Cloverfields Improvement Assoc., Inc. v. Seabreeze Properties, Inc.

362 A.2d 675, 32 Md. App. 421, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 438
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 28, 1976
Docket1142, September Term, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 362 A.2d 675 (Cloverfields Improvement Assoc., Inc. v. Seabreeze Properties, Inc.) 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
Cloverfields Improvement Assoc., Inc. v. Seabreeze Properties, Inc., 362 A.2d 675, 32 Md. App. 421, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 438 (Md. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Gilbert, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Cloverfields Improvement Association, Inc. (Association), one of the appellants, 1 and Seabreeze Properties, Inc. (Seabreeze), the appellee, both claim ownership by separate recorded documents to the same property. Association here contends the assignment to; it vests it with title, while Seabreeze avers the deed it received some six (6) years later is the valid document.

In order to assert its ownership, Association filed a petition for a declaratory decree in the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County. Following an answer by Seabreeze, *423 the matter was submitted on stipulated facts to Judge B. Hackett Turner. The trial judge decreed that Association’s assignment was a nullity, that Seabreeze was the owner of the property that Association claimed, and that Association was required to account to Seabreeze for certain monies collected by Association under the mistaken belief that they were so entitled.

Before undertaking to discuss the issues presented, we shall set the scene.

In 1959, David M. Nichols was a real estate developer actively engaged in Queen Anne’s County. Among the developments undertaken by Nichols, through a corporation named Guaranteed Realty Corporation (Guaranteed), was a 337 acre area known as “Cloverfields,” located on the Chester River, Kent Island. The lots sold by Guaranteed were subject to certain restrictions, covenants, and agreements. By the terms of one clause thereof, a buyer . agreed to pay to Guaranteed or its successor “... a sum not to exceed Twenty Dollars ($20.00) per year . ..” for each lot purchased. Guaranteed agreed that it or its successor would form “... an association of the Purchasers and Owners of the lots ...” for the express “purpose of taking title to and .operating the recreational facilities.” Each purchaser/lot owner covenanted to “maintain membership” in the Association and to abide by its rules and regulations. Guaranteed reserved unto itself the right to manage, supervise, and control all the facilities, “recreational and otherwise,” until seventy-five percent (75%) of the lots in the development had been sold. In the same year, 1959, Guaranteed conveyed the recreational facilities unto a Cloverfields Club, Inc. (Club), a corporation formed by Nichols apparently for the purpose of operating the recreational facilities.

By proclamation of the Governor of Maryland, the corporate charters of Guaranteed and Club were declared to be annulled on December 2, 1964, for nonpayment of taxes and failure to file an annual report. 2 We infer that both *424 Guaranteed and Club failed to pay their respective annual franchise taxes.

Notwithstanding the forfeiture of their charters, Guaranteed and Club purported to assign to Association, in April, 1965, “... all right, title, estate and interest in and to the annual maintenance fee established, set forth, and imposed on each of said lots....” Also, in April, 1965, Guaranteed deeded certain road ways to Association. Earlier in time, i.e., in November of 1962, Club had assigned its right, title, and interest in the operation and maintenance of a club and recreational facilities to Association.

Thereafter, Association, seemingly in reliance upon the purported assignments from Guaranteed and Club, collected the twenty dollar ($20.00) annual lot assessment charge and operated the recreational facilities. Association later discovered that Seabreeze had purchased from Olive J. Nichols and Catherine C. Wallman, “the Surviving Directors” of Guaranteed and Club, on July 2, 1971, all the remaining unsold lots in the development and, at the same time, had acquired from the surviving trustees the rights to collect the twenty dollar ($20.00) assessment and to operate the recreational facilities. From the record, we glean that Seabreeze made demand upon the lot owners for the remittance of the annual fee. Association then brought its declaratory action. While the suit was pending, the corporate charters of Guaranteed and Club were revived on December 10, 1973, by filing “Articles of Revival” with the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland.

THE APRIL 1965 DEED AND ASSIGNMENT

The deed and assignment from Guaranteed to Association occurred approximately four (4) months after Guaranteed’s corporate charter had been declared forfeited. What then was the effect of the assignment? According to H. Bruñe, Maryland Corporation Law and Practice, § 406 (rev. ed. 1953) [hereinafter referred to as Bruñe]:

“The forfeiture for non-payment of taxes puts an end to the corporate existence, and the rights of *425 creditors become fixed at that time. The corporate assets are automatically transferred to the directors, as trustees, for use of the creditors and stockholders or members, and are held by such trustees until revival of the charter of the corporation. The directors as trustees do not incur a landowner’s liability as to property, title to which was no longer in the corporation at the time of forfeiture.’’(Footnotes omitted). (Emphasis added).

The Court of Appeals does not appear to have passed directly upon the situation presented by the unique facts of the case now before us, but, from two of its decisions, we are able to perceive what we believe would be its holding. In Atlantic Mill & Lumber Realty Co. v. Keefer, 179 Md. 496, 499-500, 20 A. 2d 178, 180 (1941), the Court said that all power which had been granted to a corporation whose charter is forfeited is “... inoperative, null and void. This organization ... is not legally in existence as a corporation and cannot function as a corporation.” The Court stated in Callahan v. Clemens, 184 Md. 520, 528, 41 A. 2d 473, 476 (1945), that forfeiture puts “... an end to the corporate existence.” Patently, if the corporate existence terminates upon forfeiture, and the assets are ipso facto transferred to the directors, as trustees, then the corporate officers, as officers, are devoid of authority to act for the corporation. A corporation is a creature of the State. It owes its very being to the State. “Into its nostrils the State must breathe the breath of a fictitious life for otherwise it would be no animated body but individualistic dust.” 3 Once a corporation has been allowed to cease breathing, as through forfeiture, articles of revival 4 are the only resuscitation available to generate life in the corporate body.

We hold that, inasmuch as the charters of Guaranteed and Club had been forfeited, the purported postforfeiture *426 corporate deed and assignment to Association, by David Nichols as president of Guaranteed and Club, were nullities and consequently of no force and effect.

THE MANNER OF EXECUTION OF THE APRIL 24, 1965 DEED AND ASSIGNMENT AS AFFECTING THEIR VALIDITY

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Bluebook (online)
362 A.2d 675, 32 Md. App. 421, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cloverfields-improvement-assoc-inc-v-seabreeze-properties-inc-mdctspecapp-1976.