Myerberg, Sawyer & Rue, P.A. v. Agee

446 A.2d 69, 51 Md. App. 711, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 300
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 3, 1982
Docket1363, September Term, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 446 A.2d 69 (Myerberg, Sawyer & Rue, P.A. v. Agee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myerberg, Sawyer & Rue, P.A. v. Agee, 446 A.2d 69, 51 Md. App. 711, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 300 (Md. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Lowe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellants, a lawyer and his firm, were contractually engaged to examine title to unimproved property which appellees had contracted to purchase and, if title proved marketable, to effect the requisite conveyance. Appellants were informed that the appellees, who were moving from California, intended to build a new home on the site, which was to be financed and constructed on a predetermined schedule.

The conveyance was made by appellants who were apprised, and aware, of the consequences of unmarketable title, as well as the construction cost and interest increases that a delay may occasion in real estate transactions. Appellants verified the marketability of title and, as agents of a title insurance company, even elected to provide insurance therefor. They did not, however, inform appellees that there was no record of a right of ingress and egress between the property and a public way.

Based upon appellants’ assurance of marketability, appellees obtained a loan commitment from the Maryland National Bank after negotiating a construction price with a builder. On February 9, 1979, John Hanson Briscoe, the *713 bank’s attorney, informed appellants and appellees that his title search disclosed no recorded right of access to the property, and that the bank would not honor its commitment, absent some record of right of way.

After a time, appellants attempted to negotiate the purchase of a right of way from an adjoining landowner (at appellants’ expense). Appellants also offered to purchase the property from appellees at their cost, or to sue the neighbor for an easement by necessity. Preliminary purchase negotiations for a right of way were unsuccessful because the cost of compliance with the servient property owner’s requisites were too great, and, by that time, appellees had obtained other counsel. Eventually, in September of 1979, the title company delivered a mortgagee’s title insurance policy which guaranteed title and access in the amount of the proposed loan. In October, appellees successfully sued their neighbor to establish an easement by necessity, which was judicially declared on June 23, 1980.

Suit was subsequently filed against both appellants and the title company. Although the original declaration contained counts in contract and tort, the tort count was stricken and the case was tried on the contract count only. On motion by appellees, the Honorable Perry G. Bowen, Jr., presiding in the Circuit Court for Calvert County, granted summary judgment on the issue of liability, holding

"that the title to this property was unmarketable or unmerchantable from the time the Plaintiffs acquired it until the time this Decree was entered. . . .”

He explained upon entering summary judgment:

"That title is unmerchantable during that period of time because there isn’t a single lawyer in this room that would have allowed a client not already in that chain of title to purchase it without warning him of the existence of this defect in the title . .. .”

Judge Bowen subsequently informed the jury convened to determine damages, that

*714 "it has been determined as a matter of law that each of the defendants in this case .. . are liable for the damages, if any, which the plaintiffs have sustained by virtue of the fact that the title to this piece of property was not good and merchantable of record.”

That ruling was the basis for the first question asked by appellants on this appeal.

"Is title to real property unmerchantable as a matter of law where there is no recorded means of access?”

Prefatorily, we caution that our response is limited to the facts of this case. Appellants point out, after equating an easement by necessity with adverse possession,

"[i]t is essential that the marketability of title for each parcel, whether the parcel is owned by adverse possession, or whether it enjoys access by an implied easement, must be evaluated on its own merits. There can be no blanket rule because such a rule is antithetical to the tests for determining the marketability of title, which rely entirely upon a reasoned and prudent examination of the facts underlying each case.”

We note, however, that appellants point to no fact or facts underlying this case relating to marketability about which they contend there was a genuine dispute. Appellants’ speculative allegation that

"[circumstances are easily imagined in which the use of an unrecorded right of way is so entrenched in the life and practice of a community that the exercise of ordinary business prudence would not preclude purchase of the property which must make use of the implied unrecorded easement,”

is not a matter that we will address. While acknowledging that summary judgment may not be appropriate in every case, here as we have noted, appellants have pointed to no disputed facts despite their suggestions to the contrary.

*715 — marketability —

The appellants conceded below that "whether the title to property is marketable is a question of law for the court,” as held in Berlin v. Caplan, 211 Md. 333, 341 (1956), "and the opinion of a conveyancer or lawyer on that inquiry is here inadmissible.” Wlodarek v. Thrift, 178 Md. 453, 469 (1940). Both parties rely upon Berlin for its definition of marketability. There the Court drew upon holdings of prior cases to provide an excellent compendium for the consideration of a trial judge faced with this determination. Each of the parties here have stressed the excerpts most favorable to their view, but the essence of the discussion in Berlin is simply that the threat of, or need for, litigation to hold or obtain good title is an essential element in determining marketability.

"Of course, a vendee, by specific performance of a contract, should not be required to take real estate, the title to which is not free from doubt and which might subject him to litigation. Where the doubt as to the validity of the title produces real bona fide hesitation in a prudent man, not based on captious, frivolous, and astute niceties, the vendee should not be compelled by specific performance to take that title. Cityco Realty Co. v. Friedenwald, 130 Md. 329, 333, 100 A. 374. A title to be marketable need not be free from every conceivable technical criticism. However, if the defects are such as are sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt, such title is not marketable. Garner v. Union Trust Co., 185 Md. 386, 390, 45 A. 2d 106. A marketable title is one which a reasonable purchaser, who knows the facts and their legal bearing, would be willing to accept in the exercise of that prudence which business men ordinarily use in the transaction of their own affairs. Zulver Realty Co. v. Snyder, 191 Md. 374, 384, 62 A. 2d 276.

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446 A.2d 69, 51 Md. App. 711, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myerberg-sawyer-rue-pa-v-agee-mdctspecapp-1982.