Gilden v. Harris

78 A.2d 167, 197 Md. 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1967
Docket[No. 67, October Term, 1950.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 78 A.2d 167 (Gilden v. Harris) 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
Gilden v. Harris, 78 A.2d 167, 197 Md. 32 (Md. 1967).

Opinion

MARBURY, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On August 29, 1949, a decree was entered by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City in a case therein pending, involving the trust estate of Jane L. West, by the terms of which decree Helen West Harris, substituted trustee of the said trust estate, was authorized to sell the leasehold property situated in the city of Baltimore, known as Nos. 4003-4005 Belle Avenue. The decree stated that the sale might be at either public or private sale, and then, after a semicolon, added the following: “if at public sale, she shall give at least three weeks notice by advertisement, inserted in such daily newspaper or newspapers published in the City of Baltimore, as she shall think proper, of the time, place, manner and *35 terms of sale, which shall be cash, upon ratification of said sale by this Court; or said Substituted Trustee may submit to this Court for its approval and ratification any offer or offers she may receive for the purchase of said property at private sale, provided no private sale shall be for a less amount than the value of said property as shown by the testimony in this case”.

On March 21, 1950, the trustee reported that the appraised value of the properties was $8,250, that she had diligently endeavored to effect a sale, and she brought into court a duly executed contract for a private sale at $8,600 to Max Gilden, on which $1,000 had been paid by the prospective purchaser as a deposit. The trustee further stated that the price was a fair and reasonable one, and was the highest price obtainable. A copy of the contract was attached. The contract provides that it shall be null and void unless approved by the court, and contains a provision that settlement is to occur within 60 days from ratification. It also contains the following sentence: “It being understood and agreed that in the event this sale is not ratified and approved by said court within 30 days from the date hereof, then the sale and this agreement shall be void and all deposit monies shall be returned to the Buyer.” An order nisi was passed on this report.

On March 30, 1950, Louis Silberstein, attorney for Abraham Klein, sent a letter to Judge Moser, who was sitting in the Circuit Court, stating that Klein had been informed by the Lincoln Realty Company, agent for the trustee, that the property could be purchased for $8,300, and that Klein executed and delivered to such agent a contract for that purpose, but that several days later, the contract was returned, and thereafter the trustee entered into the contract of $8,600 which had been reported to the court. The letter further stated that on March 23, 1950, an offer had been made on behalf of Klein to purchase the property at $8,800 which had been refused, as the Gilden contract had been reported. The letter further stated that Klein was now *36 prepared to enter into a written agreement to purchase the property at $9,300, and the matter was therefore brought to the attention of the court. Subsequently, a petition was filed by Klein to the same effect, stating, in addition, that he had filed in the court a contract executed by him for the purchase of the property at $9,300, and had deposited with the clerk a certified check in the amount of $1,500 on account of the purchase price. The petition asked for leave to intervene, and requested the court not to ratify the pending sale. An order to show cause was passed on this petition. The trustee answered, neither admitting nor denying the allegation with respect to the Lincoln Realty Company, and the $8,300. offer of Klein, and asking the assistance of the court in the determination of the several allegations. Gilden filed a petition for leave to intervene and was granted such leave, and he then demurred to, and answered, the Klein petition. Gilden set out in his answer that the court lacked jurisdiction to vacate or set aside a trustee’s sale made in good faith, except on the ground of clear and unmistakable proof of inadequacy of price directly attributable to some failure of reasonable diligence or effort on the part of the trustee, and stated that the trustee exercised reasonable diligence and effort in making the sale to him. He further stated that it has always been the law of Maryland that any party whose interest is exclusively that of a disappointed bidder is not legally entitled to intervene, or to except to any judicial sale made in good faith, and reported to the court by a properly qualified trustee. He controverted the allegations of fact made by Klein in his petition. The court set these matters down for hearing.

The testimony shows that on March 16, 1950, the trustee was offered a contract of $8,300 by Abraham Klein through the Lincoln Realty Company. On March 17, the contract of Max Gilden of $8,600 was received by her. On March 24, the trustee’s counsel received a letter from Klein’s counsel offering $8,800. The president of the Lincoln Realty Company, Carl W. Juelg, said he *37 was engaged by the trustee to sell the property on February 24, 1950. The company placed For Sale signs on the property, advertised it numerous times, and showed it numerous times. They had one $8,000 offer and one $8,250 offer; then Mr. Klein offered first $8,000, and when he was told $8,250 had been turned down, he offered only $8,300, although he had been told by the witness that he should make an offer of at least $8,500. Klein said $8,300 was his top offer. This $8,300 offer was presented to the trustee, but she did not accept it. , The trustee testified that she was the direct beneficiary of the trust estate during her lifetime, and that she has two children aged, respectively, three and thirteen, who inherit the trust at her death. She said that she thought she acted hastily in accepting the $8,600 offer, but she thought it was the best offer at the time, and she would now rather the sale not be ratified for $8,600 because the larger the price, the greater amount there would be in the trust estate. She had tried to sell the property herself since November, 1948. It was in very bad condition and needed repairs involving considerable expenditure. Mr. Lockwood, a real estate broker, had attempted to get her a customer, but the highest offer she had been able to obtain was $8,000; then she received an $8,300 offer from Mr. Klein, and then finally she got the $8,600 offer which she reported. At that time, the Lincoln Realty Company told her that was the highest offer she was going to get. She says she thought she had acted hastily, in view of what she learned subsequently about the additional offers, and her reason for not wanting the sale ratified was that she had had these higher offers since.

The chancellor dismissed the intervening petition of Gilden, and dismissed the petition filed by Klein, and said he was ready to receive any sealed bids anyone was prepared to offer. Gilden objected to the chancellor’s receiving any other bids, but the chancellor ruled that Gilden’s contract was a mere offer until approved by him, and that the trustee acted hastily, with inexperience, *38 and improvidently. He then opened the bids, and found two offers accompanied by certified checks, one of $9,500, and the other of $10,100 on behalf of Klein, also with a certified check. The trustee was instructed to prepare a contract on the offer of Abraham Klein.

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Bluebook (online)
78 A.2d 167, 197 Md. 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilden-v-harris-md-1967.