Arundel Realty Co. v. Maryland Electric Railways Co.

81 A. 787, 116 Md. 257, 1911 Md. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 81 A. 787 (Arundel Realty Co. v. Maryland Electric Railways Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arundel Realty Co. v. Maryland Electric Railways Co., 81 A. 787, 116 Md. 257, 1911 Md. LEXIS 79 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this ease is from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel county sustaining the demurrer to the amended declaration filed by the appellant and entering thereon a judgment for costs in favor of the appellee.

The declaration alleges that on the Yth day of June, 1908, the defendant company sold unto John W. Tarden and Clarence W. Gould a tract of land known as the Yealdhall farm, in Anne Arundel county, at and for the sum of twelve thousand dollars, which has been paid. That in the sale thereof, the defendant represented that “by reason of its proximity to the City of Baltimore and of its situation on the line of its railroad, it would make a most desirable property for suburban homes, and among the inducements offered by the defendant to the plaintiff to purchase and develop the same for such purpose “was a promise of the defendant to give to said Tarden and Gould a special rate between Baltimore City and the said farm, now called “Woodlawn Heights,” for the benefit of all purchasers of lots at “Woodlawn Heights.’ ” That after the purchase of said land' the plaintiffs, at the suggestion and by the inducement of the defendant, expended large sums of money in laying off said property in avenues and streets, blocks and lots, and in surveying, plotting and advertising said property, etc. That the defendant printed upon its official time table a notice of the special rate offered, to wit: “Woodlawn Heights, between Shipley *259 and Well ham, 15 minutes from Baltimore by the electric short line. Eleven cents round trip by commutation.”

The declaration further alleges that Jarden and Gould in order the more effectually to conduct said business and develop and sell said property, associated with them John T. Moylan and Bruner R. Anderson and caused themselves to be incorporated under tbe name and style of the Arundel Realty Company, to which corporation the said Jarden and Gould transferred and assigned “all their rights and interests, as well as all their duties and obligations und'er their aforesaid agreement and contract with the defendant in reference to the development of said Woodlawn Heights property and the sale of lots there situate, and all their rights to the special rate between Baltimore City and Woodlawn Heights as agreed between the defendant and- the said Jarden and Gould as hereinbefore set out,” which transfer and assignment so made was with the approval and consent of the defendant company; and that thereafter tñe company continued “for a long space of time to advertise on its time tables the said special rate from Baltimore City to Woodlawn Heights and to circulate the same to the public from the ticket offices.”

That under the inducement aforesaid, a large number1 of said lots had been sold, upon the instalment plan, by Jarden and Gould and the appellant company, at prices aggregating thirty-five thousand dollars, which were yielding to the appellant company a large profit, and it was in receipt of a large income from the regular payment of the instalments due and payable from time to time by the purchasers of said lots. That certain purchasers of lots had erected dwellings on them, whereby the nnsold property had enhanced in value. Other purchasers of lots were about to erect dwellings on their lots, and other persons were negotiating for the purchase of other lots at a large profit to the plaintiff, and that the business of the plaintiff was successful and prosperous and yielded to it a large revenue and income.

*260 That “’without the knowledge or consent of the pláintifí and • without ■ previous notice to it, the defendant on the 7th of May, 1909, cancelled the said special rate between Baltimore and Woodlawn Heights, and refused to sell any commutation tickets between said points as previously agreed by the defendant, as hereinbefore set out, and refused to sell any round trip tickets between said points, and i*aised the rate of fare from eleven cents by commutation to twenty-five cents.” That although repeatedly called upon to restore said rate, the defendant company has refused to- do so, and that by reason of1 the acts of the defendant above stated and complained of, the business of the plaintiff at Woodlawn Heights has been greatly injured and practically ruined; that sales of lots have ceased; that the erection of buildings at Wood-lawn Heights has ceased, and the property of the plaintiff has been greatly depreciated in value and' rendered unsalable.

The declaration discloses that the property so purchased by Larden and Gould was granted and conveyed, at the request of the purchasers, by the defendant company to- the Arundel Realty Company, no deed ever having been executed to the purchasers, hut it is not alleged' in the declaration that the said conveyance contained any covenant or promise that the special rate mentioned in the declaration should he given to the grantee. The promise sued on in this case is a mere general verbal promise to give a special rate, without the same being fixed or established, and with no time therein, stated for which such rate should he maintained, and it is for a breach of this alleged promise that the plaintiff is seeking to recover. The breach complained of consists in the cancellation of the special rate, “Eleven cents round trip hv commutation,” fixed and’ established after the contract of purchase, and the establishing of a rate of twenty-five cents one way, as we understand it, and the defendant’s refusal to restore the former rate.

We have been referred to no case, nor have we been able to find one, where the contract was for a special rate given *261 by the railroad company as in this ease, but there are a number of decisions, not only of this Court but in other jurisdictions, where the validity of contracts made for the location of public stations along the line of the road has been passed upon.

In some jurisdictions such contracts have been held to be absolutely illegal. Burney v. Ludeling, 47 La. Ann. 73; Fla. Cent. v. State, 31 Fla. 482 (20 L. R. A., 419); Greenwood on Public Policy, sec. 149, pages 316-321; while in others the contract is held to have been performed after a reasonable time, when changed conditions warrant a removal or relocation.

In the case of the Md. and, Pa. R. Co. v. Silver, 110 Md. 517, this Court said : “It has been held in a number of well reasoned cases that the covenant on the part of the railroad company to erect and' maintain a station at a certain place along its line, even if originally valid, is fairly complied with by the erection and. maintenance of such a station for a period of years, and until the exigencies of the business, the convenience of the public, and the welfare of the railroad demands its removal. Whalen v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, 112 Md. 197.”

In the case of Whalen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, Co., supra, this Court said: “Considering the language used in the covenant before us, it is to be observed, that while it distinctly provides for the construction and maintenance of the turnout and siding on Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
81 A. 787, 116 Md. 257, 1911 Md. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arundel-realty-co-v-maryland-electric-railways-co-md-1911.