Louis K. Liggett Co. v. Rose

136 A. 651, 152 Md. 146, 1927 Md. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 136 A. 651 (Louis K. Liggett Co. v. Rose) 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
Louis K. Liggett Co. v. Rose, 136 A. 651, 152 Md. 146, 1927 Md. LEXIS 104 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

*150 Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint on this appeal was filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City on January 27th, 1926, by Henry Eose and Emil Horwitz, appellees, against Theodore H. Diener and Louis K. Liggett Company, a corporation, appellants. After the bill of complaint had been amended, its final form was sustained by the overruling of the demurrers which had been interposed by the appellants, who then answered the allegations of the bill of complaint, and testimony was taken before the chancellor. The proceedings were designed to have specifically enforced an agreement of Theodore H. Diener whereby, on November 11th, 1925, he promised in writing to lease to the appellees a desirable brick store, of three stories, with basement, at the corner of Lexington and Liberty Streets, Baltimore, known as 101 West Lexington Street, for a period of ten years from January 1st, 1926, with the privilege of renewal for a like term. The agreement to lease was not consummated, but Theodore H. Diener, on January 13th, 1926, demised the same premises to the Louis K. Liggett Company, an appellant, for a period of twenty years, beginning on February 1st, 1926. The theory upon which the present appellees proceeded was that, without their default, and while the agreement between themselves and the landlord was in effect, he negotiated and agreed to make a lease of the same property to the Louis K. Liggett Company, the other appellant, which had knowledge of the prior subsisting agreement. The chancellor decreed specific performance of the agreement of Diener with the appellees, and from his decree the landlord and the company have each prosecuted separate appeals. The record is voluminous, and the oral arguments and briefs have exhaustively and ably presented the case, which, in our judgment, will depend upon whether the Louis K. Liggett Company had notice of the prior contractual rights of the appellees at the time of the execution of its lease. The court will not attempt an analysis of the conflicting testimony, but will state its carefully considered conclusions as the substantive facts established by the preponderance and weight of the testimony.

*151 The premises in question were vacant, except a part occupied by a jeweler, Milton I. Mervis, when the landlord leased to a corporation named Dartley, Inc., another portion of the building from October 1st, 1925, to December 31st, 1925. The owner of the building w'as desirous of leasing the premises and he had employed a real estate agent, the Realty Sendee, Inc., to secure a tenant. A short time before the renting to Dartley, Inc., Emil Horwitz, one of its officers and a large stockholder, became interested in securing from the owner a lease on the whole property. The other appellee,. Henry Rose, an experienced real estate operator in Hew York, became associated with Horwitz in this undertaking,, and the two met at the owner’s place of business on Hovember 11th, 1925, where, in the presence of Sidney D. Cohen, the representative of the Realty Service, Inc., the owner himself drew up an agreement to lease the entire property, and the three contracting parties signed and delivered the instrument, which was of this tenor:

“Hovember 11, 1925.
“I hereby agree, subject to concluding arrangements with Milton I. Mervis, to lease to Mr. Horwitz and Mr. Rose premises 101 W. Lexington Street for a term of ten years beginning January 1, 1926, at an annual rental of $24,000, payable in equal monthly installments of $2,000 in advance on the first day of each and every month. As security $10,000 are to be paid on signing of the lease, of which $2,000 are to ho applied to payment of the first month’s rent, the balance to be held at 6 per cent, compound interest for three jears and then applied proportionately on the monthly rental for the succeeding three years. Lease to be signed by a corporation having $50,000 capital and to be individually guaranteed to satisfaction of landlord. Premises to be accepted in condition as is and tenant to have right to make any alteration or repairs that will improve the property. Two years before expiration of the lease, tenant is to have right to renew for a farther term of ten years at a gross rental for the first five *152 years of $27,000 and for the second five years of $80,000.
“Theo. H. Diener.
“Witness: Sidney D. Cohen.
“We hereby agree to lease the premises .101 W. Lexington Street under the terms above mentioned, and agree to execute proper lease for same.
“Henry Eose,
“Emil Horwitz.
“Witness: Sidney D. Cohen.”

The contract was conditional on the owner obtaining from his tenant, the jeweler, Milton I. Mervis, a release or surrender of his subsisting lease, which had some years to run; and, as will be later more particularly stated, the owner obtained from the jeweler a surrender of his term upon the payment of a large reward.

After the agreement was signed, Eose returned to Hew York, and Horwitz remained in Baltimore until Saturday, when he left with the understanding that the lease would be sent by Diener to Hew York for execution. Diener had prepared a lease for all of the property, except the portion occupied by the jeweler, and forwarded it to Hew York in a letter dated Hovember 14th. As explained by this letter, the form of lease submitted was to cover all of the property except that occupied by the jeweler, for the teim of six years and one month, beginning on the first of January, 1926, and ending on the 31st day of January, 1932, which corresponded with the unexpired period of the jeweler’s lease. The letter stated that another lease for the same period, with similar provisions, would be drawn for the portion of the property occupied by Mervis, and that this second lease would, also, cover the entire premises for the residue of the agreed term of ten years, with the privilege of renewal for ten years more.

The form of lease submitted contemplated a lease to the corporation to be named by the lessees and Henry Eose as the two tenants. In his letter of December 14th, the: request was made for the name of the corporation to be furnished, with the suggestion that if this be then impossible, the lease *153 would be made in the name of Rose, “with permission to, transfer same to a corporation, subject to conditions named in lease.”

The lease contained a clause that “it is further understood and agreed that the said tenants shall guarantee to' the satisfaction of the landlord the payment of the rent stipulated in this lease and the payment of the rent to be paid under the fourteen-year lease to be hereinafter executed,” which evidently was intended to provide for the stipulation in the agreement to lease that the lease was “to be individually guaranteed to the satisfaction of the landlord.” The lease as prepared was acceptable in form to the appellees, except with respect to two provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
136 A. 651, 152 Md. 146, 1927 Md. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-k-liggett-co-v-rose-md-1927.