Jay v. General Realties Co.

49 A.2d 752, 1946 D.C. App. LEXIS 178
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1946
DocketNo. 402
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 49 A.2d 752 (Jay v. General Realties Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jay v. General Realties Co., 49 A.2d 752, 1946 D.C. App. LEXIS 178 (D.C. 1946).

Opinions

CAYTON, Chief Judge.

The suit was brought by General Realties Company to recover a secret profit of $2,500 allegedly obtained by defendant Bernice Jay, a licensed real estate broker, on the resale of property which plaintiff had turned over to her for sale. Joined as defendant was Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland which was surety on the bond furnished by defendant Jay in accordance with Code 1940, § 45 — 1405.

Trial was without a jury and on the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence both defendants moved for a dismissal. The motion being overruled, defendants declined to present any evidence and judgment was entered for plaintiff for the full amount claimed. This appeal followed.

The motion for dismissal had been taken under advisement and after briefs were submitted the trial judge, in announcing his ruling, filed a long and carefully prepared memorandum. We now recite in considerably condensed form the facts important to an understanding of this appeal as they were set out by the trial judge in his memorandum.

Defendant Bernice Jay became the agent of plaintiff for the sale of rooming house property at 1338 Vermont Avenue, N. W., and as such agent tendered to plaintiff a purchase contract dated May 5, 1945, signed by Roger N. Browne for $13,500, which contract plaintiff accepted. At the time Browne intended to complete the transaction and to operate a rooming house on the [753]*753premises. But a short time afterwards Browne and his wife decided that they would be unable to finance the transaction.1 Browne told Jay about this and asked her to find someone to take the contract off his hands; Jay agreed to try and later informed him that she had procured a Mr. Harold K. Hampton to take it over. (The record shows that at the time Mr. Hampton’s wife was employed in the office of Jay and that later Hampton himself went to work for her.) „

Though the purchase contract recited that Browne had put up a deposit of $500, he had in fact not done so but had given Jay his note for that amount and. Jay returned the note to him at or about the time she told him Hampton would assume the contract. Before the end of May, Jay deposited with the title company a total of $2,500 covering the $500 Browne was supposed to have paid and the additional $2,000 he was required to deposit in order to comply with the terms of the purchase contract. During the following month Jay ordered repairs made on the property and paid $650 therefor.

Jay told Browne and his wife to come to the title company for settlement on July 5 to sign the first and second trust notes and other documents connected with the sale; that there was nothing wrong in doing this, and that immediately thereafter they should transfer the property to Hampton. She also told the Brownes that she would take care of their notes. Accordingly the Brownes went to the title company and signed notes secured by a first trust of $9,000 and a second trust of $2,-000, and other papers connected with the sale. Also present at that time were Mr. Young, president and treasurer of plaintiff company, and Mrs. Hampton, who worked for defendant Jay and represented her in the settlement. To complete the sale Young at that time executed the deed of plaintiff company as seller to Mr. and Mrs. Browne. It was recorded on July 11, 1945. At that meeting Young was not informed of the conversations which had taken place between Jay and the Brownes; nor that the Brownes were not completing the deal as actual purchasers; nor of their private arrangement with Jay under which they were to go to her office later that day and re-deed the property to Hampton.

In his testimony Browne denied that he was acting as straw man but admitted he knew he was not buying the property for himself. Mrs. Browne admitted that “she knew she was not the real buyer.”

After the settlement at the title company had been completed the Brownes went to the Jay office and there on the same day executed a deed of the property to Hampton. This deed was acknowledged before Jay in her capacity as notary public. It was not recorded until much later, under circumstances we shall recite.

On August 2, a broker named Lawrence Johnson approached Jay in behalf of John Howard, a client of his who was interested in buying the property. The next day at Jay’s office a contract was signed by which Hampton and his wife agreed to sell the property to Howard for $16,000, the purchaser to make a total cash payment of $4,-500 and to assume the existing first and second trusts which had been executed by the Brownes in their settlement of July 5. In connection with this transaction Jay conducted the title search, and settlement was made at her office on August 9. On the following day the deed from the Hamp-tons to Howard was executed; and we shall later describe the circumstances under which it was recorded. In the meantime an error in the settlement figures was discovered in that the second trust payable to plaintiff General Realties Company (which trust Howard was assuming) was set up at $2,500 whereas it actually was $2,000. To take care of this discrepancy Jay requested and Howard gave her his note for $500, payable to her personally. When Johnson, Howard’s agent, took Hampton’s deed to the recording office he discevered that title to the property was still in the name of Browne and wife. Jay was then out of the city but upon her return this was called to her attention and she had the deed from [754]*754the Brownes to Hampton recorded. This was on August 23, 1945 at 8:20 in the morning. At 12 :54 the same day the deed from Hampton to Howard was placed on record.

In his memorandum the trial judge summarized the situation thus: “Neither defendant Jay, nor anyone on her behalf, informed plaintiff, General Realties Company, nor anyone acting on behalf of plaintiff, including Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A.2d 752, 1946 D.C. App. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jay-v-general-realties-co-dc-1946.