Lombardo v. Clifford Bros. Co.

114 A. 849, 139 Md. 32, 1921 Md. LEXIS 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 114 A. 849 (Lombardo v. Clifford Bros. Co.) 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
Lombardo v. Clifford Bros. Co., 114 A. 849, 139 Md. 32, 1921 Md. LEXIS 138 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant in this case, Angela Lombardo-, on the 7th day of December, 1916, leased unto the appellee, The Clifford Brothers Company, a corporation, certain leasehold property in the City of Baltimore, known as 404 Oo-lvin Street, for the term of five years fro-m the date of the lease, at the monthly rental of twenty dollars payable in advance, with the provision that should the rent be ten days in arrears, the lessor should have the right to re-enter and take possession of the leased premises.

The le-ase contained the further provision that the lessee should have the privilege' o-r option of purchasing the leased property at any time during the tenancy at and for the sum o-f two thousand dollars; and should it exercise such option, it was therein covenanted by the lessor that she would convey the said property to- the lessee free and clear o-f all liens and incumbrances.

On the 12th day of June, 1920, the lessee filed its bill alleging therein that it had notified the defendant, Angela Lombardo, of its intention of exercising the privilege or option of purchasing the said leased property and had done all that was required of it to he entitled to have said property conveyed to it by the lesso-r, but she had refused to- convey the same in accordance with the provisions of the lease:.

The defendant answered the bill, charging the plaintiff with having repeatedly defaulted in the provision o-f the lease in respect to the payment of rent within the time stipulated *34 therein, which she claimed rendered void “the further operation of the lease, including any right or option of purchase contained in said lease,” and “that finally on the 27th day of April, 1920, the monthly installment of rent, due on the 1st day of April, 1920, remaining unpaid and being twenty-seven days over-due,” she availed herself of said provision of the lease’ and notified the lessee of her intention to re-enter and take possession of the leased property; and that it was not until such notice was given that the lessee notified her of its intention to purchase said property under the provision contained in the lease; at which time she claims the plaintiff's right to purchase the leased property no longer existed, because of its said default and the action taken thereon hy her.

The plaintiff's right to the relief sought in this case depends altogether upon the question whether its right to purchase the leased property at the sum named in the lease was forfeited by it because of its failure, under the facts and circumstances shown in the record, to pay the rent covenanted to be paid within the time stipulated in the lease.

The plaintiff corporation is engaged in the manufacture of candy and was so engaged at the time of the execution of the above mentioned lease of 404 Colvin Street. It was then occupying and using for said business purpose both 402 and 406 Colvin Street, and it was because of its location in respect to 402 and 406 that 404 Colvin Street became especially desirable to the plaintiff.

The monthly payment of rent for the property so leased was regularly made, that is, within ten days after the same became due, until April, 1918, fifteen or more months after the lease became effective (unless there was a default in the payment of the January rent, 1918, which is not clear from the record), when the payment was made on the 16th for that month. The monthly payments thereafter were all made within the stipulated period with the following exceptions: The June and ÜSTovember payments of the year 1918 were *35 made on the lltli and 14th of those months respectively; the payments for February, July, August, October and December were made on the 13th, 18th, 12th, 13th and 20th of those months respectively; and the payment for March, 1920, on the 23rd of that month. The record also discloses that for other months the rent was paid in advance of the time of payment. A part payment for April, 1918, was paid on the 15th day of March and the rent for November, 1919, was paid on the 17th of October of that year.

The lease is silent as to where the rent was to be paid and upon this question there is a conflict of evidence. The defendant and her son testified that, at the time of the execution of the lease, Frank J. Clifford, president of the plaintiff corporation, the only person present other than themselves, as claimed by them, stated that the rent would be mailed to the defendant, which they say was done for a number of months thereafter, after which time, the defendant, her son or daughter, would g*o to the plaintiff’s place of business and there collect the rent. This they say they did because of the failure of the plaintiff to mail to the defendant the rent promptly when due, but Mr. Clifford emphatically denied that he ever made the statement that the rent would be mailed to her, and stated that it was mailed to her only on occasion when he was ill and not at his place of business, when the defendant, her son or daughter, called for it. At such times, a check would be broug’ht to his home to be signed by him and, when so signed, was mailed to her. There were probably several other occasions when they called for the rent, that he told them he would mail them a check the next day, which was invariably done.

Several of the employees of the plaintiff, including the secretary of the company, whose work was in the office of the company, fully corroborated Mr. Clifford in his statement that the rent was from the beginning of the tenancy paid to the defendant or those sent by her, when she or they called *36 for it, except on such occasions as those mentioned by Mr. Clifford.

It is conceded by the defendant that after some months tlie rent was collected by her or those representing her at the plaintiff’s place of business, and the only conflict of evidence is as to how or where the rent for the first part of the term was collected, and this we think is not at all important in the decision of this case. For if it were the understanding, as claimed by her, that the rent was to be mailed to her and was not so mailed to her, this requirement was waived by her because of her continuous conduct thereafter in going to the plaintiff’s place of business and there collecting the rent, without making the slightest complaint to the plaintiff of its failure to pay the rent promptly when due, or of its failure to mail it to her, which she states the plaintiff was to do; nor did she at any time complain of the fa'ct that she was required, as she says, to go to the plaintiff’s place of business to collect the rent.

She had received the rent for March, 1920, and the only month for which she had not been paid was the month of April following, and it was because of the plaintiff’s failure to pay the rent for that month, and that month alone, within the stipulated period of the lease, that she sought to re-enter and take possession of the premises, and for this month, she neither called at the plaintiff’s office to collect the rent therefor, nor did she in any other way ask for its payment, before attempting to re-enter and take possession of the leased premises because of said alleged breach of the lease, when she could have gotten it at any time after the same became due, as stated by the plaintiff and its witnesses.

As said by this Court, speaking through Judge Urnrb in

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Bluebook (online)
114 A. 849, 139 Md. 32, 1921 Md. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lombardo-v-clifford-bros-co-md-1921.