Bowers v. Baltimore Gas & Electric Co.

180 A.2d 878, 228 Md. 624, 1962 Md. LEXIS 497
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 18, 1962
Docket[No. 256, September Term, 1961.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 A.2d 878 (Bowers v. Baltimore Gas & Electric 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
Bowers v. Baltimore Gas & Electric Co., 180 A.2d 878, 228 Md. 624, 1962 Md. LEXIS 497 (Md. 1962).

Opinion

Horney, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the third of a series of appeals arising out of the grant of an easement by Mary Ann Burnham to the Baltimore Gas *626 and Electric Company (the company) 1 for the erection, operation and maintenance of a power transmission line across a tract of land in Baltimore County, now owned by the descendents of the grantor (the Burnhams) and the heirs of Priscilla Lee (the Lees) as tenants in common, Priscilla Lee not having joined in the grant.

On the first appeal (Burnham v. Balto. Gas & Electric Co., 217 Md. 507, 144 A. 2d 80), an ejectment proceeding, we held that the Burnhams were bound by the easement granted by their ancestor and that the Lees were not bound because one' tenant in common could not grant an easement that would bind the cotenants.

On the second appeal (Baltimore G. & E. Co. v. Bowers, 221 Md. 337, 157 A. 2d 610), a partition proceeding, we held that the company had a right to require the Burnhams to seek partition in kind and remanded the case for further proceedings. '

Upon remand, the lower court, by its commission to- make partition, appointed three commissioners and commanded them to. “value and divide” the tract in kind “according to the rights and interests” of the parties if it would “admit of being so divided without loss or injury” to any of the parties. Specifically, the commissioners were, among other things, directed (1) to determine the fair market value of the tract as if the transmission, line and right of way did not exist; (2) to allot to the Lees, unencumbered by the easement, such portion of the tract as would (when each was allotted his or her aliquot share) aggregate one-half of the value of the entire tract; (3) 'to assign the remainder of the tract to the Burnhams without regard to depreciation in value by reason of the easement; and (4) if necessary to arrive at an equitable partition, to reserve rights of way across any part of the tract and to award owelty to one or more of the parties in interest.

In returning the commission to partition, the commissioners unanimously reported to the court that the tract could not be divided in kind “without loss or injury to some parties in in *627 terest.” The company, alleging error on the part of the commissioners and asserting that partition could have and should have been made in kind, filed exceptions to the return of the commissioners. But the court, by its decree, overruled the exceptions, ratified and confirmed the return, and appointed trustees to sell the tract of land subject to the easement of the company. With respect to the division of the money arising from the sale, the court further decreed that after the payment of costs, commissions and other proper deductions, the Lees should be awarded one-half of the amount the tract would have brought if sold free and clear of the easement; and that the remainder of the money arising from the sale should be awarded to the Burnhams.

All of the defendants (the Burnhams and the Lees) noted an appeal and the plaintiff (the company) entered a cross-appeal. The principal questions raised by these appeals are: (i) whether the lower court erred in ratifying the return and report of the commissioners; and (ii) whether the court erred in directing a sale of the tract subject to the easement.

(i)

Inasmuch as the company concedes that it will not be necessary to consider its contentions as to this point (i) concerning the ratification and confirmation of the return of the commissioners if point (ii) is answered in the affirmative, as it must be, we need only note that the general rule is that in the absence of “clear and satisfactory evidence of error” a court cannot substitute its judgment for that of the commissioners and set aside a partition. See Claude v. Handy, 83 Md. 225, 34 Atl. 532 (1896); Basford v. Cranford, 125 Md. 15, 93 Atl. 295 (1915). And we see no reason for a different rule in a case where the commissioners, having expressed the reasons therefor, reach the conclusion that partition in kind is not feasible, as was the case here. Cf. Crouch v. Smith, 1 Md. Ch. 401 (1849). And see the Annotation: Partition-Decision of Commissioners, 46 A.L.R. 348.

(Ü)

As to whether the court erred in decreeing a sale of the tract subject to the easement in lieu of a partition in kind, *628 the claim of the Burnhams and the Lees is that the grantee of an easement from one cotenant cannot force a sale of property subject to such easement against the will of the other cotenants. On the other hand, the company contends that a judicial sale of the land subject to the easement and an equitable division of the proceeds among the Lees and Burnhams is unavoidable. We agree with the position taken by the company.

The claim of the appellants that the company is not entitled to seek a partition sale subject to the easement is based on the premise that the company, being neither a joint-tenant, a tenant in common, a parcener nor a concurrent owner, is without standing to compel partition in its own right, but this overlooks the fact that inasmuch as the company had a derivative right to require the Burnhams to seek partition in kind, there is no reason, as the chancellor pointed out, now that it has been established that partition in kind is not feasible, why the company, in the further exercise of that right, cannot compel the Burnhams to bring about a sale of the tract subject to the easement. In fact, it is clear that the court itself, having acquired jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter, has authority to decree a sale and an equitable division of the proceeds without further action on the part of any of the parties. Code (1957), Art. 16, § 154.

In Johnson v. Hoover, 75 Md. 486, 23 Atl. 903 (1892), this Court, in pointing out that partition was an “undeniable right if feasible,” said (at p. 492) that where partition is “found to be impossible, the right to a sale under the statute as the only means of effecting partition, became equally undeniable.” The Court concluded the opinion by further pointing out that Bolgiano v. Cooke, 19 Md. 375 (1863), had established that “the report of the commissioners was competent evidence to satisfy the [lower] court of the necessity for sale to be made to effect partition.” See also Young v. Diedel, 141 Md. 670, 119 Atl. 448 (1922), where it was held that jurisdiction having been assumed, any suitable relief may be afforded. And for a general discussion of the law governing the sale of land'when partition in kind is not feasible, see 40 Am. Jur., Partition, § 83.

*629 With respect to a sale subject to the easement, we repeat what was probably first said in Story v. Johnson, 1 Y. & C. Ex. 538 (1835), 2 Y. & C. Ex.

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Bluebook (online)
180 A.2d 878, 228 Md. 624, 1962 Md. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-baltimore-gas-electric-co-md-1962.