Chew v. DeVries

213 A.2d 742, 240 Md. 216, 1965 Md. LEXIS 444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 19, 1965
Docket[No. 433, September Term, 1964.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 213 A.2d 742 (Chew v. DeVries) 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
Chew v. DeVries, 213 A.2d 742, 240 Md. 216, 1965 Md. LEXIS 444 (Md. 1965).

Opinion

Prescott, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves a somewhat unusual set of facts, and reaches us in a rather peculiar posture.

On August 14, 1959, the appellees were, and still are, the owners of a parcel of land consisting of about 121 acres, situate *218 in Baltimore County, Maryland. On that date, they executed and delivered to one S. I. Lapidus an option (Lapidus option) to purchase the subject property at a purchase price of $85,000. There are only two provisions in this option which require interpretation. They follow:

“Notice of election by the optionee, his successors or assigns to purchase the aforesaid property, shall be in writing and shall be given to the Optionors, their heirs, personal representatives, successors or assigns at any time within four (4) years of the date of this Option.”
* h= *
“This Option shall not be revocable for a period of four years from the date hereof, and shall remain in force and effect thereafter until terminated by the Optionors. Such termination may be effected at any time after the expiration of the aforesaid four year period by the Optionors giving ninety days prior written notice to the Optionee of such termination; provided, however, that no right to terminate shall be exercised by the Optionors after the Optionee has elected to purchase the property herein described.”

On July 11, 1961, the appellees executed another option for the same piece of land to William F. Chew (the Chew option), one of the appellants herein. (The other named appellant is a corporation which is wholly owned by Chew and the parties concede that Chew is the only real party in interest; hence Chew will be referred to as the appellant, and we will not refer further to the corporation, unless such a course seems desirable.) This option provided for a purchase price of $108,200 upon exercise. The parties concede that it was properly exercised by Chew on October 6 and 9, 1961, within a valid extension granted to him.

On October 10, 1961, Chew and his agents became aware of the Lapidus option which had been recorded among the Land Records prior to that time. The Chew option and extension were also recorded among said Land Records.

Chew’s attorney on October 20, 1961, wrote the appellees’ *219 attorney for a statement of the balance due under an outstanding mortgage, and also requested a release of the Lapidus option. He suggested a settlement date of October 27, 1961, therein. Appellees’ attorney replied, enclosing a mortgage statement, but indicating that Lapidus would not release his option. On October 30, 1961, Chew’s attorney replied that there was little point in scheduling settlement without such a release, and that Chew intended to file suit for damages.

On October 31, 1961, without the knowledge or consent of the appellees, Chew purchased the Lapidus option (having it assigned to his corporation) for a purchase price of $65,000. On August 15, 1963, the appellees wrote to Chew’s corporation, attempting to terminate the Lapidus option. The corporation wrote back to appellees claiming 90 days in which to elect to exercise that option. Appellees replied on August 27, 1963, that the time for election had expired four years from the date of the option. On August 29 and again on November 6, 1963, the corporation notified appellees of an election to exercise the Lapidus option. This election was again resisted by the appellees.

The appellees agreed below that Chew was entitled to have settlement under the Chew option according to the terms thereof, but denied Chew’s right to deduct the $65,000' paid for the Lapidus agreement. The appellant, in his bill of complaint, prayed the court to grant him specific performance of the contract resulting from the exercise of the Chew option, but requested an abatement of the $65,000 paid to Lapidus. Under this theory, the purchase price to the appellees would have been a net $43,200.

Appellant also requested alternative relief in that if the court refused his prayer mentioned just above, then the court allow him to exercise the Lapidus option and award him damages under the contract arising from the Chew option.

The appellant offered testimony by a real estate expert of conceded qualifications that the value of the land was $2,000 per acre at the time of Chew’s purchase of the Lapidus agreement; his purpose being to attempt to establish that $65,000 was a reasonable purchase price for the Lapidus agreement.

Chew owned a 176 acre parcel of land contiguous with the subject parcel, and the Chew parcel had very limited ingress and *220 egress, which made the subject parcel of peculiar value to Chew.

There was testimony offered by the appellees (denied by testimony adduced by the appellant) that Lapidus had orally agreed with the appellees, prior to the execution by them of the Chew agreement, that he would release his option.

The Chancellor denied appellant’s first prayer for relief, but granted his second in part. He held that when Chew exercised the Lapidus option, he abandoned his rights under the contract resulting from the exercise of the Chew option. He, therefore, decreed specific performance of the contract resulting from the Lapidus option, without damages allegedly resulting from the Chew option.

The appellant duly noted an appeal, but there was no cross-appeal by the appellees.

Thus, it is seen from the above facts and the posture in which the action reaches us that the question for our decision is whether the chancellor failed to grant the appellant any relief to which he was entitled. We think he did not.

It will not be necessary for us to consider all of the rights of the optionors and the optionee of the Lapidus option during the entire period from its execution until the attempted exercise thereof by the appellant. It was not exercised within four years from its date, but was exercised before ninety daj^s’ written notice of its termination by the optionors. We must, therefore, determine whether it was validly exercised in accordance with its terms. The Chancellor pointed out that the two excerpts, quoted above, were not so clear and precise, when considered in relation one to the other, as might be desired; but held that the two could and should be harmonized so as to give full effect to each. He did this by considering both provisions together and interpreting the second “shall” in the first excerpt as not being used in a compulsory or peremptory sense, but in a directory or permissible one. This was proper. The word “shall” has frequently been so construed by the courts on proper occasions. In re Rickell’s Estate, 158 Md. 654, 659; Delaware County Dairies v. White, 75 N. Y. S. 2d 434; and see the cases collected in 39 Words and Phrases (Perm, ed), pp. 118, et seq.

There is a well-established rule of contractual construction that where two provisions of a contract are seemingly in con *221

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Bluebook (online)
213 A.2d 742, 240 Md. 216, 1965 Md. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chew-v-devries-md-1965.