Phil J. Corporation v. Markle

241 A.2d 718, 249 Md. 718, 1968 Md. LEXIS 657
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 10, 1968
Docket[No. 126, September Term, 1967.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 241 A.2d 718 (Phil J. Corporation v. Markle) 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
Phil J. Corporation v. Markle, 241 A.2d 718, 249 Md. 718, 1968 Md. LEXIS 657 (Md. 1968).

Opinion

*720 Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Phil J. Corporation, tenant under a lease dated September 1, 1964, from the appellees George A. Maride and Holly Maride, his wife, landlords, of the property known as “Markle’s Corner,” challenges in this appeal a decree of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County (Sachse, J.), filed November 28, 1966, as amended on December 5, 1966, adjudging in a suit for declaratory and other relief that the septic system was adequate for the operation of the business of the tenant prior to January 15, 1965, and subsequent to February 15, 1965, that the tenant was entitled to possession of the leased premises on which the net rent due as of September 30, 1966, was $13,183.46 and granting leave to the tenant to remain in possession until, and to pay on or before, December 20, 1966, the net rental of $13,183.46 plus any rental which became due and was unpaid by December 20, 1966.

The lease of September 1, 1964, is a long one containing 20 separate paragraphs by which the landlords leased to the tenant Markle’s Corner, located at the southeast corner of the intersection of Maryland Route No. 198 and Brock Bridge Road in the Fourth Election District of Anne Arundel County, containing 12,771 square feet of land, more or less, with the improvements, for a ten year period beginning September 1, 1964, and ending August 31, 1974, for a rental of $84,000 payable at the rate of $700' a month. Each monthly installment of rent “shall be and fall due and payable in advance on the first day of each and every calendar month throughout the term of this lease.” There were provisions for a renewal term of five years commencing September 1, 1974, with a rental of $60,000 payable in monthly installments of $1,000, as well as an option provision for purchase at the end of the ten-year term at the fair market value of the leased premises. Paragraph 4 of the lease provides:

“4. Lessors shall furnish water and sewerage facilities from their home adjacent to the leased premises until such time as public sewer and water facilities are made available, at which time Lessees shall be ob *721 ligated to pay for such facilities as charges are imposed for the use thereof.”

Paragraph 6 of the lease provides:

“Lessees shall make all repairs necessary to maintain the building in as good a state of repair as it is now, including all interior plumbing and heating installations, motors and wiring, but not including the roof, which shall be kept in good repair and maintenance by the Lessors. Any repairs or improvements in the nature of alterations considered necessary and proper by Lessee, in furtherance of its restaurant business, shall be made at its expense, and at the expiration of this Lease, or any renewal thereof, shall revert to and become the sole and exclusive property of Lessors.”

Paragraph 15 of the lease provides:

“15. If Lessee shall fail or neglect to perform any of the terms, conditions or covenants on their part to be performed, Lessors hereby agree that Lessee shall have a grace period of fifteen (15) days within which to correct any such failure, but upon expiration of said days grace period, Lessors shall, without notice, have the right to enter upon said premises or any part thereof and repossess same and expel Lessee and any and all persons claiming under or through it, and remove any and all furnishings or articles stored upon premises, forcibly if necessary and at Lessee’s expense, without being in any manner guilty of trespass or without prejudice to any remedies or rights which they might otherwise have at law or in equity for damages, breach of contract or arrear of rent.”

The lease also provided that the first floor of the leased premises would be used and operated by the tenant as a restaurant, including the sale of alcoholic beverages for consumption on or off the leased premises and that the second floor of the leased premises would be used by the tenant as an apartment or apartments with the furnishings presently contained therein, the *722 tenant being entitled to sublet the apartment or apartments to tenants of its choice and to retain as its own the rents derived therefrom.

The tenant entered into possession of the leased premises and made certain renovations preparatory to the operation of the restaurant business. The tenant was late in its rental payments for October, November and December, 1964, and the rental payment for January, 1965, was over 15 days late. At this time the landlords advised the tenant that it had breached the terms of the lease, and that a further breach would result in the exercise by the landlords of their right of entry under the terms of the lease. The tenant, however, failed to pay the February, 1965, rent within the 15 day grace period provided by paragraph 15 of the lease and on February 18, 1965, the landlords filed a complaint for forcible detainer in the People’s Court for Anne Arundel County asking that they be restored to the leased premises.

On February 23, 1965, the tenant filed a bill of complaint for declaratory relief in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County in which it alleged, inter alia, that the landlords had failed to provide an adequate septic system, that the tenant was willing to “post the rent in escrow pending the correction of the septic system” and had so advised the landlords’ counsel, but notwithstanding this offer the landlords had filed the forcible detainer action against the tenant. The bill of complaint asserted six prayers for relief:

1. That the forcible detainer action be enjoined pending a hearing on the merits ;

2. That the tenant be granted possession of the premises pending a determination on the merits;

3. That the payment of the pending month’s rent and rent to become due be held in abeyance pending a hearing in regard to application of rent for installation of a septic system or payment into court as so directed ;

4. That the court decree declaratory relief granting the tenant continued possession and title to the leased premises as so determined by the agreement of the parties;

5. That the court award the tenant “an appropriate amount of damages as so proved upon a hearing of this cause”;

*723 6. That the tenant have other and further relief.

Upon a petition of the tenant filed on March 2, 1965, for temporary relief, pendente lite, the Chancellor passed an order for the landlords to show cause why the tenant should not be permitted to correct the existing septic system by the most economical and feasible method as permitted by the Anne Arundel Sanitary Regulations and apply the rent for that purpose. The landlords answered this petition indicating a breach of the provisions of the lease by the tenant in not paying the rent. No relief was then granted by the Chancellor, but on April 7, 1965, pursuant to another petition for temporary relief, filed by the tenant, the Circuit Court enjoined the landlords from taking possession of the leased premises pending a hearing of the cause.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 A.2d 718, 249 Md. 718, 1968 Md. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phil-j-corporation-v-markle-md-1968.