Kremen v. Rubin

116 A. 640, 139 Md. 682, 1922 Md. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 116 A. 640 (Kremen v. Rubin) 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
Kremen v. Rubin, 116 A. 640, 139 Md. 682, 1922 Md. LEXIS 166 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case arises from a dispute between the parties as to the terms of a contract made by them for the sale of leasehold property, known as 14 N. Chester Street, in Baltimore City, by the appellant to the appellees for $7,200. Under the contract, $6,000 of the purchase price was to remain as a debt against the property to be secured by a mortgage. The appellant’s contention was that a mortgage could only be secured by paying a bonus of $650, and that under the contract ■of sale that expense should have been paid by the appellees in *685 addition to the purchase price, while they, on the other hand, contended that the only expense which they were recpiired to bear, over and above the amount of $7,200, was $52, for which amount they say the appellant agreed to procure the necessary mortgage loan. In consequence, the appellant refused to consummate the transaction unless the appellees paid the $650 bonus, in addition to the price of $7,200, and that the appellees refused to do.

Before the dispute arose the appellees had paid the appellant $700 on account of the purchase price of the property, and, when he failed to convey it to them, they demanded the return of that money, and when the appellant refused to return it they brought this action for its recovery.

The action is in assumpsit, and the declaration originally contained only the six common counts. It was later amended by tbe addition of a special count, hut, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, it was again amended by striking out that count, so that the case rested finally upon the declaration in the form in which it was originally filed.

Sixteen of the eighteen exceptions which we are asked to review relate to questions of evidence, and the other two to the court’s rulings on the prayers. Before discussing them, we will refer to so much of the evidence as is necessary to an understanding of the questions which these exceptions present.

From the plaintiff’s evidence it appeared that, on January 26th, 1920, Alexander Kremen sold to I.ouis Rubin and Rose Rubin, his wife, the property to which we have referred, and which was then owned by Morris Xfibauer, for $7,200. The contract of sale, which was written by Mr. Kremen, and signed by tbe parties, provided in part as follows:

“Kine hundred dollars cash, of which $500.00 should be paid February 10th and balance at day of settlement and balance in mortgage expense for procuring same should be paid by vendee.
“And upon payment as above of the unpaid purchase money, a deed for the property shall be exe *686 cuted at the vendee’s expense by the vendor, -which shall convey the property by a good and merchantable title to the vendee.
“Taxes, water rent, ground rent, to be paid or allowed for by the vendor to the day of transfer, nineteen hundred and
“Settlement should take place within four months from date hereof.”

When asked for whom he was acting when he signed that contract, Kremen said: “For myself — I was acting for myself as agent for Mr. Libauer.”

Rubin, after he had paid $700 on account of the purchase price of the property, learned that Kremen was to got it from Libauer for $7,000. He then, he said, went to Kremen and said to him: “Listen here, you were supposed to charge me $7,000. Mr. Libauer is really selling me the property, and you are acting as agent, and now you charge me $7,200.” And he said that Kremen replied: “I will tell you, I promised to get you the mortgage for nothing * * * now, I will get you the mortgage of $4,500” and then he said, “the second mortgage of $1,500, and only to cost you $52, and the rest of the expenses I will stand. This is just the reason I charge you these $200 and sold you the property for $7,200 — this $200 will practically be a bonus for securing the mortgages.” The appellee told Kremen he could only spare $1,200 in cash; that he only had $1,000 of his own, but that his mother intended to give him $200, which made up the amount of cash he agreed to pay. When the time came to settle for the property, Rubin, his wife, Mr. Weinberg, his attorney, and Mr. Heller, a friend, went to Kremen’s office. When he arrived there Mr. Kremen told him that every one was there ready to settle for the house but he had not secured the mortgage, but that a man named Blum would lend him $5,000 on a first mortgage to run for one year and that he could secure a second mortgage for the balance, but that Rubin would have to pay $650 as a bonus for securing the mortgages. Rubin then *687 asked if the mortgage could not remain on the property for a longer time, so as to give him an opportunity of paying it off. Ho was told that that could not he done and he then said: “I can’t go ahead and settle the property. First, I Lave not got the money, I can’t get the amount of $650, and then I say, in a year, what could I do'in a year’s time, $5,000 in one year. He said, ‘that is the only way you can do, that is the only way to settle,’ and I said, ‘nothing doing.’ I could not do it, not because I wanted to hack out — I could not do it.’’ Rubin also reminded Kremen that he agreed to take care of the mortgage for $200, hut Kremen told him to read the contract and advised him to “go ahead and pay it.” On May 26th, 1920, he went to Kremen and offered him $500, the balance of the cash payment provided for by the contract, and $52, which he said Kremen had told him would he the expense incident to procuring the mortgage. Kremen refused however to “put the deal through” unless Rubin paid $650 as a bonus for procuring the mortgages. As he could not do that, he demand'd the return of the $700 he had paid, and when Kremen refused to return it he brought this suit. Rubin paid the $700 lo Eli Hies, his brother-in-law, who was then in Kremen’s employ, and none of it was returned to him.

Morris Libauer, who owned the property at the time Kremen sold it to Mr. and Airs. Rubin, employed Kremen as a real estate agent to sell it for him for $7,000, and on February 2nd, 1920, be executed a written contract for the sale of it at that price to “Alexander Kremen, Agent,” and in that contract he agreed to pay Kremen a “commission of 2l/> per cent or $175,” and on May 10th, 1920, lie executed a deed conveying it to Kremen and received from him the purchase price of $7,000 less $175 commission. Pending the transaction, Kremen had told Libauer that he was buying the property for Rubin, and when Libauer heard from the Rubins that they were paying $7,200 for it, he asked Kremen how it was that he, Libauer’s agent, g’ot $7,200' for it, while Libauer only received $7,000, when the only gain Kremen was enti *688 tied to receive was his commission of $175, and Kremen told him “that for the extra money over the $7,000 he was supposed to get for them a mortgage.”

The evidence offered by the appellant contradicts that of the appellees in most of its essential details. It tended to show these facts: Kremen, while engaged in the real estate business, was approached about the middle of January, 1920, by Eli Dies, then an agent for him, who told him he had a “sale for 14 N.

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Bluebook (online)
116 A. 640, 139 Md. 682, 1922 Md. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kremen-v-rubin-md-1922.