Griffith v. One Investment Plaza Associates

488 A.2d 182, 62 Md. App. 1, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 322
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 15, 1985
Docket693, 694, September Term, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 488 A.2d 182 (Griffith v. One Investment Plaza Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. One Investment Plaza Associates, 488 A.2d 182, 62 Md. App. 1, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 322 (Md. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

ADKINS, Judge.

Appellant, Edward A. Griffith, sued appellee One Investment Plaza Associates (Associates) and appellee The Tow-son Investment Building, Inc. (Towson). 1 In each case, he alleged an oral agreement between himself and Associates. By virtue of the agreement, he averred, he was entitled to commissions from renewals of a leased portion of The Investment Building in Towson. Associates and Towson each demurred on the ground, inter alia, that Griffith’s claim was barred by the Statute of Frauds. In addition, *3 Towson counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that it was not liable to Griffith.

The Circuit Court for Baltimore County sustained both demurrers without leave to amend. It also entered a declaratory judgment to the effect that the Statute of Frauds barred Griffith’s claim against Towson. The issue on appeal is whether the statute bars Griffith’s claims against both appellees. The facts, taken as established by virtue of the demurrers and as stipulated to by the parties, are these:

In 1971 Griffith and Associates (the then owner of The Towson Investment Building) entered into an oral agreement. Under that agreement Associates undertook to pay Griffith certain real estate commissions for leasing space in The Towson Investment Building (Building). Griffith negotiated various leases for portions of the Building and was paid initial commissions and renewal commissions by Associates. Among those leases was one between Associates as landlord and the State of Maryland as tenant. This was a five-year lease commencing in 1977. It contained options for five one-year renewals.

In 1981 Associates sold the Building to Towson. In 1982 the State exercised its option to renew the lease for a one-year term. In 1983 the State exercised its option to renew for a second one-year term. These renewals form the basis for Griffith’s claims for commissions.

Griffith advances several reasons to support his contention that the Statute of Frauds does not bar these claims. They include part performance of the contract and the purported effect of § 14-105 of the Real Property Article (dealing with circumstances under which a real estate broker is entitled to commissions). We need not address these arguments, but nevertheless we agree with Griffith that the statute does not preclude his claims because the oral contract was capable of being performed within one year.

Article 39C, § 1 of the Maryland Code provides, in pertinent part:

*4 No action may be brought:

(3) Upon any agreement that is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof;
Unless the contract or agreement upon which the action is brought, or some memorandum or note of it, is in writing and signed by the party to be charged, or some other person lawfully authorized by him.

Appellees argue that this provision is an absolute bar to Griffith’s actions because the lease between Associates and the State was itself entered into more than one year after the 1971 oral contract and because that lease and its renewal options could not be performed within one year. 2 In making the arguments, the appellees miss the point. The agreement upon which we must focus here is not the lease, but the earlier oral employment contract. It was in that undertaking that Associates promised to pay Griffith commissions. That undertaking forms the essential predicate for Griffith’s actions. The question is whether that undertaking could have been performed within one year.

So far as the record reveals, the 1971 agreement was one apparently terminable at will by either party. No term of employment is alleged. Under its terms Griffith was employed to secure tenants for the Building, and was to be paid commissions, at a specified rate, for each tenant he obtained. The facts before us do not suggest any particular time frame within which the contract was to be performed. It was, so far as we can tell, a contract of indefinite duration.

As early as 1853 the Court of Appeals opined *5 the statute will not apply where the contract can, by any possibility, be fulfilled or completed in the space of a year, although the parties may have intended its operation should extend through a much longer period. A contract to serve another for two years, would be within the statute; but a contract to serve for an indefinite period, subject to be put an end to at any time upon reasonable notice, is not within the statute though it may extend beyond the year.

Ellicott v. Peterson, 4 Md. 476, 488 (1853) [emphasis partly in original and partly supplied]. See also Campbell v. Burnett, 120 Md. 214, 224-25, 87 A. 894 (1913) (“the contract was indefinite and could have been terminated at any time”).

Put otherwise, there are two sets of circumstances under which the one-year provision of the Statute of Frauds will bar a claim. One occurs when the parties “ ‘expressly and specifically’ agreed that their oral contracts were not to be performed within one year.” Sun Cab Co. v. Carmody, 257 Md. 345, 350, 263 A.2d 1 (1970). The other occurs when it is impossible by the terms of the contract for it to be performed fully within one year. Chesapeake Financial Corp. v. Laird, 289 Md. 594, 600, 425 A.2d 1348 (1981). Neither of these circumstances is present here. There is no allegation or stipulation to the effect that Griffith and Associates agreed that performance of the 1971 contract was not to be accomplished within a year. There is nothing before us to show that Griffith could not have performed within one year, by leasing all the space in the Building within that period. Nor is there anything to show that either Griffith or Associates could not have brought the entire arrangement to an end by terminating it within a year.

The case before us is distinguishable from Collection and Investigation Bureau of Maryland, Inc. v. Linsley, 37 Md.App. 66, 375 A.2d 47 (1977). In that case there was an oral agreement under which Linsley was employed for one year and in which he agreed not to compete with his *6 employer “for a period of two ... years immediately following termination of employment....” 37 Md.App. at 69, 375 A.2d 47. Linsley terminated his employment and went to work for a competitor. His former employer sought to enjoin the competition. We held the covenant not to compete was within the statute because, by its very terms, it could not be performed in less than two years. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
488 A.2d 182, 62 Md. App. 1, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-one-investment-plaza-associates-mdctspecapp-1985.