Ginsberg v. McIntire

704 A.2d 1246, 348 Md. 526
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 6, 1998
Docket52, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 704 A.2d 1246 (Ginsberg v. McIntire) 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
Ginsberg v. McIntire, 704 A.2d 1246, 348 Md. 526 (Md. 1998).

Opinion

*529 RODOWSKY, Judge.

We granted certiorari on our own motion in this appeal, prior to its consideration by the Court of Special Appeals, primarily to consider the following, somewhat argumentatively phrased, issue:

“Did the trial court commit reversible error by permitting appellee to call a sitting Maryland state court judge as a witness on an irrelevant issue and to trumpet continually his judicial status before the jury, thereby allowing appellee to stamp her case with the imprimatur of a sitting judge?”

The appeal also raises sufficiency of the evidence issues, embellished by the parties’ disagreement over who are parties appellant and what damages are included in the final judgment.

Kensington Professional Center, Inc. (KPC) developed a relatively small (13,127 s.f.), three-story office building at 10901 Connecticut Avenue in Montgomery County. Formed in November 1984 under Maryland law by Stephen P. Ginsberg, an ophthalmologist and one of the appellants, and by John N. Mclntire, the owner of a chain of hardware stores, a builder, and a non-practicing lawyer, KPC was their vehicle for the construction, leasing, and operation of the then contemplated office building. Dr. Ginsberg owned fifty percent of the KPC stock and John Mclntire placed his fifty percent of KPC stock in his living trust. Dr. Ginsberg’s objective in the venture seems to have been to secure a suitable and stable location for his practice, while John Mclntire’s objective seems to have been investment. John Mclntire died before the building was completed. On his death his widow, Virginia A. Mclntire, one of the appellees, became beneficial owner of his KPC stock. When the building was completed Dr. Ginsberg occupied the second floor and managed the building for KPC. In the litigation now before us Virginia Mclntire alleges, inter alia, that Dr. Ginsberg violated his duty of loyalty to KPC in a number of ways, including particularly by unilaterally reducing the second floor rent that had been agreed upon with John Mclntire.

*530 Inasmuch as the verdicts of the fact finders were in favor of the appellees, plaintiffs below, we shall present the facts most favorable to the plaintiffs. Before doing so, however, we point out that there are at least three different leases that appear in the evidence for Dr. Ginsberg’s medical offices on the second floor of the KPC building. Each of these leases is to Stephen P. Ginsberg, M.D., P.A., Dr. Ginsberg’s professional association (the P.A.). Each lease and any addendum are signed for KPC by Dr. Ginsberg, each lease and any addendum are signed for the P.A. by Dr. Ginsberg, and Dr. Ginsberg admits that he prepared each of the leases. Specifically the leases are:

a lease dated February 21, 1987, at an annual rent of $108,200 or $20 per square foot, for an initial term of five years with four additional five-year extensions at the option of the P.A. (PX 21);
a lease dated September 1, 1987, at an annual rent of $86,560 or $16 per square foot, for an initial term of five years with four additional five-year extensions at the option of the P.A., and containing an addendum exercising the first renewal option as of September 1, 1987 (PX 18); and a lease dated September 1, 1987, at an annual rent of $86,560 or $16 per square foot, for an initial term of ten years together with four additional five-year extensions at the option of the P.A. (PX 19).

Each lease dated September 1, 1987, bears a legend typed at the top of the first page and reading, “This lease takes precedence over the earlier lease between same parties dated February 21st, 1987.”

At KPC’s organizational meeting Dr. Ginsberg was elected president and a director, John Mclntire vice president and a director, Dr. Ginsberg’s wife, Ruth Ginsberg, one of the appellants, secretary and treasurer, and John Mclntire’s longtime accountant, Glenn M. Hendrickson (Hendrickson), assistant secretary-treasurer. John Mclntire’s stock in KPC was issued to his living trust in consideration of his having contributed the land to the venture, valued at $36,000, and in *531 consideration of services rendered and to be rendered in managing the project. Dr. Ginsberg executed a demand note to the order of KPC in the amount of $125,000 in consideration of his stock. KPC also obtained a construction loan from Citizens Savings Bank, F.S.B. (Citizens) for $1,344,000 that closed October 3, 1986, and was repayable in five years from that date. The Mclntires and the Ginsbergs personally guaranteed that loan.

By November 1986 John Mclntire had been stricken with cancer that was so painful that his wife administered shots to him approximately every two and one-half hours. Nevertheless, Mclntire was able, through a real estate broker, to acquire Merrill Lynch Realty/Chris Coile, Inc. (Merrill Lynch) as the tenant for the first floor of the building. The lease to Merrill Lynch, dated February 4, 1987, was for a term of ten years commencing on October 1, 1987, at an annual rent of $120,494.04 or $22 per square foot.

John Mclntire died in Florida on February 25, 1987, of a heart attack following an automobile accident. He and Virginia Mclntire had left for Florida on Sunday, February 22, 1987. On the day before their departure, Saturday, February 21, 1987, there was a luncheon at the Mclntire home attended by their children and grandchildren who anticipated that John Mclntire would not return alive from Florida because of his cancer. After John Mclntire’s death Dr. Ginsberg assumed the business direction of KPC.

Costs of the project exceeded the construction loan, and it was necessary for KPC to borrow an additional $200,000 from Citizens that was secured by a second mortgage dated July 31, 1987. Dr. Ginsberg, Mrs. Ginsberg, and Virginia Mclntire personally guaranteed the second mortgage. The discussions between Dr. Ginsberg and Virginia Mclntire concerning cost overruns and the additional mortgage financing were the first discussions that she had with Dr. Ginsberg concerning the KPC project after John Mclntire’s death.

In the late summer of 1987, Dr. and Mrs. Ginsberg came to Virginia Mclntire’s home and explained that additional funds *532 were needed to meet the cost of the building. Mrs. Mclntire advanced $120,000.

Merrill Lynch moved into the first floor space in August or September of 1987, and the P.A. occupied the second floor beginning in October of that year. The P.A. paid rent at the rate of $16/s.f. The amount that Dr. Ginsberg and John Mclntire had agreed upon as KPC’s contribution to improving leased space for particular tenants, called “tenant improvements” or “build-outs,” was $8/s.f. (the tenant standard). The cost of Merrill Lynch’s build-outs were at the tenant standard. Dr. Ginsberg’s medical offices, however, were much more expensive. The build-out for the P.A. totaled approximately $145,000 or $26.62/s.f. No part of the third floor was rented until March 1989. That floor consisted of 2240 s.f., 800 s.f. of which were leased in 1989 to a physical therapist for $18/s.f., with four months free rent in lieu of tenant improvements.

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Bluebook (online)
704 A.2d 1246, 348 Md. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ginsberg-v-mcintire-md-1998.