Newell v. Johns Hopkins University

79 A.3d 1009, 215 Md. App. 217, 2013 WL 6097561, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 158
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 21, 2013
DocketNo. 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 79 A.3d 1009 (Newell v. Johns Hopkins University) 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
Newell v. Johns Hopkins University, 79 A.3d 1009, 215 Md. App. 217, 2013 WL 6097561, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 158 (Md. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

NAZARIAN, J.

This case has generated a lot of publicity and emotion, and understandably so. Elizabeth Banks was renowned, even revered, for her opposition to development in Montgomery County. Ms. Banks had owned and lived on property known for more than a century as the Belward Farm (the “Farm”), and she undoubtedly had a vision of how The Johns Hopkins University (“Hopkins”) could, and would, steward her beloved family land after she and her siblings conveyed the Farm to Hopkins in 1989. Her heirs and surviving family (the “Family”) argued in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, and argue here, that Ms. Banks would not approve Hopkins’s current plans to develop the Farm, and Hopkins does not contend otherwise.

But whether Ms. Banks would approve Hopkins’s current plans is not the question before us. Instead, this case turns on the terms of a contract and deed that the parties executed nearly twenty-five years ago. The Family does not dispute the validity of the conveyance, or that Hopkins emerged from the transaction with the right to develop the Farm for “agricultural, academic, research and development, delivery of health and medical care and services, or related purposes,” or that the proposed “ ‘mixed-use’ research park that ‘brings together university, government and private research’ ” would use the Farm entirely for those allowed purposes. The Family argued below, and argues here, that the scale, density, and lessor/lessee structure of Hopkins’s current plans violate the terms of the parties’ agreement, and that the circuit court erred in finding their contract not to be ambiguous, and in declining to consider extrinsic evidence of the parties’ (particularly Ms. Banks’s) intentions and visions when defining Hop[220]*220kins’s rights to develop the Farm, and thus in granting summary judgment for Hopkins.

We understand the Family’s frustration as they face the increasingly likely prospect that the Farm will transform into a campus that they believe Ms. Banks would never have countenanced. But although the Family may now regret that Ms. Banks and her siblings conveyed the Farm to Hopkins, or at least that they did not negotiate different terms, we agree with the circuit court that the operative contract frames Hopkins’s development rights solely and unambiguously in terms of permissible uses. Unlike hindsight, foresight is not 20/20, and whether anyone specifically envisioned the proposed development, the contract permits it. We affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

I. BACKGROUND

... for agricultural, academic, research and development, delivery of health and medical care and services, or related purposes only ...

According to Hopkins, the case boils down entirely to these eighteen words, which appear in Paragraph 13 of the Amended and Restated Contract of Sale (the “use restriction clause”) and define the uses to which Hopkins agreed, as a condition of receiving the property on generous terms, to limit its future development of the Farm. The story is more complicated than that, of course. Although there is no dispute about the threshold validity of the conveyance, the Family reads the governing documents to limit Hopkins in other ways, and contends that the terms of those documents are ambiguous and must be augmented with extrinsic evidence. We ultimately agree with the circuit court’s decision that the language of the contract is unambiguous, but the broader context is important to understanding why.1

[221]*221Ms. Banks was the latest caretaker of the Farm, a 138-acre property in Montgomery County that had been in her family for over 100 years. Although she was the only resident of the property, she co-owned it (she held more than two-thirds) with her sister and brother and was the lead decision-maker about its use and ultimate disposition. By the 1980s, properties surrounding the Farm had been developed in ways Ms. Banks disliked. Not only did she make no secret of her opposition to Montgomery County’s efforts to develop that part of the County, she actively and successfully rebuffed2 numerous efforts to develop the Farm itself:

For 30 years, I have had to protect my farm from federal government installations, state and county highways, all brought on [by] planners who want to rearrange everything every few years, never giving me a rest. Developers and others have tried to buy my land for housing and office buildings. With the help of the Good Lord and many, many true friends and the community, I have been able to keep my land mostly intact and continue farming. It has not been easy. [¶] I want the land to stand for something important for future generations.

According to her nephew Timothy Newell (the lead plaintiff in this litigation), Ms. Banks rejected offers from the County to develop a research park on the Farm no fewer than three times, and stiff-armed other efforts to buy and develop the property.

In the early 1980s, the County imposed assessments to pay for widening roads, including those surrounding the Farm. The County’s assessment to Ms. Banks totaled approximately $1.5 million, and she could not afford to pay it. As a result, Ms. Banks began exploring the possibility of selling the Farm, and she had conversations with several institutions. In 1987, Ms. Banks entered into discussions with Hopkins about a possible sale-and-gift transaction that, among other things, [222]*222would allow her to live on the Farm for the rest of her life in a new house that Hopkins would build. Ms. Banks had had positive experiences with Hopkins throughout her life (the hospital had cared well for her and her mother and she was close to former United States Senator George Radcliffe, a Hopkins alumnus), and she saw the donation as a way to ensure that the Farm did not become a commercial or residential development — to her, evidently, the worst possible outcome.

The parties executed a Contract of Sale on August 22, 1988, then restated and amended the contract in an Amended and Restated Contract of Sale they signed on December 10, 1988.3 The Contract lists Hopkins as the Buyer and Ms. Banks and her sister and brother as the Sellers. In broad strokes, Hopkins agreed to pay the Sellers $5 million in cash — $8 million at settlement and $2 million on or before the third anniversary of settlement — and to settle in January 1989.4 The recitals “reeognize[d] that the purchase price ... does not represent the fair market value of the [Farm] (including applicable restrictions on future use),” that “[t]he Sellers [223]*223intend to make a charitable contribution to the Buyer to the extent of the excess of the actual fair market value ... over the recited purchase price____” Ms. Banks was able to claim a significant tax deduction for the donation to Hopkins, the “combined gift value” of which Hopkins placed at $15 million. And Hopkins “paid” consideration beyond the cash payments: it also assumed the $1.6 million in County assessments and built Ms. Banks a small house that she occupied until her death.5

In exchange, Hopkins took fee simple title to the Farm, subject to use restrictions defined in the three paragraphs that lie at the heart of this case. First,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 A.3d 1009, 215 Md. App. 217, 2013 WL 6097561, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newell-v-johns-hopkins-university-mdctspecapp-2013.