Cityco Realty Co. v. Slaysman

153 A. 278, 160 Md. 357, 76 A.L.R. 296, 1931 Md. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1931
Docket[No. 95, October Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 153 A. 278 (Cityco Realty Co. v. Slaysman) 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
Cityco Realty Co. v. Slaysman, 153 A. 278, 160 Md. 357, 76 A.L.R. 296, 1931 Md. LEXIS 85 (Md. 1931).

Opinions

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Cityco Realty Company, the appellant in this case, is a corporation engaged in the development and sale of sub *359 urban real estate. On December 18th, 1922, it acquired by grant from the Idlewylde Realty Company part of a tract of land lying in Baltimore County, east of the York Road and a short distance north of the northern boundary of Baltimore City, known as Idlewylde, which had been laid out in lots and improved by the opening of streets and avenues designed to afford access to them. The location of these several lots with relation to such streets and avenues and to each other is shown on a plat known as the “Revised plat of Idlewylde.” One of the avenues so established is Sherwood Road, which runs in a southerly direction from its intersection with Register Avenue, a public highway running in a general easterly direction from the York Road. On October 6th, 1923, the Idlewylde Realty Company granted to Alonzo Slaysman and Elizabeth B. Slaysman, his wife, two contiguous lots of ground known as lots Eos. 386-B and 386-A Idlewylde, each having a depth of 200 feet, and each having a front of 50 feet on the west side of Sherwood Road. At that time the nearest road intersecting Sherwood Road south of the Slaysman lots was Walter Avenue, some seven or eight hundred feet distant, but on one of the earlier plats of Idlewylde, prepared before the appellant acquired the property, a road known as Banbury Road was shown intersecting Sherwood Road at a point 75 feet south of the Slays-man lots, and running westerly from that intersection. That road, if it was ever used, lias been abandoned and no longer exists.

xkfter the appellant acquired the Idlewylde property, it proposed to open, grade, and pave a new road fifty feet wide, abutting on the southern boundary of the Slaysman property, to be known as Overbrook Road, and, in accordance with its policy, it attempted to secure contributions from persons owning land which would abut on the proposed road for aid in defraying the expense of the improvement. With that end in view, the appellant by its president wrote to Alonzo Slays-man, telling him. of the proposed improvement, calling his attention to the fact that his property would have a frontage of 200 feet on the proposed road “if we opened it to your *360 lot,” and agreeing to do that if Slaysman would contribute $350 towards the improvement. Slaysman did not answer that letter, but later a lawyer representing him called upon Mr. John J. Hurst, president of the Cityco Realty Company. Negotiations followed, which came to nothing, and, after they ended, the appellant proceeded to open, grade, and improve the road, but, instead of opening it fifty feet wide, as originally proposed, it opened it forty-nine feet wide, so as to leave between it and the Slaysman property a! strip of ground one foot wide. Later the appellant granted the road forty-nine feet wide to the county, still leaving between it and the Slaysman lots the one-foot strip of ground, the title to which it retained.

After the road was opened, the Slaysmans, on the rear of their lot, erected a dwelling, a one-story bungalow, facing Overbrook road,-which upon its completion was occupied by John H. Slaysman, and he, in connection with his use of the property, from time to time committed a number of petty trespasses and encroachments on the one-foot strip-. After repeatedly protesting against such use without avail, on December 31st, 1929, the appellant filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County in equity its bill of complaint against the appellees, and subsequently on May 30th, 1929, it filed an amended bill, in which it set out, in substance, the facts stated above, and prayed that the defendants be restrained from passing over or using the one-foot strip of ground. The defendants answered the amended bill, and, in so much of their answer as is relevant or material to any question properly in issue, alleged that they did not know of the existence of the one-foot strip until after they had erected the dwelling on the rear of their lots, that during the construction of that building the appellant “made no protest, nor took any steps to assert its right to the one-foot strip of land, or to prevent” the defendants - “from erecting said dwelling,” and, because of its failure to assert its claim to the strip until the building was completed, it is now estopped from interfering with the right of the appellees to use it as a part of Overbrook Road. Exceptions to that answer were overruled, the case heard on *361 bill, answer, and testimony, and on July 17th, 1930, the chancellor dismissed the bill. From that decree this appeal was taken.

The only issue of fact in the case was whether, at the time they erected the dwelling on the rear of their lots, the Slays-mans knew that the appellant had reserved a one-foot strip of land between their land and Overbrook Road.

John J. Ilurst, president of the Cityco Realty Company, testified in the most positive terms that they had such knowledge; John IL Slaysman, a son of the owners of the two lots, said he did not learn of the reservation of the strip until the house on the rear of the lots was about half completed, but Mrs. Alonzo Slaysman testified that at some time, which she did not fix, Mr. Hurst told her that “if we didn’t pay certain money he would fix us,” and that “he seemed very excited and he just told us if we didn’t pay something what he was going to do and he went off' talking.” And, when asked, “Did he say what he was going to do ?” she replied, “Something about a foot of ground, but I could not hear what he said.” When asked to fix the time of that conversation, she said, “We were living there about six months, I guess.” It may be inferred that by “there” she meant the dwelling on the front of the lots, which was erected some time before the construction of the dwelling on the rear of the lots was begun, for it does not appear that she' ever lived in the bungalow, but she did live in the building on the front of the lots. If that was true, then she at least knew that the appellant had no intention of letting the appellees benefit by the construction of the new road unless they contributed to the cost of it.

Hurst had made it unpleasantly plain to the appellees that the appellant did not intend that they should have any benefit of the road unless they helped to pay for it; he had repeated conversations with John II. Slaysman, who was employed by the appellant in the construction of that very road, and had urged him to induce his parents to contribute to the expense of building it. Before construction work on the road was begun, he wrote to Alonzo Slaysman: “We wrote you on April 23rd. Will, you please let us know by return mail, *362 whether you are interested in having your lot made a corner or not, as we are about to go ahead. It will be too late after we make the improvements, to change the plans.” Later he showed him a plat which he had had prepared showing the Slaysman property as a corner lot, to indicate to him just “what he would get,” but Slaysman “did not comply,” and “turned the matter over to his lawyer.” During the construction of the bungalow, which extended over a period of four or five months, John H. Slaysman, who did much of the work on it himself, was warned by the appellant not to carry material across the strip.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 278, 160 Md. 357, 76 A.L.R. 296, 1931 Md. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cityco-realty-co-v-slaysman-md-1931.