Baltimore Pearl Hominy Co. v. Linthicum

75 A. 737, 112 Md. 27, 1910 Md. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 75 A. 737 (Baltimore Pearl Hominy Co. v. Linthicum) 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
Baltimore Pearl Hominy Co. v. Linthicum, 75 A. 737, 112 Md. 27, 1910 Md. LEXIS 93 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a decree of the Circuit Court Xo. 2 of Baltimore City sustaining a demurrer to and dismissing the bill of complaint of the Baltimore Pearl Hominy Company against Seth H. Linthicum, Trustee.

*28 The bill states that on the 2!th of October, 1905, the plaintiff and Eichmond H. Ford, trading as Eichmond H. Ford & Co., executed a written contract, “aud specifications' forming a part of same,” whereby the said Eichmond H. Ford & Co. “contracted and agreed to construct and build for the plaintiff” certain buildings and improvements “upon the property of the plaintiff at the southwest corner of Howard and Ostend streets in Baltimore City;” that while the agreement made it clear that Eichmond H. Ford & Co. was to receive for the work set out in the specifications “the actual costs thereof and ten per cent, additional as compensation up to the sum of forty-five thousand dollars, said agreement did not make perfectly clear the further condition that said forty-five thousand dollars was the limiting price agreed upon by said parties for the cost of said work including said ten per cent, commission and that no greater amount than said forty-five thousand dollars was to be paid by the plaintiff for the cost of the work included in said specifications with said ten per cent, commission,” and that “said agreement also set forth clearly'that all the work done outside of said specifications was to be paid for separately at the market price for same;” that “subsequently on the 10th day of May, 1906, before the completion of said work, the said Eichmond' H. Ford addressed a letter to the plaintiff, signed by him as Eichmond H. Ford & Co., stating his understanding of said agreement and desiring that the said provision that said sum of forty-five thousand dollars should be the limit of plaintiff’s total liability for the cost of the work included in the specifications and the commission thereon should be made a distinct part of said agreement,” and that the “plaintiff on May 11, 1906, by letter in reply addressed to Eichmond H.' Ford & Co., accepted the said proposition, and agreed that said provision should form a distinct part of said agreement;” that “the work went on under the agreement as thus completed and understood by the parties thereto and payments were made on the faith thereof to the said Eichmond H. Ford & Co., and accepted by him on account of both work' included *29 in said specifications and •work not so included;” and the plaintiff in fulfillment of the agreement paid to Richmond H. Eord & Co., “for and on account of the cost of the work included in said specifications and commission thereon, the whole of said sum of forty-five thousand dollars as set forth in said contract and in addition thereto jtaid in full, in accordance with the terms of said contract and specification, the cost of all work which, under said contract, was not to he covered hy said forty-five thousand dollars, so that said Richmond H. Ford has been paid in full for the work done under said contract as made between him and the plaintiff and has no just and equitable claim for any further payment.”

It further charges that on the loth of September, 1906, “Richmond H. Eord, trading as Richmond H. Eord & Co., had filed against him a petition in bankruptcy and was adjudged a bankrupt in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland” and Seth H. Linthicum, the defendant, was elected trustee of the estate of said bankrupt, and that he duly qualified and assumed his duties as such trustee; that the agreement “as first executed on the 27th of October, 1905, had affixed under the signature of the said Richmond II. Eord & Co. á seal, though no seal was attached to the signature of the plaintiff, so that the said paper, as the plaintiff is informed, could not, at law, as an agreement be modified or completed by any agreement not under seal;” that the said Seth II. Linthicum, Trustee, “on the 30th of October, 1907, filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City an attachment against the plaintiff as a non-resident claiming the sum of $14,510.49 as being still due and unpaid by the plaintiff on account of said contract,, which said attachment has been removed to the Superior 'Court of Baltimore City, where the said case is now pending and is about to be tried;” that “the claim upon which said attachment is brought—is a Avholly fictitious and fraudulent claim, being based in a great part upon an alleged cost of the work included in said specifications beyond the said sum of forty-five thousand dollars; and it is the intention.of the said Seth *30 H. Linthicum, Trustee, by said attachment proceedings to avoid the effect of said letters which completed the agreement between the said parties and formed a necessary part thereof and to make the plaintiff liable upon an interpretation of a mutilated and imperfect agreement that did not express the real and final agreement of the parties and did mot constitute the agreement under which the parties acted and on the faith of which the plaintiff made his payments to said Richmond1 H. Eord & Go. All of which proceedings ■constitute a great hardship and a fraud upon this plaintiff, who has, as is well known to the said trustee, made full payment to the said Richmond H. Ford & Co. of all that in equity and good conscience the said Richmond H. Ford & Co. or said trustee have ever been entitled to demand on ac■count of said contract,” and that the plaintiff is without remedy in the matter “unless relieved by the action of a Court -of equity, because the said original paper being a sealed instrument cannot be modified or added to by any subsequent agreement of the parties not under seal.” The prayer of the bill is for an injunction restraining the trustee from further proceedings at law against the plaintiff to collect said claim, and “especially from proceeding further with the said attachment proceeding in the Superior Oourt of Baltimore City.”

The letters referred to in the bill are as follows:

“Baltimoke, Md., May 10th, 1906.
Harry B. Smith, President,
Baltimore Pearl Hominy Co.,
Baltimore, Md.
Subject:—Contract Richmond H. Ford & Co., Contractor, and Baltimore Pearl Hominy Co., Contractee, with reference to certain ambiguity.
Dear Sir:—"With reference to the above subject-matter and to avoid any misunderstanding in certain terms thereof, we wish to express our views and to have this matter made a part of the same, viz:—In the said agreement executed in duplicate and dated October 27th, 1905, paragraphs Nos. 1, 4 and 9, *31 where it refers to the cost of the erection of the buildings and the remuneration therefrom of ten (10) per centum we understand that the entire cost (to include said remuneration or commission) shall not exced forty-five thousand ($45,000) dollars.
Please acknowledge the receipt of this letter, and thus conclude in the minds of the parties thereto might be regarded as an ambiguity.
Yours truly,
Richmond H. Ford.”

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Bluebook (online)
75 A. 737, 112 Md. 27, 1910 Md. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-pearl-hominy-co-v-linthicum-md-1910.