Bellevue Club, Inc. v. Punte

129 A. 900, 148 Md. 589, 1925 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 129 A. 900 (Bellevue Club, Inc. v. Punte) 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
Bellevue Club, Inc. v. Punte, 129 A. 900, 148 Md. 589, 1925 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought to- compel the specific performance of a renewal clause in a lease for a “shore” on Middle River in Baltimore County, the bill having been filed by the Bellevue Club, Incorporated, the appellant here, against Joseph E. Punte, Margarethe M. Punte, and Pauline Thelan (since deceased), the appellees.

The lease in question was made in 1901 to the Bellevue Club, a different corporation from the appellant, and reads • as follows:

“This lease made this 22nd day of March, 1901, by and between Pauline Thelan, widow, of Baltimore County, of the first part, and the Bellevue Club, a body corporate of Baltimore City, in the State of Maryland City, in the State of Maiyland, of the second part.
“Witnesseth, that the said Pauline Thelan, party of the first part, does hereby lease to the aforesaid party *591 of the second part, all that tract of land situate on Middle River, in Baltimore County, and known as the Chesapeake Fishing Club or Shore.
“Being the same tract of land heretofore leased by the party of the first part of the Chesapeake Fishing Club, with all the improvements thereon and the rights and privileges of the water fronting thereon, boats, outhouses, etc., now upon the premises for the term of five years from the date hereof, with the privilege of renewal for twenty-nine (10) years more, with the same conditions and agreements and with the privilege of the use of the woods to the open land in the rear. The p’arty of the second part .paying a yearly rental of twenty-five ($25.00) dollars in advance on the first day of July in each and every year during the continuance of lease for five years, and the yearly rental of fifty dollars thereafter. And the party of the second part do hereby agree to the aforesaid conditions, and they will pay the yearly rent aforesaid when due.
“Witness our hands and seals this day and date above written.
“Pauline Thelan. (Seal)
“Wm. J. Cunningham, (Seal) “President Bellevue Club.
“Wm. H. H. Sultzer, (Seal) “Secretary Bellevue Club.
“This is to certify that the alteration from 10 years to 29 years was made before signing.
“Chas. Reviol,
“Justice of the Peace.”

This lease was properly acknowledged, and duly recorded among the land records of Baltimore County.

At the expiration of the five year term in 1906 no renewal lease was executed or demanded, but the increased rent of fifty dollars per year was regularly paid until 1920, in which year, as well as in 1921, it was tendered by the tenant but refused by the owners. In 1913 the original Bellevue Club assigned the lease to a Mr. Moreland and five others, and later, by various mesne conveyances, their entire interest be *592 came vested in Moreland and one William Oster, who remained in possession of the “shore” and paid the rent until June 2nd, 1920, when they conveyed their interest to Lewis Hax and his wife. These parties had been acting as caretakers of the property since 1918, and on June 3rd, 1920, they undertook to convey the property to the appellant by a fee simple deed, the description in this deed being by metes and bounds^ and including part of “the woods to the open land in the rear.” According to the testimony, the appellant paid $2,250 for the property at this time, which money went to Moreland and Oster, and did not go- to Hax and his wife, so that these latter two- appear1 to have acted as mere conduits for the transfer of the title.

At the time the lease was made in 1901, and for some time prior thereto-, Mrs. Thelan owned a tract of about one hundred acres of land in Baltimore County, which tract included the “shore” in dispute. In 1897, Mrs. Thelan moved to Baltimore City, leaving her adopted daughter, Mrs. Margarethe M. Punte, and the latter’-s husband, Joseph E. Punte, in charge of the Baltimore County land, and in 1909 this land was conveyed to Mr. and Mrs. Punte^ subject to- an annuity of $250 in favor of Mrs. Thelan, and at the time this suit was brought Mr. -and Mrs. Punte still owned about sixty acres of the land, which sixty acres included the part leased by the ap-pellant.

In December, 1919, the appellees notified the caretaker Mrs. Hax that, beginning with July 1st, 1920, the rent for the “shore” would be $200 per year, and when the appellant tendered the $50 rent in June or July, Í920, it was refused, and it was again refused in 1921.

• In May, 1920,- James F. Illecka of Baltimore City became interested in the “shore,” and he- arranged through Hax, who was the janitor of the building in which his office was located, to purchase the property for the appellant. Klecka examined the property and the various improvements on it, and he then had a lawyer in his office, Mr. Jefferson D. Norris, examine the title-. Norris testified that he first *593 made a physical examination of the property, and found that its southern boundary was the division linej between the Punte property and that of the adjoining owner on the south, Mr. Weber, that the eastern boundary was iVIiddle- River, the shore frontage being about eighty-five feet, and that the western and northern boundaries were pointed out to- him by Hax and a man named Poster, lessee of the adjoining shore on the north. According to Norris they told him the western boundary included the woods back to- “the open land in the- rear,” though the width narrowed-on the western boundary to about twenty-five feet, and the northern boundary was along the side of a small ravine running back from the river, and was marked by the remains of an old wire fence. With this information Norris secured a surveyor and had him run the lines as they had been ascertained by and pointed out to- him, and with the description thus furnished by the surveyor, and the knowledge acquired by his examination of the paper title, ho prepared the fee simple deed whereby Hax and his wife undertook to convey the land to the appellant. The deed from Tlax and his wife having been secured, a mortgage of $10,000 was obtained on the property from a building association in Baltimore, of which association James F. Kleeka was counsel, his father was president, and his- brother vice-president. $2,250 of the proceeds of this mortgage was, according to James E. Kleeka, used to pay the $2,250 purchase price, and the balance was expended in renovating and adding to the improvements on the property. It also appeared that the appellant corporation was organized in the office of James E. Kleeka, that Kleeka, Norris, and one Conrad Schroeter were the incorporators, that the charter provided that the company was to have no- capital stock, and that the certificate was not filed with the State- Tax Commission until July 30th, 1920, and it purports to have- hee-n signed and acknowledged'on that date.

On July 1st, 1920, Kleeka tendered the- $50 annual rent to Joseph E. Punte, and upon his declining to accept it, Kleeka gave him a written notice, signed by Kleeka as presi *594

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 900, 148 Md. 589, 1925 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bellevue-club-inc-v-punte-md-1925.