Proctor v. Holden

540 A.2d 133, 75 Md. App. 1, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 14, 1988
Docket1206, September Term, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 540 A.2d 133 (Proctor v. Holden) 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
Proctor v. Holden, 540 A.2d 133, 75 Md. App. 1, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 86 (Md. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

ALPERT, Judge.

This is an appeal by John P. and Deborah Proctor, and Freeman & Kagan, Inc. from a jury verdict entered in favor of Michael and Deborah Holden in the Circuit Court for Talbot County. Count I of appellees’ Complaint alleged breach of contract by the Proctors for their failure to return the $20,000 deposit despite appellees’ inability to obtain the financing provided for in the contract. Count II of the Complaint alleged a breach of a fiduciary duty by Freeman & Kagan by: (1) failing to disclose all pertinent information to the Holdens, (2) drafting and inserting an ambiguous and contradictory financing clause in the contract, and (3) improperly urging the Holdens to increase their purchase offer by $7,000, the amount of the realtor’s commission.

Upon jury verdicts in favor of the Holdens, judgments were entered for the release and return of the $20,000 escrow against the Proctors, and for $1.00 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages against Freeman & Kagan. Both defendants appealed.

FACTS

The material facts, which are not in dispute, follow. In April 1985, appellees Michael and Deborah Holden decided to relocate from Ocean City, Maryland to the Mid-Shore area in order to be closer to their families in Baltimore and Annapolis. The Holdens contacted Charlotte Valliant, a real estate agent associated with appellant Freeman & Kagan, Inc., a real estate brokerage in Easton. For more than a month, Valliant showed the Holdens homes in the Talbot County area, some listed with Freeman & Kagan and some listed with other brokers. Also, on a weekly basis Valliant sent appellees a list of new properties, as well as information about properties which had not yet been listed, *5 but of which she had knowledge. During this period, Valliant was actively seeking a home for appellees.

On May 24,1985, Valliant showed Michael Holden a home located on Edgeview Road, near Royal Oak, which the then owner, Howard Gillellan, had just listed with Freeman & Kagan at a price of $169,500. Upon Valliant’s urging that the house was a “tremendous buy” and that it was “grossly under-priced,” Michael Holden submitted a contract offer in the amount of $170,000 cash, the only contingency being that Deborah Holden be allowed to inspect the property prior to noon the next day. Because the Holdens could not make the trip to Freeman & Kagan’s office that day to sign a contract, their offer was submitted by telegram, the text of which was dictated by Tim Kagan.

In exhorting appellees to submit an offer, Valliant related to the Holdens that there was strong interest in the Gillellan property, and that any delay could mean the loss of the property. In fact, Mr. Holden was told that another full-price contract had been submitted by another client of Freeman & Kagan. In a phone conversation with Kagan and Valliant, Michael Holden specifically requested that either Valliant or Kagan personally sponsor, present, and urge their offer upon Mr. Gillellan, the owner. Nevertheless, only the listing agent, Marshall Bailey, presented both contracts. Gillellan accepted the other contract submitted by appellant Deborah Proctor. According to Bailey, Gillellan accepted the Proctor contract, at least in part because of his fear of losing both offers if he waited for Mrs. Holden’s inspection and approval of the home. The Proctor contract was for $169,500 and was subject to a financing contingency.

Although apparently losing the Gillellan home, appellees remained in contact with Charlotte Valliant during the months of June and July, 1985. On July 14, 1985, Valliant called and informed the Holdens that they could buy the Gillellan property from the Proctors for $203,000. Almost immediately Michael Holden contacted Delphine Amrhun, Office Manager at Magnet Mortgages, a mortgage compa *6 ny located in Ocean City, about obtaining a $150,000, 30-year term loan for the property.

On July 24, 1985, the Proctors signed a 24-hour listing agreement with Freeman & Kagan. Later that same day Michael and Deborah Holden visited the property where they met and spoke directly with Deborah Proctor for the first time. Asked about the possibility of owner-financing, Deborah Proctor responded that she would not hold any financing, and in addition she wanted settlement within 30 days. Michael Holden responded that even though he had already submitted a mortgage application to Magnet Mortgages 60 days was needed; after some discussion Proctor agreed.

Thereafter, at the Freeman & Kagan office, Valliant prepared for the Holdens’ signature a standard fill-in-the-blanks contract then in use by the Talbot County Board of Realtors. $210,000 was inserted in the blank for purchase price 1 . In addition, a mortgage contingency clause was completed, which is set out in full infra. The contract also stated: “Time is of the essence of this agreement.” The Holdens tendered a $20,000 deposit with their contract, to be held in an interest bearing account by the broker, Freeman & Kagan.

The Proctors accepted the contract on July 26, 1985. On approximately August 1, 1985, Delphine Amrhun of Magnet Mortgages telephoned Michael Holden to advise him that he would not qualify for a $150,000 30-year loan; moreover, she intimated that no lender employing standard FNMA/FHLMC guidelines would qualify him for such a loan because of his high debt to earnings ratio. Amrhun later confirmed this in a letter to Holden dated August 8, 1985. Holden then submitted a mortgage application to Second National Building & Loan on August 9th, which similarly was rejected on August 12th.

*7 Michael Holden also approached the Talbot Bank for a loan. Mr. Jeffrey Hefflebower, a senior vice president of the bank, testified, however, that Talbot did not offer long-term fixed rate mortgages. It was Hefflebower’s understanding that Holden was seeking a short-term loan that would be paid off from the proceeds of the sale of a business. Hefflebower also stated that although the property was appraised and the application was ready for the Committee’s decision, the bank took no final action and neither accepted nor rejected Holden’s application. Holden testified that he assumed the bank’s silence meant the loan was rejected.

At the request of the realtors, Mr. Talbot Roe of United Mortgage contacted Holden. Mr. Roe stated that he could help the Holdens obtain a loan through a group of investors “who didn’t care what the risk was.” Holden testified that he was not interested in Roe’s offer on the basis of his being told by two reputable banks that he could not afford the loan.

Holden notified Charlotte Valliant by letter of his inability to obtain financing and requested the return of his $20,000 deposit. In response, Tim Kagan of Freeman & Kagan, in a letter dated August 20, 1985, informed the Holdens that the Proctors had agreed to finance the purchase pursuant to the adjustable rate terms stated in the contract. Specifically, in a letter addressed to Mr. Kagan, the Proctors expressed their willingness to finance the Holdens’ purchase with a $150,000 mortgage at an initial 10% interest rate, the interest rate to be adjusted annually by no more than 2% up or down and a 4% lifetime cap. Three points were to be paid the Proctors by the Holdens.

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Bluebook (online)
540 A.2d 133, 75 Md. App. 1, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-holden-mdctspecapp-1988.