Born v. Stancills, Inc.

135 A.2d 843, 214 Md. 443
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 23, 2001
Docket[No. 23, September Term, 1957.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 A.2d 843 (Born v. Stancills, Inc.) 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
Born v. Stancills, Inc., 135 A.2d 843, 214 Md. 443 (Md. 2001).

Opinion

Bruñe, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The purchaser, Stancills, Inc., (“Stancills”) brought suit against the vendors, Louis Born and Margaret M. Born, his wife, (collectively, “the Borns”) for the specific performance of a contract for the sale of a farm located in Baltimore County. The Borns demurred to the bill, their demurrer was overruled, and after they had filed an answer, the case went to trial on the merits. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s Testimony, the defendants moved for a “directed verdict,” which seems a curious misnomer in an equity suit. 2 The motion was denied and the defendants proceeded to offer their testimony, which evidently did not impress the Chancellor favorably. At the conclusion of the case the Circuit Court for Baltimore County entered a decree for specific performance and the appeal is from that decree.

*446 Stancills is engaged in the sand and gravel business, and its interest in the Borns’ farm was apparently chiefly as a source of supply of these materials. The farm is at or near Bradshaw and has a frontage of about a mile on the south side of the Pulaski highway (U. S. Route 40, which is a major east-west road between the Delaware line and the western part of Maryland). Stancills first obtained an option on the property under date of May 12, 1955. This option was to run for a period of six months, during which Stancills could (and did) make test borings or excavations on the farm for sand and gravel, at a cost of about four or five thousand dollars. If Stancills elected to exercise the option, the price was to be $140,000, payable as follows: $80,000 on or before November 12, 1955, and the balance of $60,000 in four annual instalments of $15,000 each for the next four years, with interest at 4°fo on successive unpaid balances.

On November 10, 1955 — two days before the expiration of the option — Stancills entered into a contract with the Borns for the purchase and sale of the property. The price was the same as under the option, $140,000, of which $10,000 was paid at or before the signing of the contract, $70,000 was to be paid on January 12, 1956, and the balance of $60,000 was to be paid at the rate of $15,000 for four years with interest, payable semi-annually, at 4% on unpaid balances, accounting from November 12, 1955. The sellers were to execute and deliver a deed upon payment of the $70,000 and payment of the balance of $60,000 was to be secured by a purchase money mortgage. The purchasers had the right to prepay the balance of the purchase price and the sellers had a right of occupancy upon payment' by them of maintenance charges, taxes and other public charges until the entire purchase price should be paid (or six months thereafter if fully paid before the due date), and the purchasers had the right to prepay the balance in whole or in part. The only other provisions of the contract requiring note are contained in the following sentence: “This Contract contains the final and entire Agreement between the parties hereto, and neither they nor their Agents shall be bound by any terms, conditions or representations not herein written; time being of the essence of this Agreement.”

*447 When January 12th, 1956, drew near, Stancills, acting through its president, Godfrey E. Stancill, sought a postponement of the $70,000 payment. On January 10, 1956, Mr. Stancill visited the Borns at their home and proposed paying an additional $10,000 on the purchase price, to extend the time for paying the balance of $120,000 for two months and paying interest at 5%, instead of 4%, for two months on the $120,000 balance.

Stancills claimed that it was ready, able and willing to raise the money for the $70,000 payment by January 12th, if the Borns insisted upon it. To support this contention it relies upon its comparative balance sheets and earnings, testimony of Mr. Stancill and testimony of two gentlemen employed by a company from which Stancills purchased equipment. We shall now review this evidence.

Comparative balance sheets of Stancills as of June 30, 1955 and June 30, 1956, and “comparative statements of net and retained income” for the years ending on those dates were introduced into evidence by Stancills. Each of these dates was, of course, approximately six months away from the critical date of January 12, 1956, but presumably these figures were offered for such light as they might shed upon the financial condition of Stancills in January, 1956. It is hard to see how they can aid the plaintiff corporation materially.

In the absence of direct evidence of Stancills’ financial condition as of January, 1956, it seems a reasonable approximation to take the mean of the balance sheet figures submitted as of June 30, 1955 and June 30, 1956. Applying this somewhat rough and ready formula, we find that Stancills had cash of about $4,300 (as against notes payable to banks of more than $10,800) and that, in the aggregate, its current liabilities exceeded its current assets by approximately $3,900. 3 *448 In this connection we note that although the land to be acquired under the contract with the Borns seems to have been included on the assets side at $140,000 in the June, 1956, balance sheet, no part of the $130,000 remaining due on the purchase price shown on the liability side is carried as a current liability, though $15,000 would have been payable one year after January, 1956, if the contract of November 10, 1955 had been carried into effect.

Other figures on the balance sheets are not particularly illuminating. Advances to Stancill’s Contracting Corporation (presumably an affiliated company) are shown as roughly $93,000 on June 30, 1955 and $85,000 on June 30, 1956. On the later date, about $29,400 was due by Stancills to the presumed affiliate. “Property, plant and equipment,” less depreciation were carried at more than $152,000 on June 30, 1955 and at nearly $316,000 a year later. The June 30, 1956 amount appears to include the Born farm at $140,000, but there is no breakdown on the statement as between land, plant and equipment. There is testimony by Mr. Stancill that he valued the corporation’s real estate at something over $200,000, and that about $14,000 remained due on the purchase price of one tract. He also valued the corporation’s machinery at about $200,000, on which it owed $40,000 to $50,000. The corporation customarily bought its machinery on some instalment or financing plan, with a down payment of 20% or 25%. There is nothing to show what amount, if any, could have been borrowed by Stancills on a second mortgage on the Born farm or through a mortgage on other real estate. Inquiries along this line in the summer of 1955 were not pressed, and were apparently dropped.

Earnings figures for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1956, present no optimistic picture. Stancills had á net loss of $38,000 for that year, compared with net earnings of about $59,000 for the preceding fiscal year. The loss in fiscal 1956 was offset to the extent of a little over $10,700 by “a claim for a refund of Federal income taxes paid resulting from an *449 operating loss carry back.” This claim is carried as a current asset as of June 30, 1956.

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189 A.2d 91 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1963)
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135 A.2d 843, 214 Md. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/born-v-stancills-inc-md-2001.