Bregel v. Cooper

157 A. 719, 161 Md. 416, 1931 Md. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 26, 1931
Docket[No. 6, October Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 157 A. 719 (Bregel v. Cooper) 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
Bregel v. Cooper, 157 A. 719, 161 Md. 416, 1931 Md. LEXIS 46 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee, Philip B. Cooper, had an option on a lot in Annapolis, which he intended to buy for the purpose of erecting thereon an apartment house. He had to raise the money to finance the operation and, through a mutual friend, was introduced to the appellant, Howard C. Bregel, a member of the Baltimore bar, who “accepted his application and in due course made application for Mr. Cooper and in behalf of Mr. Cooper to the Real Estate Trust for the loan.” Mr. Cooper owned a dwelling house at Wardour, near Annapolis, which he proposed to convert into several apartments. To finance both operations would require $125,000, of which $15,000 was to be used on the Wardour house.

The appellant, on the theory that he had produced a lender who was ready, willing and able to make the loan (Coppage v. Howard, 127 Md. 512, 96 A. 642), sued the appellee for compensation for his services, and it is from a judgment adverse to his claim that this appeal is taken. There was included in the suit a bill for services in the examination of the title, which will be discussed farther on.

The appellant took the appellee to the office of the Real Estate Trust Company, where he was introduced to Milton C. Roberts, its president. This was the first of several conferences in which the appellant, appellee and Mr. Roberts participated. Robert S. Cooper, son of the appellee, was present several times, and was as active and apparently as much concerned as the father. The appellee testified that the son “co-operated in this business.”

Mr. Roberts testified that “there were several interviews, culminating in a conference with both the Coopers in the *418 office of Mr. Burnett, the president of the Mutual Life Insurance Company (which was to' take over eighty per cent, of the loan), at which time all of the details were gone over and acted upon, and all the details were gone into at that time and culminated in a letter from me to Mr. Bregel in which the proposition was stated.” On April 10th, 1929, the letter about which Mr. Roberts testified was written to the appellant, wherein it was stated that “the Real Estate Trustee, Inc., will place for1 your client’s account a mortgage of $110,000.00 to run for a period of ten years on the Annapolis lot, to contain reduction clauses as set forth in the memorandum accompanying Mr. Cooper’s letter of April 9th.” Robert S. Cooper had made up two plans, one for the amortization of a loan of $125,000 and one for a loan of $110,000. The appellee’s plans contemplated the conveyance of the Annapolis lot to a corporation, which was to execute the mortgage and to provide for the additional funds required through the issue and sale of stock. It was “to be a condition precedent to the making of the loan that a satisfactory surety bond for the completion of the building be given and placed through this office and a certain fixed sum is to be withheld for final payment until the building is ready for occupancy and a certificate to that effect is furnished by Foster F. Fenton, representing this company. This may be provided for in the bond of completion or by the deposit with the Real Estate Trust Company of the sum agreed upon.” “It is further understood and agreed that the building will be constructed according to plans and specifications to be approved by us, which arc supposed to be similar to those heretofore submitted.” Mr. Cooper (appellee) is an architect. “The expenses incidental to the financing will be $11,000, which shall include title fee, and the title shall be subject to the approval of our attorney.” The concluding paragraph of the letter was: “Inasmuch as I expect to be out of town for the balance of the month, you may consider this authority to examine the title if your clients accede to the above terms. However, before proceeding it will be necessary for you to submit the plans and specifications covering *419 the proposed building on the site above referred to, to Mr. Eon ton for his approval.”

Mr. Roberts testified that “this letter was the culmination of the negotiations, that it represents what has been agreed upon between Mr. Cooper and myself at the various interviews and this letter is of course written to set forth those terms and a letter of this kind is never written unless the mortgage terms have been agreed upon and accepted by the mortgagors, the proposed mortgagors.” “That letter was the culmination of all these negotiations, and Mr. Bregel received his authority evidently for his services to proceed, but that letter was to Mr. Bregel as attorney for the Coopers and it was the culmination and there is no doubt at all as far as Mr. Cooper and myself were concerned that the apartment was to be constructed upon the terms agreed upon between us and T wrote the letter to Mr. Bregel accepting them with the terms which must necessarily bo left open for the final settlement of the mortgage transaction when the property is transferred and all done to. our satisfaction.”

The appellant’s testimony was substantially the same as Mr. Roberts’, with the addition that the original plans and specifications had been submitted to Mr. Fenton. He testified that “Mr. Cooper said he has been working on the plans and specifications for the new plans,” hut they had not been approved “because the settlement never went through.” The appellant testified that he read the; letter of April 10th to the appellee, and forwarded it to his son, Robert S. Cooper. The son wrote the appellant on April 13, 1929, beginning, “I think that terms mentioned therein are satisfactory,” and then went on to discuss some details which appeared to have been left open by Mr. Roberts’ letter of the 10th, though both the appellant and Mr. Roberts testified that everything which could be definitely settled at that time had been agreed upon. There is evidence also that the appellee had urged the appellant to search the title without delay, and had furnished, through his attorney at Annapolis, some title references to the lot on which the apartment was to be erected, and that the appeilant had promptly done that part of the work, and *420 had so informed ■ the appellee and the Real Estate Trust Company.

These are substantially all the facts upon which the appellant relies for the, recovery of compensation for his services in procuring a loan for the appellee. Stokes v. Wolf, 137 Md. 393, 112 A. 566; Warshawsky v. Traub, 156 Md. 597, 603, 144 A. 833, and cases there cited. These are cases of sales of real estate, but “the rights and duties of a broker employed to secure a loan depend in general upon the same principles which govern the broker who undertakes to find a purchaser of property. The loan broker is entitled to' his commissions where he has procured a lender who> is ready, willing and able to lend the money on the terms proposed.” 2 Mechem on Agency (2d Ed.), sec. 2467.

The appellee’s contention is that the appellant could not claim compensation because “there was no valid, binding or enforcible written contract entered into between the trust company and the defendant (appellee) whereby it obligated itself to' make a loan to the defendant.” In other words, the appellant would have no1 standing in court unless he brought the parties within the provisions of the Act of 1910, ch. 178, Code, art. 2, sec. 17. But this court in Navarre Realty Co.

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Bluebook (online)
157 A. 719, 161 Md. 416, 1931 Md. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bregel-v-cooper-md-1931.