McLean v. Maloy

111 A. 91, 136 Md. 467, 1920 Md. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 111 A. 91 (McLean v. Maloy) 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
McLean v. Maloy, 111 A. 91, 136 Md. 467, 1920 Md. LEXIS 79 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The late Colin McLean, of Baltimore City, wasi for a number of years connected with the Baltimore and Ohm Bail-road Company as superintendent of construction of bridges', etc., and left that company to engage in the contracting business in New York. After repeated reverse® in New York and elsewhere he returned to Baltimore in 1903. His losses had exhausted his means, and he no longer had the necessary money to carry on the contracting business, but in that year he caused to be incorporated in Baltimore City the McLean Contracting Company, with a capital stock of twenty-five thousand dollars, all of which was paid for by his wife with property she had in New York, and she gave him, or the company, thirty shares of the stock to distribute among his friends. She also gave him, or the company, some money that she had in the savings bank to pay for a dredge. By this means, and with further financial assistance from Mr. George Shriver of the Baltimore and Ohio Bailroad Company, with whom h© had maintained friendly relations ever since his connection with that company, and with the aid of Mr. Frank Furst, who assisted him in securing1 the necessary contractor’s bond, the McLean Contracting Obmpany began the contracting business in Baltimore City. For several years *469 tbe company's earning’s, were sufficient to afford Mr. McLean a living and to enable tbe company to gradually acquire a plant. While engaged in the: dredging business around Baltimore, Mr. McLean discovered large deposits: of sand and gravel at the bottom of the river-, and in 1907 or 1908 he conceived the idea, of dredging for this sand and gravel. To enable him, to do so the capital stock of the McLean Contracting Company was increased to $65,000.00, and Mr. McLean again appealed i» Mr. Shriver to get his, friends to take the stock. This enterprise of the McLean Contracting Company was so successful that it attracted the attention of Mr. Michael Horner, who had been a friend of Mr. McLean and who decided to undertake the same business). The competition between the McLean Contracting Company and Mr. Horner became very bitter, and tbe cutting of prices of sand and gravel below cost was about to ruin both the company and Mr. Horner. They both appealed to their mutual friend Mr. Frank Fnrst, and he advised them to combine and to form a company. As: the result of this advice the Arundel Sand & Gravel Company was incorporated with the McLean Contracting Company, Mr. Burst and Mr. Horner1 as the principal owners of the capital stock, the McLean Company receiving for that part of its equipment employed in the sand and gravel business the stock of tbe: Arundel Sand & Gravel Company to the amount of $45,000.00. The Arundel Sand & Gravel Company, doubtless: through the business ability and financial backing1 of Mr. Burst, was a great success, and for several years tbe McLean Contracting Company received each year dividends on its stock of the Arundel Sand & Gravel Company to the amount of $22,500.00. In 1913 the Arundel Sand & Gravel Company was reorganized, and as a result of that reorganization the McLean Contracting; Company received $362,000.00 in cash, prefer red stock of the par- value of $213,000.00 and common stock of the par1 value of $140,-000.00. After the McLean Contracting Company received the money and stocks referred to:, Mrs. McLean and some of Mr. McLean’s friends wanted him to: retire: from business, *470 but as early asi 1907 Mr. McLean, who was the president of the McLean Contracting Company, and with his wife controlled that company, acting on what he supposed was reliable inside information as to the future needs: of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, began to. lease and purchase lots and Water-front properties at Locust Point with the Mew of selling them to the Railroad Company. In April, 1907, he leased from E. Glenn Perine and others, in the name of the McLean Contracting Company, the lot. designated on the plat and known in this ease as lot A, subject to an annual ground rent- of $3,898.63. In November, 1910, he leased in his own name from E. Glenn Perine* and others lot D, subject to an annual ground rent of $4,739.04. In June, 1911, he leased from E. Glenn Perine and others in the name of the Contracting Company lot B, subject to an annual ground rent of $1,240.00, and in June, 1912, he leased from E. Gleam Perine and others in the name of the Contracting Company lot O, subject to an annual ground rent of $2,400.00. In March, 1913, he leased in his own name from the Baldwin and Myers heirs and tomate©» lot G, subject to an annual ground rent of $3,900.00. In April, 1913, he purchased in his own name lot F, for $45,000.00, $20,000.00! 0f which was paid in cash, and the balance of $25,000.00 Was: secured by .a mortgage of the property. In August, 1913, he purchased in his own name from the 'Standard Oil Company lot E, for $42,500.00, $12,500.00 of which was paid in cash and the balance of $30,000.00, represented by three promissory notes of $10,000.00 each, were secured by a mortgage of the* property, and the first of said notes was paid in 1915, and in October, 1913, he leased in his own name from the Howard heirs lot H, subject to* an annual ground rent of $5,300.00'. He also purchased in his own name, in August, 1914, for $18,000.00 lot No. 1, a suburban property, commonly known as the Ingram property, on Park Heights Avenue, in Baltimore City. The dwelling on this property had been destroyed by fire, and Mr. McLean spent about $30,000.00 in restoring *471 the building, and then incumbered the property by a mortgage to a building association for $24,000.00.

The money paid for the lots purchased in Mr. McLean’s name, as well asi that required to carry all of the lots and to pay the ground rents, taxes and interest, and for extensive improvements, was furnished by the McLean Contracting Company, and as that company had never declared any dividends, 'except dividends of ten per cent, each year1 during] the several years ending in 1911, when the company received the dividends of $22,500.00 referred to from the Arundel Sand and Gravel Company, in order to meet the heavy demands upon it, it was compelled to sell by degrees' all of its common stock and a, part of its preferred stock of the Arundel Sand and Gravel Company, and to pledge as security for loans nearly half of its remaining preferred stock of that company. Mr. McLean made repeated efforts to sell these lots, and also placed them in the hands of a number of real estate agents for sale, without, any success, and by the end of 1915 his credit and the credit of the McLean Contracting Company had become so impaired that he told his attorney that “he could not last six months longer.” Another embarrassing feature of the situation in 1915 grew out of the proposed opening of McOomas Street through these lots. Mr. McLean, and those who succeeded him in the management of his estate and the affairs of the Contracting Company, believed that the opening of the street would practically destroy the value of the lots., and in addition to that the Commissioners for Opening Streets had assessed the benefits to these, lots at $82,000.00 more than the damages awarded. Appeals were entered from the action of the Commissioners and were pending at the time of Mr. McLean’s death.

Mr. McLean died in Baltimore City, intestate, on the 29th of April, 1916, leaving a widow, Catherine McLean, a daughter by a former marriage, Josephine McLean, now1 Mrs. Dali, and a.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 91, 136 Md. 467, 1920 Md. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclean-v-maloy-md-1920.