Donnelly Advertising Corp. v. Flaccomio

140 A.2d 165, 216 Md. 113, 1958 Md. LEXIS 405
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 21, 1958
Docket[No. 155, September Term, 1957.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 140 A.2d 165 (Donnelly Advertising Corp. v. Flaccomio) 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
Donnelly Advertising Corp. v. Flaccomio, 140 A.2d 165, 216 Md. 113, 1958 Md. LEXIS 405 (Md. 1958).

Opinions

HornEy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by the Donnelly Advertising Corporation of Maryland, (the tenant), from a judgment for $350 obtained by Annie Flaccomio, (the landlord), in the Superior Court of Baltimore City (Mason, J., sitting without a jury). The judgment represents two months’ rent which the trial court held was due under an “implied” lease which arose as a result of the tenant holding over after the expiration of a written lease which expired on March 20, 1956.

On November 16, 1955, the tenant acquired all of the property of The Morton Company, Inc., (the previous tenant), including the lease from the landlord to the previous tenant. The term of the original lease, which began on August 1, 1947, and ended on March 20, 1953, had been extended by written agreements for three successive terms of one year each, the last extension ending, as stated, on March 20, 1956. Each of the written agreements provided that the-extended term would be on “the same terms and conditions of the original lease”. The tenant was obliged to pay rent of $175 per month, plus ground rent of $60 per annum, water rent, and various taxes.

The property leased is- a row house at 405 North Exeter [118]*118■ Street in Baltimore City. It was particularly desirable as advertising space since it had acquired a side exposure towards ■Orleans Street after the condemnation by the City of the two ■adjacent houses to the south in connection with the construction of the Orleans Street Viaduct. The condemnation left alongside of the landlord’s house a small lot of land owned by the City. When the original lease was executed the house was vacant and in an uninhabitable condition. At first the previous tenant used the building for the support of a signboard on the south wall facing Orleans Street and as space for another painted sign. It was also used for housing the electrical equipment for the sign and part of the equipment •for the thermometer on the sign. A hole was cut through the wall of the house for that purpose. Later the previous tenant sank steel girders into the adjacent vacant lot of the City. Although some steel braces betweén the sign and the house remained until the tenant vacated, the billboard was thereafter supported in the main by these girders. While the previous tenant had the right under the lease to use the property for •any purpose whatsoever, there is no evidence that any part 'of it was used for any purpose other than those mentioned above, except the first floor which was sublet to a neighboring manufacturer for the storage of equipment.

Since a decision of this case depends primarily on the interpretation of a series of letters between the parties, it is necessary to discuss and analyze such letters with particularity. On December 8, 1955, the tenant wrote to Murray •McNabb, Esq., who was then the attorney for the landlord, stating that it had acquired the interest of the previous tenant in the property. Realizing that the then current extension expired on March 20, 1956, it said: “We will at that time arrange for an assignment of lease between the proper parties.” On February 29, 1956, the tenant wrote to the landlord confirming a verbal offer made by it on February 23, 1956, to pay a rental reduced from $2100 a year to $1000 a year, but for a five-year term instead of a one-year term. On March 12, 1956, the attorney for the landlord replied to this offer: “* * * [the landlord] is not willing to rent her ■property for less than the amount it has been bringing for the [119]*119past several years, as she said she could have put stores here but for this lease.”

By March 20, 1956, the expiration date of the lease, nothing further had been done. Until this date, the tenant had offered to lease at a lower rental, but the landlord had flatly refused to accept the offer. On March 23, 1956, the third day after it had begun to hold over, the tenant wrote the following letter to the landlord:

“Due to the fact that the present lease has expired, and as you are aware, we are attempting to renegotiate a new lease with you.
“We will continue on the same rental basis from month to month until such time as we can come to some agreement as to the future.
“We reserve the right to vacate the property upon thirty (30) days’ written notice at any time should we fail to be able to make satisfactory arrangements.
“Check for one month is enclosed.”

On March 30, 1956, the tenant received the following letter from the landlord’s attorney:

“Your lease has expired and I have authorized * * * [the landlord] to deposit the one check which pays for the current month, but * * * [the landlord] desires me to inform you that she is not willing for you to continue on a month to month basis, but she will rent year to year.
“Please arrange to sign a lease for a year or remove your property from the premises and restore the premises to its former condition prior to the lease.”

Nothing further was heard from the tenant until April 16, 1956, when the landlord received a check for the rent from April 20, 1956, to May 20, 1956. In the letter accompanying the check the tenant stated that it would not continue to lease the property beyond May 20, 1956. Therein the tenant also stated that there had not been a renewal of the “previous agreement”. On the same day, April 16, 1956, the landlord’s attorney wrote to the tenant enclosing the bill for the ground [120]*120rent which the tenant was obliged to pay under the origiñal lease. The attorney added:

“I have heretofore notified you that * * * [the landlord] is not willing to rent this property from month to month but must be from year to year so that if you are not out of there immediately and have not moved your equipment we shall consider that you are taking it for another year under the same terms or I shall have to issue ejectment proceedings, whichever we find most advantageous to us.
“You must understand that * * * [the landlord] does not wish to lose any of her rights in the property by letting you stay there without a lease and it is my duty to protect her in this respect.”

On April 20, 1956, the tenant replied to the attorney, stating that it would send $30 in payment of six months’ ground rent to the owner of the reversion. On April 25, 1956, the attorney wrote to the tenant that:

“Inasmuch as you have gone over two months since the termination of the lease, I believe that under the law you have automatically renewed the lease for another term of year to year.”

The tenant countered on April 27, 1956, by stating that it would vacate on May 20, 1956, but once again, on May 2, 1956, the attorney for the landlord insisted that the lease had been “automatically renewed * * * for a period of a year on the same terms.”

This suit ’ was brought to recover the rent claimed to be due for the months beginning May 21, 1956, and June 21, 1956, respectively, on the theory that the tenant was holding over under an implied lease for one year beginning March 21, 1956, and ending March 20, 1957, since it remained on the premises after March 20, 1956, until May 15, 1956.

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Donnelly Advertising Corp. v. Flaccomio
140 A.2d 165 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 A.2d 165, 216 Md. 113, 1958 Md. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnelly-advertising-corp-v-flaccomio-md-1958.