Bamberger v. Johnson

37 A. 900, 86 Md. 38, 1897 Md. LEXIS 109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 37 A. 900 (Bamberger v. Johnson) 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
Bamberger v. Johnson, 37 A. 900, 86 Md. 38, 1897 Md. LEXIS 109 (Md. 1897).

Opinion

Roberts, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 2nd of April, 1894, the appellants entered into an agreement in writing with the appellee to lease for the term of ten years, beginning on the first of April, in the year 1894, and ending on the first of April, in the year 1904, a lot of ground belonging to the appellee, situate in the town of Cambridge, in Dorchester County, for an [39]*39annual rent of $30.00 to be paid in equal semi-annual instalments of $15.00 on the first day of January and the first day of July of each and every year during the continuance of said lease; the appellants to have the privilege of purchasing said lot at any time during said term upon payment to the appellee of the sum of four hundred dollars for the same, provided that all rent due the appellee under the terms of said lease, at the time of such purchase, shall be paid in full; said lease also contains a covenant that the appellants will promptly pay said rent as hereinbefore stated, and that if at any time during said term, any one payment shall remain in arrears and be unpaid for the period of six months after it is due, the said lease shall be void and of no effect, and the appellee may enter and resume full possession thereof, with the right to distrain or otherwise collect all rent due and unpaid; the appellants further covenant to keep the property in good repair and not to haul or allow to be hauled sand or anything else that may cause the shore to wash, unless they shall wall the shore with stones or logs. These are substantially the facts to be found in the contract of lease, which constitute the ground of this controversy. On the 5th of August, 1896, the appellants filed their bill in the Court below asking the passage of a decree to compel the appellee to complete said lease by acknowledging the same, or a similar paper, before a Justice of the Peace of said county, together with the appellants, in order that they might have the same recorded and thus protect themselves against any fraudulent conveyance of said property to an innocent purchaser, as well as be protected against any attempt at law, on the part of the appellee, to dispossess them of, and praying for general relief. The appellee on the 19th of September, 1896, answered said bill, admitting the execution of and the covenants contained in said lease, which is exhibited with their bill as part thereof; but denying generally the other facts set out in said bill, and especially and particularly the charge in said bill alleging fraud in the execution of said lease, or in the failure to acknowledge the [40]*40same according to law, and charging the appellant with failure to pay the rent and taxes and to observe the several covenants as set out in said lease and denying the waiver of forfeiture for the non-payment of the rent which became due under said lease on the 18th day of January, 1896, and was not paid within the six months thereafter, when, on the 16th of July, 1896, the appellee notified the appellants to quit the property and deliver possession of the same. The appellee further says the appellants have entirely failed to observe their covenant that they would keep the property in good repair, and that, in direct violation of their said contract, they have constantly hauled sand from the shore, without walling it with stones or logs, to protect it from washing. The only testimony in the record is given by John W. Bamberger, one of the appellants, and Joseph H. Johnson, the appellee, each of whom testifies in his own behalf and upon his own offer.

The bill in this case is in the nature of a bill for specific performance. Yet the effort here is primarily to compel the appellee to formally acknowledge the lease that the same may be recorded and then to compel its specific performance. There is, however, nothing in the lease itself or in the proof offered tending to support such a demand, or which would justify a Court of Equity in lending its aid to accomplish. The appellants filed with their bill the original lease or contract and it is offered as part of the testimony of the appellant who testifies in the cause, and is found to be such a paper as hereinbefore described, without formal acknowledgment and simply signed and sealed by the parties to the controversy and then delivered to the appellants. It is not necessary that we should enter into the consideration and determination of all the questions which are sought to be made upon this appeal. There are certain propositions of law relating to specific performance which this Court has had repeated occasion to pass upon, so that a mere reference to some of the decided cases will be sufficient.

Does this application for relief present a meritorious case ? [41]*41It is addressed to the sound discretion of the Court, to be granted or refused according to its circumstances ; it does not flow as a matter of right. “ The meaning of this proposition is not that the Court may arbitrarily or capriciously perform one contract and refuse to perform another; but that the Court has regard to the conduct of the plaintiff and to circumstances outside the contract itself, and that the mere fact of the existence of a valid contract is not conclusive in the plaintiff’s favor.” Fry, Spec. Perf. sec. 44; Pomeroy, Spec. Perf. secs. 35-46. Whilst the application is addressed, not to the arbitrary will of the Court, but to its sound and reasonable discretion, yet when a party seeks the execution of a contract he must be able to show that he has fully, not partially, performed everything required to be done on his part. O’Brien v. Pentz, 48 Md. 577-578; Mills v. Matthews, 7 Md. 324; Small v. Owings, 1 Md. Ch. 371; Alexander v. Ghiselin, 5 Gill, 138. In Oliver v. Palmer, 11 G. & J. 446, it was held by the Court to be “ one of the oldest and soundest principles of equity, that he who goes into a Court of Chancery invoking its interposition in his behalf, must allege in his bill that he has done, or has offered to do, or is ready and willing to do, all that on his part is necessary to entitle him to the relief which he seeks, or he must set forth adequate reasons why he should be excused from doing so.”

By the express terms of the lease, the appellants have covenanted that they will pay to the appellee the sum of thirty dollars annually in equal semi-annual instalments on the days named in said lease. This they have not done; they further covenanted to keep the property in good repair, the proof shows that they have failed to keep this part of their contract; and again, they have covenanted that they would not haul or allow to be hauled sand or anything else that might cause the shore to wash, unless they walled the shore with stone or logs ; this requirement they have failed to observe. It is true the appellant, whose testimony is found in the record, seeks to place a different construction [42]*42upon this provision of the lease by saying, “We declined to sign the lease without Mr. Johnson permitted sand to be hauled. He then agreed that if we would log or stone the shore we would be permitted to use or haul the sand. We agreed to log the shore, but not all at one time.” Neither the lease itself nor the oral proof in the record sustain this contention, for the lease expressly provides that sand shall not be hauled unless the shore be walled with stone or logs. The lease in this respect is so entirely clear and explicit as to leave no doubt as to its meaning.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A. 900, 86 Md. 38, 1897 Md. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bamberger-v-johnson-md-1897.