Kriel v. Cullison

169 A. 203, 165 Md. 402
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 5, 1933
Docket[No. 3, October Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 169 A. 203 (Kriel v. Cullison) 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
Kriel v. Cullison, 169 A. 203, 165 Md. 402 (Md. 1933).

Opinion

Oeeutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William T. Cullison, the appellee, on March 16th, 1928, agreed with Walter E. Kriel, the appellant, to sell to him five separate parcels of land lying in Carroll County, Maryland, for $12,500, and on the same day delivered to Kriel a written receipt for fifty dollars, paid on account of the purchase price. But after that payment had been made it was found that Cullison had only a life interest in one of the tracts, and for that reason it was impossible for him to perform his contract. Both Kriel and Cullison, at that time, appear to have been desirous of completing the purchase of *404 the land which Cullison had undertaken to sell to Kriel, and to make that possible a proceeding was instituted for the sale of the parcel in which Cullison held the life estate, as a result of which trustees were appointed to sell it, and they reported a sale of it to Kriel for $5,000. The sale was ratified, the purchase price paid, and the property conveyed to Kriel. That parcel lay on the west side of the Hanover Turnpike Road, and was estimated to contain eighty-five acres. On December 3rd, 1930, the day on which he agreed with the trustees to purchase the eighty-five-aere tract, Kriel executed a second contract with William T. Cullison, under which Cullison bargained and sold to him the same four lots which were described in the first contract, which Cullison had made with him on March 16th, 1928, and which, with the eighty-five-acre tract, comprised all the land which Cullison in that contract undertook to sell. In that contract of December 3rd, 1930, between Cullison and Kriel, the parties agreed:

“That the said Yendor doth hereby bargain and sell unto the said Yen dee, and the latter doth hereby purchase from the former, all those several tracts of land lying east of Hanover Turnpike Road, of Carroll County, State of Maryland, containing in the aggregate forty-five acres, more or less, and more particularly described as follows:
“(1) A tract of twenty acres, more or less, lying on the east side of Hanover Turnpike Road between Greenmount and Hampstead.
“(2)° A tract of ten acres, more or less, lying on the Gross Mill Road.
“(3) A tract of nine acres, more or less, lying at or near Rockbrook.
“(4) A tract of five acres, more or less, lying in Greenmount.
“Being all and the same property which by the last will and testament of Jesse M. Cullison, Sr., dated May 1, 1819, and recorded in the office of the Register of Wills of Baltimore City in Wills Liber R. T. B. 61, folio 119, was devised to Jesse M, Cullison, Jr., *405 for life, with remainder to his child or children, and if none surviving him, then to the said Vendor herein, the said Jesse M. Oullison, Sr., having died in 1889, and the said Jesse Al. Oullison, Jr., having died in 1925 unmarried and without any child or children surviving him.
“At and for the price of Seven Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($7,500), of which the sum of Fifty Dollars ($50.00) was paid prior to the execution of this contract of sale, the balance of Seven Thousand Four Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($7,450) to he paid upon the ratification by the Circuit Court for Carroll County, in Equity, in the case of William T. Oullison et al. v. Georgia F. Crook et al. (Ho. 5869), of a contract of sale of even date herewith covering Oullison property lying on the west side of the Hanover Turnpike Road.
“And * * *
“It is understood and agreed between tbe parties hereto that this contract of sale shall become inoperative and without effect in the event that the sale to the Vendee herein in the court proceeding aforesaid of property lying on the west side of the Hanover Turnpike Road shall not be finally ratified, and upon such failure of ratification the deposit aforesaid shall he returned.”

In January, 1931, when the purchaser had the land described in that contract surveyed, it was found that the “twenty acre” tract, known as the “White Hall property,” actually contained 11.52 acres, of which 1.08 acres were subject to a railroad right of way, the “five acre” tract known as the “Dayhoff” lot, 7.13 acres, the “ten acre” tract known as the ‘‘Worthington” lot, 10 acres, and the “nine acre” tract known as “Hoover’s Lot,” 3.748 acres. The aggregate acreage of these four lots as estimated in the contract was 44 acres, while the actual acreage shown by the survey was 31.32, a deficiency of 12.68 acres. Alleging that deficiency as a reason, the vendee refused to perform the contract, and on December 7th, 1931, the vendor filed the bill in this case *406 against the vendee, in which he prayed that the contract of December 3rd, 1930, for the sale of those four lots, be spe'cifically enforced. The trial resulted in a decree in favor of the vendor, in which the court directed the vendee to forthwith pay or bring into court the purchase money less an allowance of $561.50 for the deficiency, and that failing the payment or forthcoming of said money that the land be sold and the proceeds brought into court to be distributed under its direction. The appeal is from that decree.

The important question submitted is whether, upon the facts of the case, appellee was entitled to a decree requiring appellant to specifically perform the contract of December 3rd, 1930. If he was so entitled, a subsidiary question arises, whether the abatement allowed by the decree was sufficient to adequately compensate appellant for any deficiency in the quantity of the land sold.

The material facts are either admitted by the pleadings or established by the proof, and may be -thus stated:

Because of their character and location three of the four lots described in the contract may be considered as a group separately from the fourth. Those three lots are: (a) The Worthington lot on the Gross Mills Road, estimated in the contract and shown by the survey to contains 10 acres; (b) Hoover’s lot near Rockbrook, estimated in the contract to contain 9 acres and shown by the survey to contain 3.748; and (c) the Dayhoff lot at Greemnount, estimated in the contract to contain 5 acres and shown by the survey to contain 7.13. These three lots were referred to in the evidence as “wood lots,” were not contiguous, were remote from the turnpike, and were valued by Kriel at fifty dollars per acre.

The fourth lot, estimated in the contract to contain twenty acres, and known as the White Hall property, binds for about 904.66 feet on the east side of the Hanover Turnpike Road, which continues a short distance beyond as the main street of the Town of Hampstead. That lot was shown by the survey to contain 10.44 acres, exclusive of a railway right of way containing 1.08 acre’s, which runs through the property several hundred feet distant from and nearly par *407 allel to the turnpike. It is separated by the turnpike from the tract estimated in the contract of March 16th, 1928, to contain 85 acres but which was found by actual survey to -contain 87.79 acres.

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

Related

Union United Methodist Church, Inc. v. Burton
948 A.2d 1 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2008)
Cavacos v. Sarwar
545 A.2d 46 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Steele v. Goettee
542 A.2d 847 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
Goettee v. Steele
526 A.2d 626 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1987)
Witmer v. Bloom
288 A.2d 323 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1972)
Dixon v. Morse
463 P.2d 284 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1969)
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)
Wood v. Hildebrand
42 A.2d 919 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1945)
Housing Engineering Co. v. David M. Andrew Co.
40 A.2d 368 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 A. 203, 165 Md. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kriel-v-cullison-md-1933.