Maryland Apartment House Co. v. Glenn

70 A. 216, 108 Md. 377, 1908 Md. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 70 A. 216 (Maryland Apartment House Co. v. Glenn) 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
Maryland Apartment House Co. v. Glenn, 70 A. 216, 108 Md. 377, 1908 Md. LEXIS 91 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinión of the Court.

This is an action of assumpsit upon the common counts for *385 work and labor done, in a suit brought in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City, by the appellee against the appellant company, to recover a commission for obtaining a loan for it of $70,000 from the Title Trust and Guarantee Company of Baltimore. There is filed with the declaration a bill of particulars showing the nature of the plaintiff’s demand, and it is as follows:

1903 and 1904
To this amount payable by the defendant to the plaintiff for work and labor done by the plaintiff for the defendant at the instance and request of M. and J. Brandt, its. agents and representatives, in securing a loan of |7o,ooo for the défendant on its mortgage $1,750.00 — with interest until paid.

■ The defendant pleaded never indebted and never promised as alleged.

The case was tried before the Court, sitting as a jury, and from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant has appealed.

The questions brought here for our consideration are presented upon two bills of exception, one to the refusal of the Court to admit certain testimony offered upon the part of the defendant, and the other to the ruling of the Court in granting the plaintiff’s prayer, as modified, and in rejecting all of the defendant’s prayers.

The prayers it will be observed make no reference to the pleadings but were granted upon the evidence and facts in the case, so we are confined to the evidence to which they refer and are precluded from considering the state of the pleadings. The rule is well settled, that suitors must recover according to the allegata and probata. Stockton v. Frye, 4 Gill 406; Giles v. Fauntleroy, 13 Md. 126; Fletcher v. Dixon, 107 Md. 420.

There was no error, we think, in sustaining the objection to the testimony set out in the first bill of exception. The testimony sought to be introduced appears to have been irrelevant and immaterial to the issue between the parties, but its rejection could not have injured the defendant’s case because the defendant company had the benefit of the fact, in the tes *386 timony of the witness Glidden, who testified on cross-examination that the Brandts have not been paid at all but that they do hold some stock in the corporation which they obtained from George H. Thomas as a commission for securing the contract for the construction of the apartment house for the said Thomas.

The vital questions in the case arise upon the prayers, and it will be necessary to state somewhat in detail the facts disclosed by the record, in order to have a clear understanding of their application.

The Court granted the plaintiff’s prayer, with a certain modification, which will hereafter be set out, but rejected the. four prayers offered by the defendant.

It will be seen that the defendant’s prayers presented the converse of the proposition contained in the plaintiff’s prayer as granted, and a consideration of one will practically dispose of the others/

The facts, upon which the instructions were asked, appear to be these:

The appellant company was incorporated under the General Incorporation Laws of the State on the 19th of March, 1903, and subsequently, on March 31st, 1903, its certificate of incorporation was amended by increasing its capital stock to two hundred thousand dollars. The incorporators . were Messrs. Jacob Brandt, John Henry Keene, John Glenn, Jr., Henry S. King, George H. Thomas, Edward H. Glidden, of Baltimore City, and John H. Wight, of Baltimore County. The corporation was to be managed by seven directors and the incorporators were named as such for the first year.

The object for which it was formed is stated to be for the purpose of buying, selling, 'mortgaging and leasing or otherwise dealing in lands, or other property, and also for the purpose of carrying on in the city of Baltimore the industrial, business of conducting an apartment house in all its branches.

The firm of M. & J. Brandt, of Baltimore, were among the promoters of the organization and according to the evidence, the firm was authorized to negotiate a loan of $70,000 on the; *387 bonds of the appellant company, to be incorporated. Mr. Glidden was employed as thekarchitect to build the apartment house on a lot to be purchased from Messrs. Keene and Wight, provided the matter could be financed.

On the 13th of February, 1903, Messrs. Brandt, who were promoting the plan, entered into negotiations with the appellee •to secure a loan of $70,000 from the Title Guarantee and Trust Company. This was subsequently effected by the appellee with the Trust Company and the loan was secured by a duly executed mortgage, dated the 8th of May, 1903. The contract between the appellant and the appellee is evidenced by the following letter.

“Baltimore, Maryland, March 6, 1903. John Glenn, Jr., Esq.,

Dear Sir: We enclose herewith letter to the Title Guarantee and Trust Company making application for a loan of $70,000 on the new apartment house to be erected on the lot at the northeast corner of St. Paul and Preston streets.

Will you be kind enough to hand this to Mr. Miller and have company to take action?

We agree to pay you a commission of two and one-half per cent, on the amount of the loan secured. This payment to be made as money on $70,000 loan, is paid over to the company.

Yours very trulv,

M. & J. Brandt, Promoters.”

It is admitted that the money as secured by the appellee was accepted by the appellant company and was used in the construction of the apartment house; that it was paid according to the terms of the mortgage, and was obtained through the services of the appellee, and that no commissions have been paid him or to M. & J. Brandt, on account of the services rendered.

There is evidence tending to show that all of the directors except one or two knew of the employment of the appellee to negotiate the loan and that all of them knew it before the first of June, when the first instalment upon the mortgage became due. It also appears that at a meeting of the board of direc *388 tors held on the 6th of April, 1903, the matter of the loan was •discussed and the following resolution was passed.

“Whereas it is necessary to the fulfillment of the purpose of the company to obtain a loan of not less than $70,000, and therefore, it is to its interest to adopt the agreement made in its behalf by M. & J. Brandt with the Title Guarantee and Trust Company in reference to the loan. Now, therefore, be it resolved, That the Board of Directors be and they are hereby authorized to accept and adopt for the Company, the agreement entered into on its behalf by'M. & J. Brandt and the Title Guarantee and Trust Company.”

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Bluebook (online)
70 A. 216, 108 Md. 377, 1908 Md. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-apartment-house-co-v-glenn-md-1908.