Huse v. Reed

146 A. 579, 157 Md. 504, 1929 Md. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1929
Docket[No. 12, April Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 A. 579 (Huse v. Reed) 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
Huse v. Reed, 146 A. 579, 157 Md. 504, 1929 Md. LEXIS 121 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Benjamin Franklin Reed and Mary Catherine Reed, his wife, were the owners as tenants by the entireties of a parcel of land situated at the corner of Reese and Twenty-eighth Streets in Baltimore. In April, 1927, J. Henry Strohmeyer, a licensed real estate broker of Baltimore, was employed by Andrew’ J. Dietrich to purchase the lot mentioned from the Reeds, the negotiations between Strohmeyer and the Reeds covering about a year. At the first interview between Mr. Strohmeyer and Mr. Reed the latter stated his price to be $15,000, and, although Mr. Strohmeyer regarded the price as exorbitant, the old man (Mr. Reed being about eighty years of age), never wavered in his demands. Finally, on or about the first of April, 1928, Mr. Dietrich authorized Mr. Strohmeyer to pay $15,000 for the property and, on the second day of April, 1928, he called on the Reeds, tendered them his *506 check for $1,000 on account of the purchase money, and. submitted a form of agreement for execution. Mr. Reed declined to sign the agreement, but said that the matter of the agreement would be referred to his attorney. The Reeds engaged Mr. Elmer M. Harper, an attorney at law and secretary of the Maryland Title Guarantee Company, with whom Mr. Strohmeyer thereafter dealt. A form of contract was prepared by Mr. Harper, which was satisfactory to Mr. Strohmeyer, and was sent by Mr. Harper to the Reeds on April 10th, 1928, to be executed by them. The Reeds signed the duplicate copies of the contract and returned them to Mr. Harper and, on or about April 12 th, Mr. Strohmeyer called at his office, prepared to sign the contract and make the first payment of $1,000 on account. The signatures of the Reeds to the agreement had not been witnessed, and while all agreed that this was not necessary, it was agreed that it was desirable, and accordingly Mr. Harper again mailed the contract to the Reeds, with a letter requesting them to have their signatures witnessed and return the agreement to him, Mr. Strohmeyer at that time leaving with Mr. Harper the check which he had tendered the Reeds, and said that whqn the contract was returned to Mr. Harper he should turn it over to his clients and send him the agreement.

The appellant William F. Huse lived on property adjoining that of the Reeds, and, about the time the contracts were returned to them, Mrs. Reed told Mrs. Huse that they had sold their property, and immediately Mrs. Huse asked if any money had been paid on account, and, upon being informed that none had been paid (Mrs. Reed not having known of the delivery of the check for $1,000 to' Mr. Harper), she advised Mrs. Reed that the contract was not binding, and the Huses proceeded to- persuade the Reeds to repudiate their agreement with Mr. Strohmeyer, with the result that the same paper which had been signed by the Reeds, agreeing to convey the property to Mr. Strohmeyer, became an agreement to convey to Mary Agnes Martin, agent, a neighbor of Mr. Huse, who made the agreement on his behalf, Mr. Huse saying that he *507 made Mrs. Martin his agent because he did not want any one to know who was buying the property. The price named in the Huse, or Martin, agreement was $16,000, which was written into the original agreement instead of $15,000; the name of J. Henry Strohmeyer was crossed out, and Mrs. Martin’s interlined. In addition to the property described in the Strohmeyer agreement, Mr. Huse added a small triangular piece of property on the opposite side of Twenty-eighth street, which was the consideration for his increasing Mr. Strohmeyer’s price $1,000.

On May 31st, 1928, J. Henry Strohmeyer, agent, filed his bill in the Circuit Court of Baltimore against Benjamin Eranklin Reed and Mary Catherine Reed, his wife, praying a decree against them for the specific performance of their agreement to convey the property mentioned in their contract with him. On the 20th day of July, 1928, Mary Agnes Martin, agent, and William E. Huse, filed a petition in the cause praying to be made parties defendant to the proceedings, and asking leave to file an answer to Mr. Strohmeyer’s bill of complaint, and on the same day an order was passed accordingly, and thereupon an answer was filed by them setting up their contract, a copy of which they filed as an exhibit to their answer. On the 4th day of August, 1928, the plaintiff J. Henry Strohmeyer filed in that case an order to the clerk to enter his bill of complaint “dismissed.”

The record shows that on the 3rd day of August, 1928, Mary C. Reed, widow and survivor of Benjamin Eranklin Reed (who had died on July 3rd, 1928), by a duly executed deed conveyed to Andrew J. Dietrich the property which she and her husband had in April, 1928, agreed to convey to his agent, J. Henry Strohmeyer. The record also shows that on the same day an agreement was entered into between Andrew J. Dietrich and Mary Catherine Reed, stipulating that the purchase price of the property, $15,000, should be deposited in the Savings Bank of Baltimore in the name of Edward J. Colgan, Jr., and Paul R. Each, attorneys. It was agreed that if no proceedings should be brought against Mrs. Reed *508 by William F. Huse and/or Mary Agnes Martin, agent, within six months, then the said sum of $15,000, with all accumulated interest, should be paid to Mrs. Reed by Messrs. Colgan and Each, but that if within six months any such proceedings should be brought, then the fund should continue to be held on deposit until the final determination of the litigation and, “upon final termination of said litigation if it shall finally be adjudicated that the said Andrew J. Dietrich did not obtain title to the property at 2723 Reese Street described by the said deed to him of said Mary C. Reed, * * * then the said sum of $15,000 and interest shall be repaid to the said Andrew J. Dietrich who shall, however, first pay therefrom without any right to reimbursement, all the costs and expenses of said litigation, including the fees of the attorneys for the said Mary Catherine Reed. In that event the said Andrew J. Dietrich shall also reconvey the said property to the said Mary Catherine Reed.” It was also provided that if, as a result of such litigation, it should be determined that Andrew J. Dietrich obtained a good and merchantable title by virtue of the said deed, then the said sum of $15,000 should be turned over to the said Mary Catherine Reed and that, in the event of any suit for damages being brought against Mrs. Reed by William F. Huse and/or Mary Agnes Martin as agent, Andrew J. Dietrich should be responsible for all fees, costs, expenses and any judgment which might be recovered against her.

On the 14th day of August, 1928, William F. Huse and Mary Agnes Martin, his agent, filed their bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City against Mary Catherine Reed, J. Henry Strohmeyer, agent, and Andrew J. Dietrich and Susanna Dietrich, his wife, wherein they set up their agreement with Benjamin Franklin Reed and Mary Catherine Reed, and prayed specific performance of the same, and also prayed that an order be passed annulling, vacating, and setting aside the deed of August 3rd, 1928, from Mary C. Reed to Andrew J. Dietrich. To this bill answers were filed by all of the defendants, testimony was taken *509

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Bluebook (online)
146 A. 579, 157 Md. 504, 1929 Md. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huse-v-reed-md-1929.