Laurel Realty Co. v. Himelfarb

62 A.2d 263, 191 Md. 462, 1948 Md. LEXIS 385
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 11, 1948
Docket[No. 17, October Term, 1948.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 62 A.2d 263 (Laurel Realty Co. v. Himelfarb) 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
Laurel Realty Co. v. Himelfarb, 62 A.2d 263, 191 Md. 462, 1948 Md. LEXIS 385 (Md. 1948).

Opinion

Marbury, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order overruling a demurrer to a bill for specific performance filed in the Circuit Court *465 of Baltimore City. The demurrer is to eight separate paragraphs of the bill, and also to the whole bill. We have heretofore permitted immediate appeals in equity cases from orders overruling demurrers to entire bills, (Young v. Cockman, 182 Md. 246, pages 248 and 249, 34 A. 2d 428, 149 A. L. R. 1006), but that exception does not extend to appeals from orders overruling demurrers to individual paragraphs in a bill. An order overruling such demurrers is interlocutory, and the ruling is reviewable by this court only on an appeal after final decree. In the present case, therefore, we consider only that part of the demurrer which is to the whole bill.

The allegations of the bill are that on December 5, 1945, the appellant had acquired from the Bureau of Buildings of the City of Baltimore, permits for the construction and erection of 24 semi-detached houses on lots in Sunset Road and Cylburn Avenue in Belvedere Park, one of which houses was known as 5005 Sunset Road. With the applications upon which these permits were obtained were filed plans and specifications showing how these houses were to be built. On January 29, 1946, the appellant applied to the Federal Housing Administration for a priority rating for scarce materials, and received such rating in consideration of its agreement to sell the houses and lots at a price not exceeding the ceiling price established by the Federal Housing Administration, and to give veterans of World War II, preferential rights of purchase. The appellee, Harry Himelfarb, is such a veteran. In April or May, 1946, the appellee, Harry Himelfarb, visited the development of the appellant, was shown partly completed houses by the president of appellant, and was told by the latter that all houses, including the house to be known as 5005 Sunset Road, were being constructed and erected and would be constructed and erected in accordance with the plans and specifications on file with the Bureau of Buildings. Also that the house, No. 5005 Sunset Road, would be constructed and erected with wooden sub-flooring such as that already installed in 5023 Sunset Road, in accordance with said *466 plans and specifications. In reliance upon these representations, the appellees agreed to purchase the lot and the house which was to be completed thereon and to be known as 5005 Sunset Road, subject to an annual ground rent of $120, for the sum of $8500 which the president of appellant reported was the price for the completed house and lot established by the F.H.A., and it was agreed in consideration of the purchase price that the house, which was then in the course of construction and erection, would continue to be constructed and erected in accordance with the plans and specifications filed with the Bureau of Buildings. The agreement between the parties was evidenced by a written contract filed with the bill. The complainants made a down payment of $1000 on the purchase price and on the sixth of November, 1946, paid in full for the lot and house and received an assignment of the leasehold estate from a holding company used by appellant for this purpose. This assignment was duly recorded, and is filed with the bill. The appellees also allege that prior to and at the time of said settlement and payment in full for the house, they had had no opportunity to inspect the house because the president of appellant, acting for appellant, refused to open the house for inspection, representing that the house was completed as agreed upon. After moving in and residing in the house the appellees found that it was not constructed and erected in accordance with the plans and specifications, many items having been omitted entirely, other items erected and installed in a defective manner, and inferior grades of materials substituted for those called for. There are listed in paragraphs a. to p., both inclusive, of the bill, the defects, omissions and substitutions. The appellees also allege that they were overcharged $50 in violation of the maximum ceiling price, and that they have seasonably and repeatedly requested appellant to correct and remedy the conditions in the house, but such requests have been ignored. Photostatic copies of the plans and specifications are filed as exhibits with the bill. The appellees further state that they have suffered dam *467 age and inconvenience, that they have no adequate remedy at law, and they ask that the appellant be decreed to perform specifically the contract for the completion of the house, or if this is now impossible or impractical, that they be awarded monetary damages for the failure to perform, and also for the overcharge and for the loss and inconvenience caused them by the breach of contract.

The contract is on a standard form of contract of sale of real property approved by the Real Estate Board of Baltimore, and provides for the price of $8500 subject to the ground rent “of which One Thousand ($1000.00) Dollars have been paid prior to the signing hereof, and the balance to be paid as follows: Cash at time of settlement, upon completion.” There is a clause in the contract that it is thoroughly understood by the buyer that the seller is unable to give any date of completion, and there is also a clause that the contract contains the final and entire agreement between the parties and neither they nor their agents shall be bound by any terms, conditions or representations not therein written.

The demurrer to the whole bill is upon eight grounds of which, however, only three are pressed. These, as stated in appellant’s brief, are

“I. The written contract is stated to be and is a complete integration which cannot be supplemented or contradicted by alleged parol evidence.

II. The contract of sale is an indivisible contract, at least part of which is required to be in writing by Section IV of the Statute of Frauds and, therefore, no part of said contract is enforceable which is not reduced to writing.

III. Any such alleged oral understandings were merged in the deed.”

As a general rule a court of equity will not specifically enforce a building contract, but there are well established exceptions to that rule. One of these is where a complainant has purchased an unfinished house, taking title when it is in that condition, but the work has never been completed. That was the situation in the case of Brum *468 mel v. Clifton Realty Company, 146 Md. 56, 125 A. 905, 909. In that case the court examined and quoted from a number of text-writers and English, New York and New Jersey cases, and stated as a conclusion “From an examination of these and other cases, this at least seems to be clear that in this state, a court of equity may compel the vendee to specifically perform such a contract as that involved in this case, where the work remaining to be done under it is clearly defined, and where the complainant had no adequate remedy at law. It is also clear that the work to be done under the written contract filed in this case is sufficiently defined.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A.2d 263, 191 Md. 462, 1948 Md. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurel-realty-co-v-himelfarb-md-1948.