Heaver v. Lanahan

1 Balt. C. Rep. 415
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 415 (Heaver v. Lanahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heaver v. Lanahan, 1 Balt. C. Rep. 415 (Md. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

RITCHIE, J.

This case has been before the Court several times on preliminary questions, and before the Court of Appeals on the pleadings. It was afterwards tried before the late Judge Stewart without a jury, but his death occurred before he had decided it. It has now again been tried before the Court without a jury, and under an agreement that the issues should be taken as having been formally joined, and that it should be heard on the same evidence which was taken before Judge Stewart, it has been most fully and earnestly argued, and I have given to it the careful consideration which the interest manifested by counsel and the importance of the questions involved, seemed to require.

The contract, for the breach of which this suit is brought, was executed on June 16th, 1888. At that time the defendant was the owner of the ground rents on twenty-seven unimproved lots situated on the north side of North avenue, and the legal title to the leasehold in said lots was held by Anthony S. Bonn.

By this contract the plaintiff agreed to build a house on each of said lots; and the defendant, desirous that his ground rents might be secured and made more valuable, agreed to “assist” the plaintiff in making said improvements by paying him a bonus of $800 on each house, and to cause the leasehold interests to be assigned to plaintiff, Bonn joining in the contract and agreeing to make such assignments as the defendant might request.

No question arises in respect to the first twenty-two of said houses; the contract as to them was carried out by each party, and the controversy here relates to the last five, Nos. 23, 24, 25, 26 and 27.

On October 22d, 1888; the City of Baltimore passed an ordinance for the extension of Barclay street northwardly through and over the last five of said lots. In view of the passage of this ordinance defendant proposed that they should modify the contract and abandon the erection of the last five houses. To this, however, the plaintiff would not consent, and on his refusal to do so the defendant, on October 12th, notified him in writing not to build the houses in question.

On October 12th the first twenty-two houses were at various stages of completion and some little grading may have been done on the last five lots, but the plaintiff does not seem to have begun the erection of any of the last five houses. On October 15th the Street Commissioners notified plaintiff that any improvements made in the proposed bed of Barclay street would be at his own risk. He paid no attention to either of the above notices, but began and went on with the erection of the houses on the lots referred to, and when the twenty-third, twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth had reached the stage at which, under the contract, he was entitled to the bonus instalment of $150 on each house, probably about November 1st, he made demand for the money. The defendant, because of his notice not to build, refused to pay this instalment and stated to plaintiff that he would not pay any bonus on any of the five houses in the proposed bed of Barclay street. The plaintiff thereupon and because thereof stopped all work on these five houses.

Meanwhile the proceedings for the opening of the street continued; the Commissioners in their final return, made on January 23d, 1889, allowed $1,650 damages for the improvements in the bed of the street, the plaintiff took an appeal therefrom and in February, 1890, he was allowed by a jury in the City Court the sum of $2,000 damages, which amount has been paid to him by the city. In July, 1890, he brought this suit to recover damages for breach of contract in respect to these five houses.

The declaration sets out the contract and assigns as the breach the refusal of defendant to pay when due the first instalments on the 23rd, 24th and 25th houses, and the notice that he would not pay the remainder of the bonus of $800 on each house as the same might under the contract accrue, whereby, it is alleged, the plaintiff was compelled to desist from the further prosecution of the said work. The defendant filed three pleas; the first and second are now out of the case; a demurrer to the third was overruled by Judge Stewart, whereupon an appeal was taken by plaintiff, and the judgment was reversed. See Heaver vs. Lanahan, 74 Md. 493.

[417]*417The third plea set up the notice not to build and the notice from the Street Commissioners, and also averred that the plaintiff in the trial of his appeal from the award of the Street Commissioners had claimed against the city the same damages which he claimed in his declaration against the defendant. The Court of Appeals held that the street appeal case was not between the same parties; that the plea failed to allege that the damages claimed were recovered; that the notice given by the Street Commissioners was in excess of authority, and that notwithstanding such notice the plaintiff, as against the city, had a right to continue the work until it was ready to pay his damages.

Since the hearing in the Court of Appeals the defendant has filed the fourth, fifth and sixth pleas. The fourth embraces the matter set up in the third, repeating in the same terms the averment of the instruction to plaintiff not to build said five houses, and further avers that the plaintiff in his street appeal not only claimed, but also recovered, and has been paid all damages now claimed against defendant except the bonus, and, as to the bonus, that it was to be paid for the building of the houses, and the plaintiff, because of the condemnation and appropriation of the ground by the city, did not in fact build them. The fifth alleges that the plaintiff accepted said damages from the city in full satisfaction of all claims against the defendant, and the sixth plea denies any breach.

It is clear from the evidence, and indeed it has not been disputed in the argument, that the defendant committed a breach of the contract. Even if his motive was a desire to avoid the useless erection of five houses which would be torn down under the ordinance for opening the street almost as soon as erected, and the increased expense that building them would impose on the city, the street proceedings interposed no legal obstruction to the performance of the contract, and such motive furnished no valid excuse for instructing plaintiff not to build these houses, or for his refusal to pay the bonus instalments. The evidence, in fact, shows two breaches. First, in the notice of October 12th, not to build, which, however, is not declared on; and second, in the refusal of defendant to pay the bonus instalments due under the contract, and notice that he would not in the future pay any bonus on these five houses, which is the breach assigned. As between these two breaches, each considered by itself as a cause of action, the right to recover may be more clearly established in one case than in the other, and the measure of damages would be different ; and again, as to the second, the measure would depend upon whether it is to be construed as a partial or entire breach.

It is necessary, therefore, to determine, first, upon what ground, or upon which breach, the plaintiff is entitled to recover, and if only on the second, then the legal quality or scope of that breach; secondly, the damages to which he may be entitled under the peculiar facts of this case.

As has been stated, the breach assigned is the refusal to pay the instalments due and the noiice as to future ones, and not the prevention of performance on the part of the plaintiff by the notice from defendant not to build. Tinder the authority of Black vs. Woodrow, 39 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heaver-v-lanahan-mdsuperctbalt-1894.