Levine v. Chambers

118 A. 798, 141 Md. 336
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 5, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 118 A. 798 (Levine v. Chambers) 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
Levine v. Chambers, 118 A. 798, 141 Md. 336 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

*339 Bjkiscoe, Jl,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was originally instituted in the Baltimore City Court, on the 9th day of May, 1919, but was subsequently removed to the Superior Court of Baltimore City and, after trial in the last named court, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $1,784.00. From a judgment on this verdict, the defendant has taken this appeal.

The record contains seven exceptions. One of these relates to the rulings of the court on the prayers, and six to the rulings on the evidence. The plaintiff offered one prayer, which was granted. The defendant presented sixteen prayers, and of these the fifth, seventh, eighth, ninth and eleventh were granted and the first, second, third, fourth, sixth, tenth, twelfth and thirteenth were refused.

The appellant states in his brief that all of the exceptions are based upon the same propositions of law, and except as hearing thereon, the six exceptions as to the evidence are not pressed.

The suit was brought to recover the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, the alleged purchase price of three- thousand dollars par value of the stock of the Now Windsor Hotel Company, under the circumstances which will he hereafter more- fully stated.

The declaration contains seven counts. The seventh amended count sets out the cause of action and is as follows:

“And for that the Windsor Hotel Company, of which the defendant, Abraham H. Levine, was treasurer, was indebted unto the plaintiff, and that on or about May 28th, 1918, the defendant personally agreed with the plaintiff to liquidate the balance of the plaintiff’s account against the said Windsor Hotel Company in the following manner: That there should he paid to Mm, the plaintiff, $1,000.00 in cash, and there should be delivered to Mm six promissory notes of the said Windsor Hotel Company, three of them to be endorsed by the defendant and three by one; A. J. Fink; and that the defendant was to purchase nidi *340 vidually tlie stock of the Windsor Hotel Company amounting to $3,000.00 par value, which was to he issued in the name of the plaintiff hy the said Windsor Hotel Company (as part payment of his account against the said hotel company) for the sum of $1,500.00, said $1,500.00 to he evidenced by an individual promissory note of the defendant for ninety days, with the privilege to the defendant to renew the same every ninety days upon the curtailment of not less than 15%, said note to be delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff at the time the said six notes of the said Windsor Hotel Company should be taken up and paid; that the said defendant did pay his part of the $1,000.00 theretofore promised to be paid to the plaintiff, and did deliver to the plaintiff said six promissory notes of the Windsor Hotel Company, three of which were endorsed by the defendant and three by A. J. Eink, as a part performance of his contract, but has failed and neglected to deliver to the plaintiff his promissory note for $1,500.00 for the said $3,000.00 par value of the stock of the said Windsor Hotel Conw pany, as the defendant agreed to do, although the plaintiff has often requested the defendant to complete the performance of his agreement.”

The facts of the case, as disclosed by the record, appear to be as follows:

The plaintiff is in the decorating and painting” business and, some time in the year 1918, entered into an agreement for the painting and'decoration of Mount Holly Inn, a hotel located in the suburbs of Baltimore City.

The defendant is engaged in the clothing business in Baltimore City, and was the treasurer of the Windsor Hotel Company, the owner of Mount Holly Inn, and a stockholder in that company.

It appears that, at the time of the completion of the work on the hotel, the Windsor Hotel Company was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $8,000, and under the terms of a final agreement of settlement, as stated in the amended decía *341 ration, tlic defendant was to pureliase tlie stock of the Windsor Hotel Company to 1he amount of $3,000 par value, as part payment of his account against the hotel company, for the sum of $1,500, and to deliver to the plaintiff his promissory note for this sum, for the stock, as part performance of his contract. And this suit is "brought on that part of the-alleged agreement of the defendant to purchase the stock, and. to give his note for the purchase price, as. will appear from the plaintiff’s bill of particulars, filed to the first six counts of the declaration and as sot out in the seventh amended count of the declaration.

The first, second, third and fourth exceptions present the rulings, of the court, on objection by the defendant to the admissibility of certain letters written by Messrs. Karr and M’ullikin containing and setting forth the terms of the contract. This evidence was admissible, under the rulings of this Court in Nelson v. Willey, 97 Md. 373, and Goodman v. Saperstein, 115 Md. 683, as tending to show the terms of the settlement and the true agreement between the parties.

There was no reversible error in the ruling of the court in the fifth and sixth exceptions. The question and answer in the fifth exception were proper, and what was said in regard to the ruling in the third exception applies equally to the sixth.

This brings ns to an examination of the prayers. The defendant’s first, second, third, fourth and sixth prayers were in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and were designed to withdraw the case from the jury. They were properly refused, under the evidence disclosed by the record, because the case was clearly one for the consideration of the jury.

The defendant’s tenth, eleventh and twelfth prayers are practically and in effect the same. The court, granted the eleventh prayer, which instructed the jury that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to establish to the satisfaction of the jury by preponderating evidence that the defendant agreed to pureliase from the plaintiff the stock of the "Windsor Hotel *342 ■Company, mentioned in evidence, and that a note or memorandum in writing evidencing all the material terms of said alleged contract was signed by the plaintiff or by his agent duly authorized in that behalf, and unless the jury shall find to their satisfaction that the defendant did agree to purchase said stock from the plaintiff, and that.a note or memorandum in writing, evidencing all the material terms of said alleged ■contract, was .signed by the defendant or by his agent duly authorized in that behalf, the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant.

The ruling of the court, therefore, in the refusal of the tenth and twelfth prayers, was proper, because granting several prayers to the same effect, and covering the same subject, would have a. tendency to confuse and mislead the jury-

There was no error in the refusal of the defendant’s thirteenth prayer. Tt was not only misleading, but there was no evidence to support it.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 798, 141 Md. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levine-v-chambers-md-1922.