J. T. Donohue Realty Co. v. Wagner

141 A. 337, 154 Md. 588, 1928 Md. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 1928
Docket[No. 21; January Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 141 A. 337 (J. T. Donohue Realty Co. v. Wagner) 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
J. T. Donohue Realty Co. v. Wagner, 141 A. 337, 154 Md. 588, 1928 Md. LEXIS 54 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The J. T. Donohue Realty Company, a Maryland corporation, is engaged in the business of buying, selling, improving, and developing real estate. Henry W. Wagner owns a tract of thirty-nine acres of land on the Eastern Avenue road near Mace Avenue in Baltimore County.

On October 19th, 1926, Henry W. Wagner and Frances H. Elizabeth Wagner, and the J. T. Donohue Realty Company, executed a formal written contract signed and sealed by the parties and by Thomas J. Donohue, president of the corporation, under which the Wagners sold the property to the corporation for $77,500, of which $1,000 in cash was paid and the balance was to be paid in the following manner: “Fourteen thousand ($14,000.00) dollars in cash within sixty (60) days from the above date, and the balance of the purchase money sixty-two thousand five hundred ($62,500.00) to be earned on a five year mortgage at six per centum per annum, with a release clause in lots of not less than one acre at a time upon payment of the sum of twenty-five hundred ($2,500.00) dollars, -with interest, copy of said mortgage is attached here-' to.’ The vendors further agreed that upon the payment of the whole purchase price they would convey the property to the corporation by a “good and merchantable title,”

After making the initial payment of $1,000, the appellant employed the Maryland Title Company to search the title to *590 the property, and it reported to it that, on September 23rd, 1918, the Wagners and other persons owning property in the vicinity of Back River had joined in a release to the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, in which they agreed for themselves, their heirs and assigns, and their successors in title to the lands respectively owned by them, to release the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, its successors and assigns, from “all damage, suits, claims and demands for damages at law or in equity, which we and our successors and assigns, as aforesaid, now have or claim to have or may hereafter have or claim to have against the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, its successors or assigns, by reason or on account of the location, erection, existence and operation by the said Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, of a plant for the collection and disposal of sewage from the City of Baltimore, on or near the southwesternmost shore line of the waters of Back River, in Baltimore County aforesaid, and on the property of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, formerly the Willis property there located, hereby declaring ourselves fully satisfied and contented therewith.” That release was duly acknowledged and recorded on October 8th, 1918, among the Land Records of Baltimore County. Upon being informed of its existence the appellant refused to consummate the purchase of appellees’ property and demanded that they return the $1,000 paid them on account thereof. They refused that demand, and on January 5th, 1927, filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County a bill against the appellant, in which they prayed that it might be required to specifically perform its contract for the purchase of the property. The defendant answered, testimony was taken, the case was heard, and at its conclusion the court granted the relief .prayed. This appeal is from that decree.

The only defence asserted by the appellant was that the release-to which we have referred so affected the property described in the contract as to render the title thereto unmarketable. And its contention in regard to that is that the .release forever-estops any'owner of the land in question *591 from complaining of the establishment, maintenance, or operation by the Oity of Baltimore of its sewage disposal plant on Back River, that consequently it imposes a servitude on the land in favor of the City of Baltimore, which may injuriously affect the properly, and which therefore is a cloud on appellees’ title thereto. It concedes that it knew of the location of the plant when it bought the property, but asserts that it did not know of the release, so that its definite and specific objection is that the release deprives it of any right or privilege of suing the city for damages occasioned by its operation of the plant which may accrue hereafter. Aside from that objection, it is admitted that the contract is fair, untainted by fraud, mutual, and that the title to the property is good. So that the only question presented by the appeal is whether the fact that no owner of the property in question can sue the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore for damages resulting to it from its operation or maintenance of the disposal plant at its present location renders the title of the appellees thereto unmerchantable. In our opinion it does not, for several reasons, any one of which would be a sufficient answer to the objection.

(1) In considering the force and validity of that objection, it is important to know in what manner and to what extent the normal operation of the disposal plant affects the land in controversy, and concerning that, the record affords no information whatever, except that the disposal plant is about a mile from the property, and that, while there is an odor from it, it does not affect the property much, and because at the time the contract was executed appellant knew of the condition and used it to beat down the purchase price. The disposal plant was constructed under the authority of chapter 349 of the Acts of 1904, is a part of the sewerage system of Baltimore City, and in the very nature of things is of a permanent character. As has been stated, it is so far removed from the property that no inference of damage can be inferred from its propinquity thereto, and, in the absence of any evidence justifying such a conclusion, it cannot be assumed that the normal operation of the plant would create *592 conditions -which wonld damage the appellees’ property. In the case of Taylor v. Baltimore, 130 Md. 133, decided in 1917, it was proved that this same disposal plant was so operated as to cause an actionable nuisance, but that case was decided upon the plaintiff’s testimony alone, and no such condition is proved or even alleged in this case, and such testimony as there is is to the. contrary. But in that case the court strongly intimated that the establishment of the plant was not a nuisance per se, for it said: “We find nothing in the statute under which the city is acting suggestive of an intention of the Legislature to authorize the city authoritiés to commit a nuisance. Nor can it be said that the Legislature contemplated that the performance of what is authorized to be done would necessarily or even probably result in such damage to private property as the plaintiff complains of If it had been so understood by the members of the Legislature, is it not reasonable to assume, especially as the city was authorized to extend its works into the counties, that provision would have been made for compensation of those whose properties would be injured?” If, therefore, the existence and normal operation of the plant does not damage appellees’ property, it is difficult to see how the vendor’s title to the property is rendered unmerchantable by the fact that he is estopped from claiming damages which will never accrue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jones v. Smith
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2025
Goldstein v. Potomac Electric Power Co.
404 A.2d 1064 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
Pascal v. Hurwitz
172 F. Supp. 402 (D. Maryland, 1959)
Waldrop v. Town of Brevard
62 S.E.2d 512 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 A. 337, 154 Md. 588, 1928 Md. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-t-donohue-realty-co-v-wagner-md-1928.