Chesapeake Homes, Inc. v. McGrath

240 A.2d 245, 249 Md. 480, 1968 Md. LEXIS 628
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1968
Docket[No. 168, September Term, 1967.]
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 240 A.2d 245 (Chesapeake Homes, Inc. v. McGrath) 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
Chesapeake Homes, Inc. v. McGrath, 240 A.2d 245, 249 Md. 480, 1968 Md. LEXIS 628 (Md. 1968).

Opinion

Finan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellants, Chesapeake Homes, Inc., et al. (Chesapeake) have taken this appeal from a decree of the lower court granting rescission of a contract of sale and a deed of conveyance of real estate to the appellees (McGraths).

Chesapeake is engaged in the promotion of real estate subdivisions and the construction and sale of homes therein. Chesapeake sold the McGraths a lot improved with a dwelling known as No. 7015 Cipriano Road, designated as Lot No. 8, Block C of Woodholme Forest Subdivision, Lanham, Prince George’s County, Maryland. The contract of sale was dated April 24, 1966, the purchase price being $31,195. Settlement date was July 20, 1966, at which time the deed and the deed of trust securing the purchase money were executed. None of these written instruments contained any metes and bounds description of the property conveyed, the only description being the lot and block designation, with reference to the plat recorded among the land records of Prince George’s County.

The particular home which was purchased by the McGraths had been set apart as a model home for the subdivision and Chesapeake had maintained a sales office in this home, a Mr. Speert, the sales manager of Chesapeake, usually being on location and in charge. The McGraths were attracted to the Briarwood model structure on the property and were particularly concerned about the size of Lot 8, Block, C with reference to the dimension of the back yard. Inquiry was made by the McGraths as to the location of the rear property line prior to their entering into the contract of sale. At the time they first viewed the property the lot was sodded to only a short distance from the rear of the dwelling, and the McGraths inquired as to whether the lot only went that far. Speert assured them that the rear line of the lot was farther back, and escorted them to a wooden stake which was in line with a projection of the line of three utility poles then standing in the rear of five completed homes on Cipriano Road, the McGraths’ property being the southernmost lot of this group. Speert walked the McGraths *483 along this line and assured them it was the rear boundary line of the lot. This line as projected made Lot No. 8 nearly one-half again as large as it actually was. The truth of the matter was that the pole standing the farthest away from McGraths’ lot was the only pole located on the rear property line of any of the lots fronting on Cipriano Road, and the second and third poles, while placed in a visual line with the first, were not on the rear property lines of any of the lots, although an unknowledgeable- and imaginative individual might have obtained the erroneous impression that the rear property lines of all five lots facing Cipriano Road formed a straight line coextensive with the utility poles. The rear property line of Lot No. 8, it being an irregularly shaped lot, was completely unrelated to either an extension of the rear property lines of the other four lots, or the projection of the visual alignment of the utility poles. In fact, the rear line was so close to the house that it cut off a substantial portion of the sod already set in. Speert in his testimony at the-hearing stated that he actually believed the rear line of the Mc-Grath lot to be an extension of the visual line of the utility poles and, for the purposes of this appeal, it was conceded that this, was an honest mistake of fact on the part of Speert.

Between the date of the contract and the date of settlement, a period of almost four months, the McGraths frequently visited this property, and the record reveals several occasions on which they were assured by Mr. Speert and by Mr. Davis, a salesman for Chesapeake, that the rear line of the lot was an extension of the utility pole line. Even on the date of settlement the matter was brought up again by Mr. McGrath in the presence of Mr. Gately, Vice President of Chesapeake, whom Mc-Grath says informed him “the lot went right back to the telephone line extended.” Also present at the settlement was Mr. Weinstein, a representative of the title company.

Two of the five owners of houses facing on Cipriano Road' near the McGraths testified they too had been shown the extension of the utility line as the rear property line of the lots, including the lot purchased by the McGraths. Actually, after the-settlement, Chesapeake did sod back to the projection of the utility pole lines. Debris was also removed from this area, and the McGraths incorporated it into their rear yard.

*484 The memorandum of settlement, which is a printed form type of settlement sheet and is filed as an exhibit, contains an item for a survey charge to be paid by the seller. However, no charge was made for a survey, no survey was produced by anyone or .requested by anyone at the time of settlement and apparently no survey had been made of this specific lot with reference to this transaction. Some months later, after litigation was instituted, the McGraths had a survey made of the property. Mr. McGrath also testified that although he had frequently observed the plat of the Woodholme Forest Subdivision on the wall of ■Chesapeake’s office, he had not paid any attention to it because Mr. Speert had advised him: “* * * there is a little plat that is ■on the wall, but there is no need to look at it because it is confusing.” On cross-examination McGrath further testified that Mr. Speert, with reference to this plat, had told him that “* * * ■it was so small you can’t tell the true lot line.”

On or about September 1, 1966 the appellees, who for some 'weeks had been in possession and occupancy, noticed that workmen appeared near their dwelling and were apparently preparing to build a house on the land which had been continuously ■represented, recognized and utilized as the McGraths’ back yard. Upon inquiry they learned that the proposed structure would 'be situated about 18 feet from the sun deck of their home and ■ approximately 28 feet from their picture window. The Mc-■Graths protested against the proposed construction of this dwelling and when it appeared they were being ignored, filed a bill ■of complaint in equity to restrain Chesapeake from further construction or conveyance of the property to anyone else and asked the court to impose a constructive trust in their favor on the -3,000 square feet which Chesapeake represented as being part •of the McGrath lot. It was later ascertained that exactly 3,290 sq. feet in dispute was not part of Lot 8, Block C but was rather part of the adjoining Lot 7, Block C.

Chesapeake, although admitting to an innocent misrepresentation of fact concerning the boundary, argued that the Mc-Graths were not entitled to relief because Mr. McGrath, a practicing attorney who had some experience in this field and repTesented himself as being a general practitioner of the law, did mot exercise reasonable diligence on his own behalf. Chesa *485 peake contended that McGrath knew of the subdivision plat hanging on the wall of the sales office, which they presumed he had the opportunity to examine, and was also aware that a plat of the subdivision was on file among the land records of Prince George’s County, which plat would show precisely the dimensions, courses, distances and area of each lot.

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Bluebook (online)
240 A.2d 245, 249 Md. 480, 1968 Md. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-homes-inc-v-mcgrath-md-1968.