrine of necessaries.
    35