Debnam v. Simonson

92 A. 782, 124 Md. 354, 1914 Md. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 92 A. 782 (Debnam v. Simonson) 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
Debnam v. Simonson, 92 A. 782, 124 Md. 354, 1914 Md. LEXIS 36 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The allegations contained in the amended narr. in this case, upon which suit was instituted by the appellant against the appellees, are as follows:

“* * * j.]le piaPpiff^ in the latter part of the year 1912, had entered into and was about to enter into certain contracts under which a company was to be organized to purchase a tract of land situate on the west side of St. Paul street near Twenty-sixth street, in Baltimore City, and to erect an apartment house thereon; and for that the plaintiff had submitted his said contracts and plans, in the fullest confidence, to the defendant, Otto G. Simonson, who was an architect in the City of Baltimore. The defendant Simonson was employed by the plaintiff to prepare a set of plans and specifications for the erection of said apartment house, and the defendant accepted said employment, and agreed with the plaintiff to accept in payment for his said services, in lieu of cash, six per cent, of the total cost of the apartment house in the stock of the corporation to be organized by the plaintiff; and the said defendant had prepared a set of plans and specifications for the plaintiff, and had given them to the *356 plaintiff to be used by him in completing his contracts and plans for the erection of the apartment house.
“And for that the plaintiff, with the full knowledge of said defendant, proceeded to make the necessary financial agreements to carry out said project, and was engaged for a number of weeks in perfecting the same, and had secured contracts,'from various persons to furnish materials and labor, and had entered into a contract to borrow sufficient moneys to fully carry out and complete said project, and was about to enter into a contract for the purchase of the said lot of ground, and was in every way prepared and ready to fully complete the Said project, when he was prevented from so doing by the exertions and influence of said Simon-son in the manner following, to wit: Said Simonson conspired with the defendant Herbert J. West, and said defendants interfered with and prevented the plaintiff from completing said project by maliciously, unlawfully and fraudulently betraying the trust and confidence reposed in them or some of them, as the result of their employment by the plaintiff, and purchasing, through the agency of the defendant, the Normandie Apartments Company, the tract of land herein-before referred to, upon which the iffaintiff intended to build his apartment house, and in this way the defendants interfered with and prevented the carrying-out by the plaintiff of the contracts already entered into by him, as well as the contracts about to be entered into for the purchase of said land and the erection of the apartment house thereupon.
“And for that the action of the said defendants in so conspiring together and betraying the trust and confidence reposed in them, or some of them was unlawful and in fraud of the rights of the plaintiff, and was done by said defendants for the purpose of securing gain and profit to themselves.
“And for that by the actions of the defendants aforesaid, the plaintiff has suffered great pecuniary loss and damage by being prevented from completing his said contracts and buying the lot of ground and building the apartment house thereon.”

*357 Each of the defendants demurred to this amended declarat ion. These demurrers were sustained by the Court below and judgment was entered thereon for defendants’ costs. It is from the action of the Court in sustaining such demurrers that this appeal is taken.

The act complained of which interfered with and prevented, as alleged in the declaration, the fulfillment of the contracts already entered into by the plaintiff, and which interfered with and prevented the plaintiff! from entering into other contracts which he was about to enter into, was the purchase of the lot of land by the defendants, Simonson and West, through the agency of the defendant, the Normandie Apartments Company, which lot of land the plaintiff had contemplated purchasing in carrying out his general plan, which embraced the organization of a company and the purchase of said lot by said company and the erection of an apartment house thereon.

The declaration merely states that the plaintiff “was about to enter into a contract for the purchase of said lot of ground.” Not that he had entered into a contract or that he had commenced negotiations with the owner for the purchase of said land.

It is only upon the act of purchasing said lot of land that the defendants are charged with interfering with the contracts already entered into by the plaintiff or interfering with or preventing him from entering into other contracts which he was about to enter into for the furtherance of the objects aforesaid. The inability of the plaintiff to carry out the contracts said to have been entered into by him with others for financing the project and for furnishing material to be used in the construction of said apartment house is not alleged to have been the result of any direct interference with or any influence directly exerted upon the parties with whom said contracts were made, but was the result of the purchase of Hie said lot of land by the defendants.

One of the questions here to be considered is, was the act of the the defendants in purchasing this lot of ground, under *358 all the facts and circumstances of this case, an unlawful act, giving a right of action to the plaintiff to recover from the defendants for damages resulting to him therefrom, if it be shown that had it not been for such act of the defendants, the plans made by the plaintiff would have been fully consummated ?

The mere fact that the plaintiff has suffered damage or has lost an opportunity to profit financially because of his failure to consummate his plans owing to the purchase of said lot of land by the defendants, does not in itself give him the right of recovery from the defendants for the damage sustained by him. The act must be of .such a character as to create an actionable wrong before the right of recovery against the defendants exists, and to create an actionable wrong the legal rights of the plaintiff must in some way be invaded. There must be a violation of a legal right committed knowingly to create a cause.of action. Qnickerbocker v. Gardiner Dairy Co., 107 Md. 565; Cumberland Glass Co. v. Dewitt, 120 Md. 381; Sumwalt v. Knickerbocker, 114 Md. 403, and other cases.

What legal rights of the plaintiff in this case have been interfered with by the defendants ?

As to the lot herein mentioned, it cannot be gathered from the allegations contained in the declaration that the plaintiff had any rights in respect thereto or in connection therewith superior to those possessed by any other person. Nor can it be gathered from the declaration that he ever approached the owner of the lot with the view of purchasing it or that negotiations were ever started or undertaken by him in any way with such object in view, or that he could have purchased it from the owner had he attempted to do SO'.

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Bluebook (online)
92 A. 782, 124 Md. 354, 1914 Md. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/debnam-v-simonson-md-1914.