Carr v. Lee

762 A.2d 142, 135 Md. App. 213, 2000 Md. App. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 13, 2000
Docket2685, Sept. Term, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 762 A.2d 142 (Carr v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr v. Lee, 762 A.2d 142, 135 Md. App. 213, 2000 Md. App. LEXIS 189 (Md. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

EYLER, Judge.

It is an understatement to observe that there are many decisions by Maryland appellate courts addressing the concept of appealability. We add to that list by publishing this opinion, in which we discuss the 1997 amendment to Rule 8—602(d), a so-called savings provision.

Factual Background

Andrew J. Lee, appellee, contracted to buy property known as 441 Broadneck Road, located in Anne Arundel County, from Howard Smith, Donald Smith, and Saundra Parker (“the Smiths”). A gravel driveway located between that property and the property next door owned by Edna Carr, appellant, had been used by both appellant and the Smiths.

In addition to the contract of sale, appellee and the Smiths entered into a document entitled “affidavit.” In the affidavit, the Smiths stated that (1) they were the owners of the property located at 441 Broadneck Road, (2) the driveway between 441 Broadneck Road and the adjacent property was located in part on the Smiths property and appellant’s use was permissive, and (3) such use was not pursuant to an express easement, an interest acquired by adverse possession, or a prescriptive use or easement. The affidavit provided that the *216 Smiths would indemnify appellee “from any loss or damage, including reasonable attorney’s fees which may occur due to any misstatement or misrepresentation, whether intentional or negligent, contained in this affidavit or as the result of the necessity of Andrew J. Lee to defend his title from such use or in connection with the termination of such use.” There was no survey or title search done at that time.

Prior to closing, appellee engaged David Green and Survey Associates of Maryland, Inc. (“Green”) to perform a boundary survey of the property being acquired. The survey, prepared in August, 1995, incorrectly reflected that title to the gravel driveway, as well as the property on which the Smith house was located, was held by the Smiths. Appellee and the Smiths settled on the property.

In October, 1995, appellee contacted another surveyor to place stakes on the boundary lines. At that time, it was discovered that the Green survey was incorrect and that the property line not only did not include a portion of the gravel driveway but did not include a portion of the property on which appellee’s house was located. Appellee advised Green of this discovery, and Green, in January, 1996, corrected his survey. In the Spring of 1996, appellee advised appellant of the above facts, including that a portion of his house was located on her property.

Appellee filed a con'iplaint, later amended, in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County against appellant to quiet title, against the Smiths for rescission of the contract of sale, and attorney’s fees, and against Green seeking damages for professional negligence. The claim against Green was voluntarily dismissed prior to trial. Appellant filed a third-party claim against Green, seeking damages, and a counterclaim against appellee, seeking the right to use the gravel driveway.

The case was tried non-jury on December 8 and 9,1999. At the conclusion of the trial, from the bench, the court ruled as follows. First, the court stated that it was undisputed that appellee acquired the property under the comer of his house by adverse possession. Second, the court reviewed the evi *217 dence and concluded that appellee acquired ownership by adverse possession to the portion of the gravel driveway to which he did not hold record title.

The court concluded:

So, what I have been inclined to do based on my inspection, is to make it in effect a pie wedge, which I have sketched on this map and will ask the parties to confer about and see if they could agree on a metes and bounds description. If not, the Court will if necessary appoint a surveyor and come up with its own.
But, it would be a line of adverse possession which would run from the pipe found on Broad Neck Road, which is the dividing line correctly between the two properties, to the pipe found at the edge of Ms. Cair’s garden. So, the Court would certainly not-take her garden by this because she has apparently used that and that was the same area used by the pony stable and so forth in past years.
And would run straight on back without deviating to a point that would be located approximately 35 feet beyond the southernmost edge of the chicken coop. Which puts it, I think, approximately five feet past the pine tree. And that would be the end of the area which is very close to the edge of the clearing.
Again, I don’t know that the Court can be exact about where the clearing starts and ends because that may move over the course of years with precisely how it is kept clear. I think it would go at least that far though.
At that point the Court would find it should make a 90 degree turn and go back to the actual line of title which would be a distance of, at that point, approximately 40 feet—I may be wrong about that estimate, it is less than an inch as I scaled it on this photocopy, there [may be] some error in scale by the photocopying process—to the point where it would intersect with the existing actual title line of the Lee property and would then continue with the Lee property original metes and bounds description until it closes again at the same pipe found on Broad Neck Road.
*218 So, that whole distance is, I think, approximately six and one-half inches so that is going to be about 350 feet from the edge of Broad Neck Road before it makes that right angle turn and goes back to the existing .line.

The trial court then found that the error had not been created by Green but that the situation had existed since the 1940s. Based on that finding, the court dismissed the claim by appellant against Green. The court then turned its attention to the claim for counsel fees by appellee against the Smiths. The court stated:

As to the claim for counsel fees by Mr. Lee against Ms. Parker and the two Mr. Smiths, the Court does not think that although it was sort of sprung on them at the settlement table and although they did not have an attorney, I think that it is an enforceable contract anyway. The fact that they didn’t understand precisely all of the language in it, I don’t think would protect them from it because it would not be a mutual mistake.
If anything it might be a one-sided mistake. So I do think that technically speaking they are obliged to indemnify, which would include counsel fees. I think practically, at this point it would only include counsel fees and costs because the Court does not find that they conveyed less than the metes and bounds description.
It was an error in the representation that they were made to sign that they were conveying it by title and not by adverse possession. Indeed they were conveying it by adverse possession, but the fact that it was adverse possession and not title does not mean that there was any damage to Mr. Lee in terms of loss of the property.

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Bluebook (online)
762 A.2d 142, 135 Md. App. 213, 2000 Md. App. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-lee-mdctspecapp-2000.