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Spirits Co. v. Baltimore

Court of Appeals of Maryland
May 26, 1933
166 A. 407 (Md. 1933)

Summary

In American Medicinal Spirits, a company contracted to purchase land from the city conditioned on the city passing an ordinance within one year.

Summary of this case from Prince George's County v. Silverman

Opinion

[Nos. 40, 41, April Term, 1933.]

Decided May 26th, 1933.

Sale of City Property — Charter Requisites — Intended Contract as Offer — Mode of Acceptance — Time as Essential.

Where, after Baltimore City had bought from a distilling company certain land for the purpose of widening a street, the plan was abandoned, and a purported contract was accordingly signed by city officials on the one side and the company on the other for the sale of the land back to the company at a named price, held that the contract did not bind the city, because of non-compliance with the charter requirement that a disposition of property no longer needed by the city for public use be authorized by ordinance, and approved by the commissioners of finance, and made at public sale. pp. 132, 133

The instrument thus not binding the city, it was in legal effect merely a unilateral offer by the company to buy on the terms prescribed therein. p. 133

These terms providing that the contract should be void if the city failed, within a year, to pass ordinances closing that portion of the street and authorizing the sale, and the offer not having been accepted, within the time named, by the passage of such ordinances, the offer expired. pp. 133, 134

One offering to sell property may impose whatever terms he may choose, as that the offer be accepted within a designated time in a specified manner. p. 133

The time limit named, in an offer by a distilling company to buy city property, for the acceptance of the offer, held to be material and essential, in view of the facts that the land, which had formerly belonged to the company, was covered by the front portions of warehouses still used by the company for the storage of its products, and that whether the company would again own the property with the improvements in the same condition as at the time of its sale to the city, or would be compelled to alter its warehouses, depended on the city's acceptance of the offer. pp. 133, 134

While in equity time is not usually essential in the sale of land, yet, where expressly made so by the terms of the contract or by special circumstances, it becomes essential, and equity will not lend it aid for specific enforcement of the contract regardless of the limitation of time. p. 134

Where by the terms of an offer to a city to buy from it certain property, the city was required to accept the offer by the passage of certain ordinances within a year, and the provision as to time was, under the circumstances, material and essential, the city could not, by passing the ordinances after the year, acquired a right to specific performance. pp. 134, 135

Where a vendor sued for specific performance, for an injunction against an action at law previously brought by the purchaser to recover a part payment made by it on the purchase price, and for an accounting as to taxes and rents due by the purchaser, already in possession of the property, held that, on refusal of specific performance and an injunction, the bill would not be retained for the purpose of an accounting, since the vendor could present any defense by way of set-off or otherwise in the action at law. p. 135

Decided May 26th, 1933.

Appeals from the Circuit Court of Baltimore City (STUMP, J.).

Bill by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore against the American Medicinal Spirits Company. From the decree rendered, each party appeals. Decree reversed except with respect to costs.

The cause was argued before BOND, C.J., PATTISON, URNER, ADKINS, OFFUTT, DIGGES, PARKE, and SLOAN, JJ.

Raphael Walter, with whom were Sykes, Nyburg, Goldman Walter on the brief, for American Medicinal Spirits Company. Allen A. Davis and S. Wilmer Pleasants, Assistant City Solicitors, with whom was R.E. Lee Marshall, City Solicitor, on the brief, for Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.


The American Medicinal Spirits Company and its predecessors in title were the owners of a parcel of land in Baltimore City which fronted on the west side of Russell Street the distance between the south side of Stockholm Street and the north side of Alluvian Street. The land was improved by three separate warehouses whose front walls were in the building line of Russell Street. In order to widen this street from sixty-six feet to one hundred feet, the municipality passed an ordinance on May 14th, 1926, and pursuant to its provisions duly acquired a fee simple title to that portion of this land which is included between the western boundary line of Russell Street and a line beginning in the northern edge of Alluvian Street thirty-four feet west from Russell Street and running thence northeastwardly, at a right angle with Alluvian Street, a distance of 270.76 feet to intersect Russell Street, after it turns to the northeast. The projected widening of Russell Street involved the removal of a corresponding portion of the front of every one of the three warehouses, which were specially constructed and used for the storage of whiskey in barrels; and the construction of new front walls. The company was awarded the sum of $50,000, and was obliged to remove, at its own expense, those parts of the three warehouses which were on the parcel taken, but whether it was to keep the material salvaged seems in controversy. The award was paid on December 15th, 1930, by the municipality to the company, which thereupon conveyed the land. Pending the time when the strip would be required for its contemplated physical incorporation in the street, the city permitted the warehouses to occupy the land granted without requiring the removal or change in the improvements, and without having received any rent or reward for this occupancy. Since December 15th, 1930, no taxes have been paid on this parcel. See Charter, art. 1, sec. 6 (26) (A), Code Pub. Loc. Laws 1930, art. 4, sec. 6 (26)(a).

The widening of this particular section of Russell Street remained in abeyance until 1931, when, upon the assumption that the authorized improvement would not be made, representatives of the city and the company carried on negotiations which culminated in a document of August 24th, 1931, which purported to be an agreement of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore and of the company. The paper writing was duly executed by the company, and the name of the municipality was subscribed by the mayor, its seal affixed, and the execution attested. The mayor, comptroller, city register, and a commissioner of finance, also, signed in their official capacities to signify their approval of the terms of the agreement.

The instrument thus executed recited that the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, in consideration of the payment of the sum of $50,000, without interest, in an installment of $10,000 on the day of the execution of the agreement, and in four credit installments of $10,000 payable on the 1st day of September in the years 1932, 1933, 1934, and 1935, did thereby sell and agree to convey, to the company, the fee simple title, free of all incumbrances, to the identical parcel of land, with the improvements thereon, which the municipality had previously acquired from the company by its deed of December 15th, 1930. The company promised to buy on these terms, and to make the final payment at the time of delivery to the said company of a valid deed for the property, with taxes paid to September 1st, 1935.

The terms which were stipulated, and require statement, are:

1. The agreement was made subject to the passage (1) of an ordinance for the purpose of closing that portion of Russell Street which was the location of the parcel sold and conveyed; and (2) of an ordinance authorizing the disposal or sale of the property mentioned when the proceedings for the closing of Russell Street under the first ordinance should have been completed.

2. The company was to be entitled to the possession of the premises sold upon the payment of $10,000 on the signing of the agreement, and the municipality was to waive all claim for use and occupancy of the premises before the execution of the agreement.

3. The failure of the company to pay any installment as due, and the continuance of such default for a period of thirty days, after the notice provided, should constitute the company a tenant at will, with an obligation to surrender the premises upon ten days' written notice. In the event of the prescribed default, after notice, all moneys paid should be considered and retained as rent.

4. The importance of this next paragraph requires it to be quoted:

"It is further understood and agreed, That in the event that the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore shall fail or refuse to pass the ordinances herein provided within one year from day hereof, then this agreement shall be void and of no effect, and all moneys paid under this agreement shall be returned to the party of the second part (company), and upon the return of said payments, the party of the first part (municipality) shall be entitled to take possession of the premises mentioned herein within ninety days after notice of such failure or refusal."

The importance of these stipulations lies in the conditions and limitations of the statutory law in connection with which the stipulations must be read. In the first place, after the title to the land had been duly acquired by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore as a part of the roadbed of the widened street, the title to this land became inalienable, except in the mode and manner prescribed by law, which, while providing for laying out, opening, extending and widening any street within the bounds of the city, confers the power to close up, in whole or in part, any street which the public welfare or convenience may require. Charter P.L.L. of Baltimore City (Wallace), art. 1, sec. 7, p. 55, art. 1, sec. 6 (26) (A), p. 34 (Code Pub. Loc. Laws, 1930, art. 4, secs. 7, 6 (26)(a); Minor Privilege Cases, 131 Md. 600, 605, 102 A. 1014. So, any parcel no longer needed for public use may be disposed of "provided that such disposition shall be authorized and provided for by ordinance, and shall be approved by the Commissioners of Finance by their uniting in the conveyance thereof, and shall be made at public sale, unless a private sale be expressly authorized by the Board of Estimates, and so entered on their minutes." Article 1, § 13 of Charter (Wallace), note 58; Code Pub. Loc. Laws, 1930, art. 4, sec. 13. See Rittenhouse v. Baltimore, 25 Md. 336.

These statutory requisites to the abandonment or closing of that section of Russell Street, whose title is in the municipality, and which is the subject-matter of the pending controversy, and to its disposition by sale when no longer needed for public use, did not exist before or at the signing of the paper writing of August 24th, 1931, so those acting for the municipality had no capacity to contract. The instrument, therefore, did not bind the city, but was, in legal effect, a unilateral offer by the company to buy on the terms prescribed. Williston on Contracts, secs. 13, 76. Since the offeror was at liberty to make no offer, it was free to determine and impose whatever terms it might choose, and among these it might require that its offer be accepted within a designated time in a specific manner. If no acceptance is made in the manner and within the period fixed by the offer, the offer necessarily expires. Williston on Contracts, secs. 53, 61, 76; Van Camp Packing Co. v. Smith, 101 Md. 565, 61 A. 284.

The contract here was not merely for the sale of the land. The offeror was carrying on its business of distiller upon the land in question, and the particular utility of the portions of the three warehouses in the proposed widening of Russell Street was, together with the rest of the buildings, for the storage of its product in barrels. Furthermore, if the municipality should accept its offer to buy, the offeror would be assured of again being the owner of its property, with the improvements, in the same condition as at the time the municipality acquired the strip bordering on Russell Street for the purpose of widening that highway. But, if the municipality would not accept the offer, the offeror would be compelled to renovate the warehouses. Time, therefore, was not a subsidiary stipulation, but was made, and is, in fact, so material that the acceptance by the municipality in the form prescribed, within the period specified, was essential. While in equity time is usually not essential in the sale of land, yet, where expressly made so by the terms of the contract or by special circumstances, it becomes essential. Equity will not lend its aid to enforce specifically the contract regardless of the limitation of time. Coleman v. Applegarth, 68 Md. 21, 27, 28, 11 A. 284; Maughlin v. Perry, 35 Md. 352, 359; Stern v. Shapiro, 138 Md. 615, 626, 114 A. 587; Tarses v. Miller Fruit Prod. Co., 155 Md. 453, 142 A. 522.

The municipality failed to pass the required ordinances within one year, and the company notified the municipality on September 26th, 1932, that the agreement was void and of no effect, demanded the repayment of the $10,000 paid when the paper writing was signed, and informed the city that it could take possession of the strip of land in question.

It was not until October 20th, 1932, that the ordinance closing that part of Russell Street which was the subject-matter of the paper writing of August 24th, 1931, was passed; and on the same day was enacted another ordinance authorizing the sale of this land in accordance with section 13 of the Baltimore City Charter. The day after these ordinances became effective, the company again demanded the refunding of the $10,000, on the theory that it was not bound; and the municipality replied on October 26th, 1932, insisting that there was a valid contract as of August 24th, 1931, which would be enforced. On November 12th, 1932, the company brought an action at law against the municipality to recover the part payment of $10,000; and on November 29th, 1932, the municipality began the suit in equity now at bar on this appeal. The bill of complaint was to enforce specifically against the company the terms of the paper writing of August 24th, 1931; to enjoin the company from prosecuting farther the pending action at law, or any other action at law against the municipality; to recover any sum of money claimed to be due under the instrument of August 24th; and, alternately, to take an account of the taxes and of rents for use and occupancy during the period which the company has occupied and used the property in dispute, and decree the amount payable by the company to the said municipality, and, finally, to obtain general relief.

After the parties were at issue, testimony was taken, and the chancellor decreed "that the contract of August 24th, 1931, * * * is not rendered null and void because of the failure of the complainants within one year from the date of said contract to have passed by the City Council the ordinances referred to in said contract, and the Court decrees that said contract is still in full force and effect." The decree then permanently enjoined the company from prosecuting the action at law to recover the $10,000, and decreed that the municipality pay the costs. The company has appealed and so has the city. The latter's sole ground of appeal is the imposition of costs upon the municipality.

For the reasons assigned in the course of this opinion, the decree of the chancellor must be reversed, except with reference to the imposition of costs upon the city. As the municipality will have an opportunity to present any proper defense, whether by way of set-off or otherwise, in the action at law now pending in the Superior Court of Baltimore City between the parties, there does not appear to be any equitable principle involved which would require the bill to be retained for an accounting.

Decree reversed, except with respect to costs; and cause remanded for a decree dismissing the bill of complaint, with costs to the American Medicinal Spirits Company in both appeals.


Summaries of

Spirits Co. v. Baltimore

Court of Appeals of Maryland
May 26, 1933
166 A. 407 (Md. 1933)

In American Medicinal Spirits, a company contracted to purchase land from the city conditioned on the city passing an ordinance within one year.

Summary of this case from Prince George's County v. Silverman
Case details for

Spirits Co. v. Baltimore

Case Details

Full title:AMERICAN MEDICINAL SPIRITS COMPANY v . MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF…

Court:Court of Appeals of Maryland

Date published: May 26, 1933

Citations

166 A. 407 (Md. 1933)
166 A. 407

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