Levin v. Stratford Plaza, Inc.

76 A.2d 558, 196 Md. 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 20, 2001
Docket[No. 20, October Term, 1950.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 76 A.2d 558 (Levin v. Stratford Plaza, Inc.) 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
Levin v. Stratford Plaza, Inc., 76 A.2d 558, 196 Md. 293 (Md. 2001).

Opinion

Markell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These are cross-appeals from a decree construing contracts between the parties for the construction of an apartment house project by plaintiff for defendant and referring the case to an auditor to state an account determining the amount due from one party to the other. This is the net result of somewhat unusual and complicated proceedings, which need not be outlined since no jurisdictional or procedural questions have been raised. Pending these appeals plaintiff was adjudicated bankrupt; its case is now being conducted by its trustee *297 in bankruptcy. Either the bankrupt or the trustee, or both, (as the case may be) will be referred to as plaintiff. The bill was filed against the corporation defendant and Jacob L. Zellan. Zellan is a non-resident, was not served with process, has not appeared and is not before the court except as a witness. The corporation defendant alone will be referred to as defendant.

Harry A. Rosefeld was plaintiff’s president and apparently its principal stockholder, spokesman and representative. About October, 1947, a tract of undeveloped land in Prince George’s County was purchased by Rosenfeld and associates, Zellan says for about one cent per square foot, and conveyed to a corporation controlled by them. Part of this tract, 62,382 square feet, was on October 27, 1947 sold to Zellan, and on January 5, 1948 conveyed to him, for $17,078.97, about 27 cents per square foot. Zellan was “sold” the idea of the apartment house project, and at the same time the land.

On November 3, 1947 a comprehensive contract was executed between Zellan, as “Owner”, and plaintiff, as “Builder”. By this contract (1) the Owner authorized the Builder forthwith to engage named architects to prepare commitment drawings and specifications for an apartment house project on the land, as required by Federal Housing Administration for mortgage insurance under section 608 of the National Housing Act, 12 U. S. C. A. § 1743. The Owner agreed (2) upon completion of the drawings and specifications, to sign all necessary applications, furnish all documents and pay all fees required by the Federal Housing Act. The Builder was to have the exclusive right to select the mortgage lender in whose name application was to be filed. The Owner agreed (3) forthwith to pay the Builder $2500 “on account of the Builder’s fee hereinafter mentioned”, out of which payment the Builder agreed to pay the architects all sums due them for preparing the commitment plans and specifications “in the event the apartment project is not constructed by the Builder; and if the Owner shall elect not to accept the F.H.A. loan, and *298 shall not construct said project thereunder”, the $2500 payment “shah be deemed to be in full payment to the Builder”, and to the architects, “of any and all services performed by them for the Owner hereunder, and this agreement shall thereupon terminate and be of no further force and effect”. If the commitment of the F.H.A. is issued, and “the Owner elects to have the project constructed under said Commitment”, the Owner agrees (4) to engage the architects to prepare final working drawings and specifications and to pay them a fee equal to $65 for each apartment unit in the project and (5) to engage the Builder, “as general contractor, * * * upon the terms, and at the fee”, stated, viz., “to pay, or cause to be paid, to the Builder for its services as general contractor in connection with the construction, an amount equal to all ‘costs of construction’ plus a fee * * * equal to five per cent of such costs of construction”, the $2500 already paid to the Builder and the architects to be deducted from their respective fees; “* * * if the Owner elects to have said project built as aforesaid, the Owner agrees to enter into a contract with the Builder, or cause such contract to be entered into by any corporation organized by the Owner to own said project, under which contract the Builder is to be employed as general contractor as aforesaid, at a fee in the amount set forth above. Said contract shall provide that the owner shall deposit in a special trustee bank account with the Builder, from time to time, funds * * * [to] be drawn against by either the Builder or Owner for this project only, * * * in a total amount equal to * * * $800 for each apartment unit * * * in said project, in order to make available to the Builder adequate operating capital for the construction of said project, * * * said fund * * * [to] be in addition to the proceeds of the construction loan insured by the F.H.A., and in part cover the retained percentages thereunder all of which * * * loan proceeds shall also be made available to the Builder to defray the costs of construction of said project. In the event the project is to be owned by a corporation the *299 construction contract referred to above shall be guaranteed by the parties hereto of the first part, insofar as the same refers to the obligations of the Owner. The term ‘costs of construction’ as used herein, is hereby defined to mean each and every item of cost, expense of disbursement paid or laid out by the Builder on account of the actual construction and development of said project, including but not limited to, any and all payments of disbursements for labor and material, rental of equipment used in the construction, subcontractor’s bills, surveyor’s and engineer’s fees, utility services, field office costs, supervision, Federal, State and Municipal licenses, taxes, Social Security and Unemployment taxes, insurance premiums, and any and all other expenditures which the Builder is called upon to make necessary to and in connection with the project,” with exceptions not now material. The Builder agreed to “take prompt action and use the utmost diligence in obtaining the loan * * * and all the necessary measures to complete all preliminary steps and * * * actual construction * * * in the shortest reasonable time and with the minimum cost to the Owner” and to “build the building in accordance with the plans and specifications and in the most economical, but workmanlike manner. * * * in no event is its total compensation or fee to be more than five per cent of the F.H.A. loan.”

The $2500 was paid by Zellan to plaintiff, defendant was organized by Zellan to own the property, and application was filed with F.H.A. On February 24, 1948 F.H.A. issued (on a printed form) its “Commitment for Insurance”, a lengthy letter addressed to Metropolitan Mortgage Company, “mortgagee”, Zellan, “sponsor”, and defendant, “proposed mortgagor”, stating that it finds the project to be eligible for insurance under section 608, and subject to its Rules and Regulations and to specified conditions, will endorse as insured a credit instrument, secured by a first mortgage upon the land and property included in the project, in an amount not exceeding $343,800. The conditions specified are many *300 and lengthy, including delivery to F.H.A. of many instruments, among them “(c) Four conformed copies of the Construction Contract between the Mortgagor and the general contractor whereby the project is to be built (F.H.A. Form 2442-W)Before May 4, 1948 F.H.A. abandoned this requirement. Plaintiff and defendant, however, did in fact execute such a contract; apparently F.H.A. was not given a copy.

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Related

Service Realty Co. v. Luntz
123 A.2d 201 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1956)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A.2d 558, 196 Md. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levin-v-stratford-plaza-inc-md-2001.