Gross v. J & L Camping & Sports Center, Inc.

312 A.2d 270, 270 Md. 539, 1973 Md. LEXIS 702
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1973
Docket[No. 82, September Term, 1973.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 312 A.2d 270 (Gross v. J & L Camping & Sports Center, Inc.) 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
Gross v. J & L Camping & Sports Center, Inc., 312 A.2d 270, 270 Md. 539, 1973 Md. LEXIS 702 (Md. 1973).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County (Proctor, J.) by the appellee, J & L Camping & Sports Center, Inc., against Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Gross, appellants, seeking specific performance of a contract to sell their property located in Baltimore County which is designated in the agreement as 8560 and 8566 Pulaski Highway. Though admitting their execution of the land sales contract, the appellants, in an effort to defeat appellee’s complaint, besides raising a procedural question, argue that the agreement was unconscionable and its procurement was tainted with fraud sufficient in magnitude to prevent specific performance. For the reasons which follow, we shall *541 affirm the decree of the chancellor “that the Agreement of Sale of December 16, 1971 between the parties ... be, and hereby is, specifically enforced.”

As the record in this case supports the full and complete factual findings of Judge Proctor, and as we cannot say he was clearly in error in making these findings (Maryland Rule 886), our synopsis of the evidence is substantially derived from the judge’s factual determinations which were announced from the bench.

On July 19, 1966, Mr. and Mrs. Gross listed for sale at $100,000 their Pulaski Highway property with Aston Realty, a real estate concern owned by J. William Aston (the individual who appellants seemingly designate as the preeminent miscreant in the perpetration of a furtive scheme to filch their property). Aston agreed to list the property at that price, although he had previously examined it and advised the appellants that he estimated its worth to be somewhere between $65,000 and $75,000. The brokerage agreement, in addition to registering the property for sale, specified rental terms in the event that the agent procured a lease for, rather than a sale of, the tract. We mention here that the record shows that two tenants secured by this broker occupied the premises under short term leases before the appellee entered the picture and before the ensuance of the events which culminated in this appeal. However, details of these arrangements are irrelevant to our disposition of this case.

In spite of Aston’s continuing efforts to obtain a more favorable sale or lease arrangement for the property, it was not until the late fall of 1968 that any real indication of success in this venture began to appear. It was at this time that the broker became acquainted with a representative of J & L while attending a sporting goods show in Laurel as a prospective purchaser of a recreation vehicle. The realtor was advised by one of the sporting goods company’s owners that it was interested in finding new quarters for their business which was then situated in Rosedale, an area of Baltimore County located not more than a mile from the subject property. The broker offered to show J & L three of *542 his listings as possible spots for their relocation. Included among the three was the appellants’ Pulaski Highway property; and upon inspection of that tract, J & L became sufficiently interested in it to' propose an arrangement which included a lease of the premises with an option to purchase for $75,000. Aston forwarded this offer to the Grosses who, although definitely interested in the lease portion of the proposal, spurned the arrangement because of the inadequacy of the suggested purchase price. This rejection of the option was influenced, to at least some extent, by indications that the State eventually intended to acquire the property for additional highway service. When the appellee increased its offer to $85,000, payable in cash if the option were exercised, appellants requested Aston to get in touch with the State Roads Commission in an effort to ascertain if there existed any definite information as to when, if ever, the State planned to go through with the rumored acquisition. 1 As it turned out, however, the agent’s inquiry proved to be fruitless.

It is at this point in the record that some conflict in the evidence appears. Though Mr. Gross testified that he protested the inclusion of the purchase option in the agreement and consented to it only after the broker assured him that it would never be exercised, Judge Proctor, principally relying on Mrs. Gross’s testimony, made a determination that appellants “were interested in whether or not the option would be exercised; that Aston said [appellee] probably wouldn’t have the money; and that [appellants] took a calculated risk . . . .” In any event, on February 22, 1969, the lease, including the $85,000 option to purchase, was executed by all of the parties with only minor changes, insignificant to the resolution of this dispute.

Nearly two years later, in the fall of 1971, when J & L informed Aston that they wished to exercise their option to purchase appellants’ property, he conveyed this information *543 to the Grosses. The broker, following some negotiations concerning payment terms, drafted an agreement which provided for a $1,000 deposit and settlement to be made within 120 days with the balance of the purchase price payable by means of an additional $19,000 in cash and a $65,000 purchase money mortgage to be amortized over a fifteen year period together with interest at 8%. It is conceded that this arrangement in these particulars differed from the provisions in the option which called for full payment in cash.

When this sales agreement was submitted to Mr. and Mrs. Gross for execution, they say that they were hesitant to sign and did so reluctantly only when Aston threatened them with a law suit. Whether this threat was in fact made is of little consequence. This is so as the appellants obtained independent advice from their regular attorney that they need not sign the sales agreement (presumably because of the change in the payment provision from that contained in the option) and, disregarding this, proceeded to execute the contract anyway.

Be that as it may, the Grosses, after first obtaining a postponement, subsequently refused to convey the property. 2 Their continued refusal to do so has resulted in the institution of this specific performance action by J & L.

While the granting or withholding of a decree for specific performance lies within the discretion of the trial court, in the words of Chief Judge Bruñe, speaking for this Court in The Glendale Corp. v. Crawford, 207 Md. 148, 154, 114 A. 2d 33 (1955):

“This discretion is not, however, arbitrary; and where the contract is, in its nature and circumstances, unobjectionable — or, as it is sometimes stated, fair, reasonable and certain in all its terms — it is as much a matter of course for a court of equity to decree specific performance of it *544 as it is for a court of law to award damages for its breach.”

Styers v. Dickey, 261 Md. 225, 274 A. 2d 374 (1971); Robertson v. Coad, 249 Md. 252, 259, 239 A. 2d 75 (1968).

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312 A.2d 270, 270 Md. 539, 1973 Md. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-j-l-camping-sports-center-inc-md-1973.