Jenkins v. Bolgiano

53 Md. 407, 1880 Md. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 30, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 53 Md. 407 (Jenkins v. Bolgiano) 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
Jenkins v. Bolgiano, 53 Md. 407, 1880 Md. LEXIS 44 (Md. 1880).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

It appears from the record, that at a trustee’s sale under a decree, made at the Exchange in Baltimore, on the 10th day of May 1859, of parts of a tract of land known as “ the Cooke Estate,” the appellee became the purchaser of one of the lots into which the land had been divided as shown by a lithograph plat filed in the chancery proceedings, exhibited at the sale and circulated. The lot so purchased was triangular in shape at the corner of Lanvale Street and L'ovegrove Alley, described in the advertisement of sale, as “fronting 94 feet on the former and 216 feet on the latter as laid down on said plat.”

The oblique line bounding the lot on the north-west was the outline of the whole tract, and designated on the [414]*414plat as the centre of a road 83 feet wide running in a north-easterly direction from Lanvale Street to Lovegrove Alley.

The sale being confirmed, a deed was made to the appellee) by the trustee, on the 7th day of August 1863,. conveying the lot in fee, and describing it as “ beginning at the north-west corner or intersection of Lanvale Street and Lovegrove Alley, and running thence west, bounding on the north side of Lanvale Street ninety-four feet, to the outline of the whole ground there situate belonging to the estate of said Cooke, and running thence northeasterly with said outline and along the centre of a road thirty-three feet wide, to the west side of Lovegrove Alley, and thence south bounding on the west side of Lovegrove Alley two hundred and sixteen feet to the place of beginning, being a part of the property mentioned and described among the proceedings in the cause,” (in which the decree of sale had ‘been passed.)

At that time the lot was unimproved; “ it was situated in a deep ravine; Lanvale Street and Lovegrove Alley were not graded or paved in that vicinity, and there were no visible monuments or boundaries to the lot, other than an indistinct trace of an abandoned county road, which formed the hypothenuse of the triangular lot. The property remained substantially in the same condition till the Spring of 1873, the only change being a. sewer which was constructed along the ravine, at the expense of Sullivan the appellant, and others through whose land it passed.”

In June 18.68, the appellee sold the lot to Sullivan for $2800, of which $1000 were paid, and for the accommodation of the purchaser, the balance was suffered to stand upon a lease for 99 years renewable, reserving to the lessor a rent of $108 per annum, and redeemable upon payment of $1800, in five years. In the lease the lot is described in the same manner as in the deed executed by the trustee to the appellee, which deed is referred to in the lease [415]*415as containing a description of the-lot. On the 14th day of April 1873, the sum of $1800 being paid, the lot was conveyed to Sullivan in fee; in this deed the lot is described in the same manner as in the lease, which is therein referred to, and it contains a covenant of special warranty. A short time after receiving the conveyance of the reversion, Sullivan leased to a man named Smith a portion of the lot fronting 18 feet on Lanvale street, when for the first time, he discovered that the dimensions of the lot were considerably less than those mentioned in the, lease and deeds; whereupon he demanded of the appellee to refund a part of the purchase money, or to pay him for •the alleged deficiency, and upon the appellee’s refusal to do so, filed this bill of complaint on the 7th day of March 1874, to compel the appellee to make compensation for the alleged deficiency.

The ground upon which relief is prayed, as stated in the bill, is “that to induce the complainant to purchase, Bolgiano represented to him that the lot was of the dimensions stated in the deed, that before the purchase he exhibited to the complainant the plat, Exhibit 0, which he represented to be a correct description of the lot, and that the complainant in making the purchase, was largely influenced by the quantity of land in the lot, as the same appeared from the said plat and deeds, and from Bolgiano’s representations; that the amount of purchase money paid for the lot was determined by the area and dimensions thereof, as shown by the plat and deeds, and by Bolgiano’s representations and not by an inspection of the ground.

' “That prior to the purchase he had no survey made, nor was he able to determine the exact locality, dimensions or area of the lot by an inspection of the premises; there being no monuments by which he could ascertain the bounding lines and abutments thereof, and that he relied upon the plat (Ex. 0,) and the representations so made hy Bolgiano, when he purchased the property.”

[416]*416The hill alleges “that the true area aud dimensions of the lot are in fact much less than those stated in the deeds and represented hy Bolgiano, and charges that the representations so made to him hy Bolgiano, if not made by mistake and ignorance of fact, were fraudulent and intended to defraud the complainant, and relief is claimed whether the same were fraudulent, or were made hy mistake of the parties.”

Exhibit G referred to in the hill is a diag'ram of the lot .made by the appellee, on which are marked lines showing how the same might he sub-divided or laid off into building lots, showing three lots of 20 feet each, fronting on Lanvale street, leaving a lot 34 or 35 feet front at the western angle.

The appellee in his answer “ denies that the conveyances to the complainant were in any manner founded upon or connected with the diagram £ Exhibit O ’ mentioned in the hill and filed therewith; and alleges that, at or before the time of leasing, he gave to the complainant a copy of the £sale-plat’ of the Cooke property, exhibiting the sub-divisions thereof, the same as that shown to him at the time of his own purchase of the ground in question.

“ That he made no representations to the complainant as to the dimensions of the ground so leased as of his own knowledge, hut at the time of said leasing and subsequent conveyance in fee, in good faith put him in possession of the same means of information the defendant himself had, namely his title deed from the trustee, and a copy of the plat filed in the equity proceedings.

“ Further answering he does not admit that the actual dimensions of the parcel of ground differ from those set forth in the lease; hut even if there were any deficiency or falling short in this respect, this defendant would be in no manner answerable therefor, having conveyed the said ground to the complainant, precisely as the defendant received it, the description in the lease and deed to the [417]*417complainant, being taken and copied without alteration from the description in the deed from the trustee to the defendant. He denies that the bounds of the land were of such a character as to make the ascertainment of .it difficult or inconvenient, on the contrary, the same was and is well defined, being bounded on one side by Lanvale street, on another by Lovegrove Alley, and on the only other side by an open road thirty-three feet wide. He denies all fraud charged in the hill, and says that he made no false statement or representation whatever to the complainant, who had the fullest opportunity, as well when he took the lease, as when he demanded and received the conveyance of.

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

Related

Ochse v. Henry
33 A.3d 480 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2011)
Steele v. Goettee
542 A.2d 847 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Marcus v. Bathon
531 A.2d 690 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1987)
Goettee v. Steele
526 A.2d 626 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1987)
Carozza v. Peacock Land Corp.
188 A.2d 917 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1963)
Brodsky v. Hull
77 A.2d 156 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1950)
Wagner v. Bing
163 A. 199 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)
Neavitt v. Lightner
142 A. 109 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)
Wagner v. Goodrich
129 A. 364 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1925)
Mutual Fire Insurance Co. of Montgomery County v. Pickett
83 A. 1097 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1912)
Cohen v. Numsen
65 A. 432 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Md. 407, 1880 Md. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-bolgiano-md-1880.