Eastern Associates, Inc. v. Sarubin

336 A.2d 765, 274 Md. 378, 1975 Md. LEXIS 1218
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 10, 1975
Docket[No. 153, September Term, 1974.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 336 A.2d 765 (Eastern Associates, Inc. v. Sarubin) 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
Eastern Associates, Inc. v. Sarubin, 336 A.2d 765, 274 Md. 378, 1975 Md. LEXIS 1218 (Md. 1975).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In accordance with Maryland Rule 871 a, we shall remand this case without affirmance or reversal for further proceedings: A trial judge (Grady, J.) determined that a broker, Eastern Associates, Incorporated (Eastern), which was paid a commission for procuring a tenant for a landlord, Morton T. Sarubin (Sarubin), was not entitled to commissions upon the rent paid under a renewal of the lease pursuant to an option in the lease exercised by the tenant.

Eastern and Sarubin entered into a standard listing contract on June 25, 1962, relative to a building owned by Sarubin in the 1300 block of St. Paul Street in Baltimore. The listing was for a period of three months on a printed form entitled “Standard Listing Contract,” said to have been “[p]romulgated by the Real Estate Board of Greater Baltimore,” By the terms of the contract Sarubin agreed to pay Eastern “an amount equal to the commission specified in the Standard Schedule of Rates of the Real Estate Board of Greater Baltimore ... if during the term of th[at] contract, or any extension thereof, said Realtor produce[d] a customer to purchase rent [sic] said property at the last price/rental agreed upon between the owner and the Realtor . . . .” (Emphasis in contract.) The contract recited that “[e]xcerpts from the Standard Schedule of Rates [were] shown on the reverse side of [the] contract.” On the reverse side under “Rates for Procuring Tenants” appeared a sliding scale which began at six percent of “the average annual gross rental over the period of the lease” for the first year and went down to two percent per year after the fifth year. A further provision read:

“Lease Options: Where lease gives tenant an *380 option for an additional period and such option is exercised on the terms stated therein, or on any other terms, or where the tenancy is extended under a new lease, the commission shall be at the rates specified in section 3 (c) of this article (9).”

The reference to rates “specified in section 3 (c)” is to the rates to which we have just referred. No tenant was procured by Eastern before the listing agreement expired. However, Eastern continued in its efforts to find a prospective tenant. On October 28, 1963, Eastern brought this building to the attention of the then Director of the State Department of Budget and Procurement, suggesting it as a possible location for the Children’s Division of the Department of Public Welfare of Baltimore City. On June 29, 1965, the State leased the building for the State Department of Public Welfare for the term of five years at $6,900 per month. The State was “given the option to renew the___Lease for a further term of five (5) years ... subject to the same terms and conditions as in [that] Lease contained.” The option was to be exercised “on or before the expiration of the fourth (4th) year next following the commencement date of ithe] Lease.”

David Greenberg (Greenberg) of Eastern testified that he attempted to persuade counsel for Sarubin to insert in the lease with the State a clause by which Sarubin would agree to pay to Eastern for that lease or any renewal thereof the real estate commissions in effect as of the date of the lease as described by the schedule of the Real Estate Board of Greater Baltimore. Later, he made a similar request of Sarubin, who refused. Greenberg said that Sarubin told him that he would be paid a renewal commission if the State exercised its option. The trial judge explicitly found that Sarubin made no such agreement. A bill in the amount of $16,560 was submitted by Eastern to Sarubin covering the broker’s commission for the original five-year term. This was paid on July 9,1965.

Sarubin has since sold the building. The State exercised its option to renew the lease subsequent to that sale.

Eastern sued Sarubin alleging in its second amended *381 declaration that Eastern was a licensed real estate broker employed by Sarubin to find a tenant for the office building in question; that it procured such a tenant; that a written lease was entered into between Sarubin and the tenant “for an original term of five years commencing December 4, 1965, and providing for an option to tenant to renew said lease for an additional term of five years, subject to termination by tenant, however, on one year”s notice”; that Sarubin paid Eastern “the usual and customary real estate commission, based upon the original five-year term of said lease; that, pursuant to the provisions of said lease, tenant renewed the same for an additional term of five years ...; that, by reason of such renewal, [Eastern] ha[d] earned and ha[d] become entitled to the usual and customary commission in the amount of $1,656.00 based upon the first year of said renewal term beginning December 1, 1970,” which Sarubin had “failed and refused to pay”; and that since the renewal Eastern had “become entitled to additional commissions in the amount of $3,312.00 based on the second and third years of said renewal term commencing December 1, 1971, and December 1, 1972, respectively, but [Sarubin] ha[d] failed and refused to pay same.”

The matter came on for trial in the Superior Court of Baltimore City. Greenberg, by then president of Eastern, testified that he entered the real estate business in 1962, having been licensed as a real estate salesman on April 13 of that year. He said he obtained a license as a broker on May 1, 1964. In response to a question from his attorney as to what “the usual and customary real estate commissions were in the City of Baltimore in June of 1965 for the leasing of a property such as the property located at 1315 Saint Paul Street,” Greenberg testified as to the schedule printed on the back of Eastern’s contract, to which reference has already been made, based on the schedule published by the Real Estate Board. Melvin Greenwald, a real estate broker “[s]ince the very early ’60’s,” described by Eastern in its brief as “an experienced real estate broker specializing in commercial and industrial real estate,” said that “during the period from the beginning of [his] real estate career until *382 1965” he was involved in “perhaps fifty or a hundred” transactions in which he had “occasion to lease, or serve as a broker in the listing of commercial and industrial property.” Greenwald testified that the usual and customary commissions of real estate brokers in Baltimore for the leasing of commercial property, such as that here in question, were the rates to which we have previously made reference. In response to a question from the court, he testified that the “recommended procedure and the custom at the time” was that if there were no written listing agreement between the owner and the real estate agent and the agent obtained a lease for the owner the prevailing custom would provide for rates as previously mentioned for an extension of the original lease.

Sarubin testified that when they “really knew that the State meant business,” he desired to “know exactly what exposure [he] would have from all viewpoints, architecturally, commissions, real estate commissions . . . and also • construction,” as a result of which he asked Greenberg precisely what compensation he expected. The record at that point is:

“And he said, T worked hard and for three years’ and all, this sort of business, I. said, T appreciate that.

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Bluebook (online)
336 A.2d 765, 274 Md. 378, 1975 Md. LEXIS 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastern-associates-inc-v-sarubin-md-1975.