Navarre Realty Co. v. Coale

89 A. 728, 122 Md. 494, 1914 Md. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 89 A. 728 (Navarre Realty Co. v. Coale) 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
Navarre Realty Co. v. Coale, 89 A. 728, 122 Md. 494, 1914 Md. LEXIS 67 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

*495 Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

This suit was brought to recover the sum of eight hundred and seventy-five dollars alleged to be due for commissions in obtaining a mortgage loan of thirty-five thousand dollars for the appellant company. The facts necessary to present the important question in the case are few and practically undisputed, although the record contains nearly two hundred pages and on some questions exhibits sharp conflicts and much feeling.

The defendant is a corporation, and was the owner of a fee simple lot of ground in Baltimore City having a frontage of fifty feet on Eutaw Blace, with a depth of one hundred and thirty feet to an alley. It had erected upon this lot a four-story brick house and basement known as the Navarre Apartments. This property was encumbered by two mort gages, and the defendant owed other debts which it was anxious to pay. It entered into an arrangement with Mr. Griffin by which he was to take, the property — giving in exchange a farm in Baltimore County and two mortgages upon the property for certain amounts. One of these mortgages was to be executed and delivered to the defendant company, and the other — a first mortgage — to the person who should advance the money. By this arrangement the company expected to pay the mortgages then on the property and have them released, and also to- realize from the first mortgage loan sufficient in addition to discharge the other outstanding obligations. To carry this plan through it was considered that forty thousand dollars would be required, and the defendant undertook to raise that amount by a first mortgage upon the apartments.

It employed Mr. George Norbury MacKenzie, of the Baltimore Bar, to secure this loan. After doing some work upon ihe matter Mr. MacKenzie was taken sick, and he engaged Mr. Isaac Coale, Jr., to take charge of the matter for him. This was made known to the defendant and was acceptable to it.

*496 • The. Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia was looking for good mortgage loans,- and Mr. Coale got into communication with it through Mr. Clarence \Y. Perkins, its local counsel in Baltimore. He obtained from Mr. Perkins a blank form of application for a loan. This form was filled in and signed on July 20th, 1912, by the- defendant company, by Harry E. Gilbert, its Vice-President, and William G. Buckey, its Secretary and Treasurer. The application was “to the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia for a loan of ¡S40.000.00, payable at the expiration of five years, at 6% interest per annum, payable semi-annually (principal and interest to be payable at the said company’s office in Philadelphia, Penna., in gold coin' of the United States of present standard of weight and fineness, or in its equivalent at lender’s option).” This application, which contained full information as to the character, value, location, and ownership of the property, was sent by • Mr. Coale to the office of the Penn Mutual Company in Philadelphia. Upon the receipt of the application, the company sent Mr. L. W. Streeble, the assistant manager of its loan department, to Baltimore to examine the property. He and Mr. Perkins went -through the apartments. Mr. Streeble was of the opinion that the company would not make the loan “without some individtial endorsement or security.” A paper entitled “Personal Report upon Proposed Bondsmen” was submitted to the defendant, in which each of the persons willing to personally guarantee the loan applied for was to insert his name, address, occupation, and estimated worth over and above his holdings in the Navarre Realty Company ITarry E. Gilbert, Vice-President; J. Ered Adams, President; William G. Buckey, Secretary and Treasurer of the defendant, and C. Milton Wells inserted their names therein and gave the other information requested, and the paper was then sent to the Penn Mutual Company. The evidence does not show the date when this paper was filled out, but it does show that it was done after Mr. Streeble’s visit to Baltimore.

*497 There was great reluctance on the part of some of the persons who inserted their names in the paper to obligate themselves personally to pay the loan; but, as a loan of forty thousand dollars would enable them to complete the sale, and furnish besides sufficient money to discharge other obligations for which they were personally liable, they finally expressed their willingness to do so. There were, therefore, reasons which induced them to become personally responsible for a loan of forty thousand dollars, and reasons why they might decline to become responsible for a smaller loan from which nothing would be available to discharge the outstanding indebtedness. The object of that paper was twofold— first, it was an expression of a readiness of the persons who inserted their names therein to become in some proper way personally responsible for the payment of a forty thousand dollar loan; and secondly, to furnish information to the Penn Mutual Company of the names and financial responsibility of persons who might be offered as “proposed bondsmen.” It imposed no obligation whatever upon the Penn Mutual Company.

After receipt of this paper, the Penn Mutual Company notified Mr. Coale that it would not mate the loan applied for according to the terms of the application of July 20th, 1912. An effort was then made to secure a loan on different terms, and, after some further negotiation, Mr. Streeble wrote Mr. Coale as follows:

“The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, Philadelphia.

August 10th, 3912/

Mr. Isaac Coale, Jr.,

10 East Payette St., Baltimore, Maryland.

Dear Sir:—

Your favor of yesterday with respect to application of the Navarre Realty Company for a loan of $40,000 is received. I note that the case can be closed on the basis of $40,000, with annual reduction of $1,000, or $35,000 for a period of five years. In reply we beg to state that neither proposition would attract our *498 committee. If the parties are prepared to arrange for annual reductions of $8,000 or semi-annual payments of $1,500, it is possible our committee might give the matter favorable consideration, or a loan of $35,000, with annual reductions of $1,500. If the application can be amended in these respects, I shall take .pleasure in submitting it for action.”

On August 12th, Mr. Coale wrote as follows .to Mr: Streeble:

“Your letter of 10th is received, and upon the suggestion of Mr. Perkins I write to ask if you will consider a loan of $40,000 with semi-annual reduction of $1,000 instead of $1,500? Will you kindly reply by special delivery or telegram. Hoping you will approve the above, I am.”

To this letter Mr. Streeble on August 13th replied as follows:

“Your favor of yesterday, regarding the Navarre application for a loan of $40,000 is received. My first thought with respect to the annual reductions was $4,000 per year, but I do not think our committee would care to go below semi-annual payments of $1,500, or a total of $3,000 per year. If your parties are prepared to meet this, I will take pleasure in submitting the matter for action.”

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 728, 122 Md. 494, 1914 Md. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/navarre-realty-co-v-coale-md-1914.