Jacham Enterprises, Inc. v. Hoffman

197 A.2d 128, 233 Md. 432, 1964 Md. LEXIS 538
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 31, 1964
Docket[No. 185, September Term, 1963.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 197 A.2d 128 (Jacham Enterprises, Inc. v. Hoffman) 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
Jacham Enterprises, Inc. v. Hoffman, 197 A.2d 128, 233 Md. 432, 1964 Md. LEXIS 538 (Md. 1964).

Opinion

Marbury, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City dated October 11, 1962 overruling appellants’ demurrer to a petition for injunction and from an order passed *435 by the same court on April 25, 1963 wherein the appellants were directed to restore to the appellee certain coin-operated amusement devices specified therein, or in lieu thereof to pay the appellee the sum of $1,100 and further awarding the appellee damages in the amount of $1,950 and assessing costs against the appellants.

The appellant Jacham Enterprises, Inc. (Jacham) is a Maryland corporation engaged in the business of installing and operating coin-operated amusement devices and automatic phonographs in various business locations in Baltimore and throughout the surrounding area pursuant to contracts entered into between it and the owners of such business establishments.

The appellee, Joseph Hoffman (Bloffman) owns a tavern in Baltimore, and in November 1961 he contracted with Jacham for the installation of Jacham’s coin-operated devices on his business premises. As a part of the agreement Jacham was to purchase Hoffman’s equipment, remove it from the premises, and install its own equipment in the tavern. This was done, and almost immediately thereafter, strangers presented claims of title to Hoffman’s equipment then in the hands of Jacham. One such claimant filed an action of replevin in December 1961.

As a result of these claims made against Hoffman’s equipment and further difficulties between him and the appellant, a suit for an injunction and for specific performance of the November contract was instituted by Jacham on January 12, 1962. This suit is the original pleading in the case from which this appeal stems. Hoffman filed a cross-bill of complaint, and after some additional pleadings, the case was heard by Judge Cullen in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City and resulted in a decree, dated April 30, 1962, about which more will be said later herein.

However, between the hearing on the bill and cross-bill and the issuance of the decree, another replevin action, this one by Chesapeake Vending Machine Co., Inc. (Chesapeake), was instituted against Jacham in March 1962 seeking some of the equipment which Jacham had purchased from Hoffman. This suit, we were told at the oral argument, is still pending.

The effect of the decree of April 30, 1962 was that Hoffman was ordered to repay to Jacham any money that Jacham had paid him pursuant to their agreement, allowing Jacham to re *436 move its equipment from Hoffman’s premises, declaring their former agreement null and void and determining that “property” in the disputed equipment was in Hoffman. In other words, the parties were placed in status quo, as though the agreement between Jacham and Hoffman entered into in November 1961 had never been made. Following the decree Jacham then agreed to permit its equipment to remain on Hoffman’s premises for a period of one month from May 4 to June 4, 1962, upon payment by Hoffman of $400. Hoffman’s equipment which he had sold to Jacham consisted of seven items, four of which had not been returned to him pursuant to the decree, although an order of satisfaction was signed by attorneys for both parties and filed May 9, 1962. These four machines, which are the subject of the controversy between the parties, consisted of one Ballerina pin ball game, one Shawnee console, and two Continental cigarette machines.

On May 1, 1962, the day following the court’s decree, Hoffman, having learned of Chesapeake’s replevin suit, formally intervened as a party defendant in that suit and several days later filed a petition for a writ of retorno habendo together with a bond in the amount of $4000. We now get to the point where, as Mr. Justice Holmes once said, the little boy pinched his finger in the machine. Finding that four pieces of equipment had not been replevied by Chesapeake as he thought but were still being held by Jacham, Hoffman, on June 7, 1962, filed a petition for an injunction, seeking, inter alia, to enjoin Jacham from removing its equipment from Hoffman’s premises until the four pieces of equipment which belonged to Hoffman were returned.

Jacham demurred to the petition, contending that Hoffman had an adequate remedy at law (the replevin suit by Chesapeake, in which Hoffman had intervened as a party defendant). Judge Cullen overruled the demurrer, holding that the fact that a legal remedy existed did not oust the jurisdiction of the equity court. Jacham thereupon filed an answer to the petition, and the matter came on for hearing before Judge Shirley B. Jones in the Circuit Court.

At the hearing before Judge Jones Hoffman’s testimony established that Jacham had not returned any of his equipment, *437 and that he had paid Jacham the $400 rental for Jacham’s equipment left with Hoffman for a month as agreed. He further testified that as a result of Jacham’s failure to return the equipment to him, he had been required since June 1962 to rent comparable equipment at $50 per week. He valued the two amusement devices which Jacham had retained at $1895, and the two cigarette machines at $350 each.

A. David Gomborov, Hoffman’s attorney at the time of the decree of April 30, 1962, testified that between the time Judge Cullen informed counsel for both sides what he was going to decide and the actual preparation of the decree, he had been told by Jacham’s attorney that all of Hoffman’s equipment in Jacham’s possession had been replevied by the sheriff as the result of Chesapeake’s replevin suit against Jacham and was then being held in custodia legis. He stated that the reason he had signed the order of satisfaction and waived appeal in the case before Judge Cullen was because the clerk of the Circuit Court had advised him that the money which had been paid voluntarily into court could not be released in accordance with the decree unless there was an order of satisfaction.

Peter Mongelli, president of Jacham, testified that at the time the sheriff served him with the writ of replevin the two cigarette machines he had gotten from Hoffman had been commingled with other similar machines of his company and were located in other business establishments. The two amusement devices had been stripped of their valuable parts and the residue junked. He further testified that he gave a Mr. Angster, president of Chesapeake (plaintiff in one of the replevin suits), who accompanied the sheriff, a check in the amount of $700 for the value of the goods eloigned.

On April 16, 1963, Judge Jones filed a memorandum opinion in which she held that the proceedings brought by Ploffman were not to rescind or modify the enrolled decree of April 30, 1962. She considered them as an effort by Hoffman to have that decree enforced as to the four pieces of equipment, the property in which had been found in the earlier proceeding to be in him, and so stated in the April 30 decree. Judge Jones further found that Hoffman had joined in the order of satisfaction and a subsequent waiver of appeal under the erroneous be *438 lief that the four items the court had declared to be his were held in custodia legis

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Bluebook (online)
197 A.2d 128, 233 Md. 432, 1964 Md. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacham-enterprises-inc-v-hoffman-md-1964.