Purdum v. Edwards

141 A. 550, 155 Md. 178, 1928 Md. LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 13, 1928
Docket[No. 56, January Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 141 A. 550 (Purdum v. Edwards) 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
Purdum v. Edwards, 141 A. 550, 155 Md. 178, 1928 Md. LEXIS 115 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

Paeke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Malcolm Edwards 'and Augusta Edwards, his wife, appellees, brought an action for deceit against Bradley K. Purdum, the Hamilton Real Estate Company, Inc., C. Edgar Wood, and the Orange Home, Inc., the appellants, and recovered against the four appellants a judgment of $1,526.15. The suit was tried on the general issue plea in tort, and this appeal presents for review fifty-four exceptions on th© evidence, and one on the court’s rulings on the prayers.

By their prayers demurring to the evidence the appellants raised the question of th© right of the appellees to1 recover a judgment against the. appellants or any one of them. The briefs of the appellants make this their chief contention, and it will now be considered.

O. Edgar Wood, one of th© appellants, while engaged in the development of real estate in Baltimore and its suburbs, bought in April, 1925, a tract of land containing about twelve hundred acres and located in Sumter' County, Florida, for the purpose of subdivision and development for residential purposes. In furtherance of his plan he organized ai corporation called th© Orange Home, Inc., under th© laws of the State of Florida, and caused a survey to be made of the property, and about one hundred and ten or twenty acres, desig *181 nated as Section O, were selected as the portion of the tract best adapted for immediate exploitation and conveyed by Wood to his corporation. Wood was the president of the Orange Home, Inc., and owned at the time of the transaction involved in this case ninety-seven per cmiurn- of all its outstanding capital stock, -and Edward G. Cole1, P. O. Eutch, and E. Green, who each held one share of stock, whose par value was one hundred dollars a share, were the holders of the remaining shares. Futeh was the attorney and resident agent of the corporation, and Dole was its- vice-president and in charge of the selling operations in Florida, and Green in Baltimore, while Wood covered both places and was the executive head and had general control and management of all the corporate affairs.

Section 0 was divided by built and projected streets into blocks, which were sub-divided into1 lots, and the usual preparatory steps in the laying out of streets, the construction of sidewalks, and the development of the property for sale were undertaken. Under the- direction of Wood plats were made, and the disposition and development of the lots began at a time to take -advantage of the prevailing speculation in Florida land. The corporation employed salesmen to market the property, and constituted the Hamilton Real Estate Company as its agent hr sell the lots in Block H of Section O.

The Hamilton Real Estate Company was a corporation whose principal office was in Baltimore. Bradley K. Purchim was its president and in charge of its business. He and Malcolm Edwards had long known each other in business and social relations, and Edwards had great confidence in Purdum and placed implicit reliance upon his word. On Saturday, October 3rd, 1925, Malcolm Edwards went to the office of the Hamilton Real Estate Company to see his son, who was there employed, and Bradley K. Purdum called the appellee into the hack office to talk to him about the Florida property. The evidence on the part of the appellees; tended to prove that Purdum described the favorable location of Orange Home, its present and prospective advantages, and the general reasons why a purchase of -one of the lots would *182 be profitable. Purdum then exhibited a plat of the development, which represented it as situated on the shores of Lake Okahumpka, and traversed by the Dixie Highway. The property was shown laid off in blocks and lots -and divided by wide thoroughfares, with a driveway of one hundred feet in width skirting the lake. Purdum stated that the driveway-had not been completed, and some filling on its low places wopld be done by dredging the sand from the lake, and that the water front lots were the most desirable. The driveway passed between these lots and the beach of the lake front, and, in the course of the negotiations, Edwards told Purdum he did not want to buy anything under water, and thereupon he was assured by Purdum that he had been over every inch of the Orange Home development, and knew the lots indicated on the plat and then under consideration, and that they were high and dry and that the lot now in controversy was all right. Upon these representations and in reliance upon Purdum’s assurances, Edwards, who had never been in Florida and whose sole source of information were the representations then made by agent and plat, bought for himself and wife one of these lots for $4,100; paid one-third in cash to the order of Hamilton Real Estate Company; and, on October 12th, 1925, he and his wife executed a mortgage of the lot to the Orange Home, Inc., to secure the payment of two promissory notes in equal amounts that were given for the residue of the purchase price and payable ait one and two years from date. At the time of the sale, Edwards listed the lot bought with the Orange Home, Inc., for resale at $6,500, as Edwards was informed by Purdum before he bought that the lot would be sold for that amount before the credit payments would become due on the mortgage notes.

Several months after the sale, Edwards became uneasy because he had not received his deed and had heard rumors affecting the financial position of the Orange Home, Inc., so he sent his attorney to Florida in March, 1926, to investigate and report. As a result of this action, the appellees learned for the first time that their lot was then, and at the time of the sale, unfit for any purpose, since it was covered by the *183 waters of Lake Okahunxpka to the depth of from two to six feet, and that his venture was a complete loss. When confronted with these facts, Purdum disclaimed knowledge, and agreed to refund the money paid, if the lot were under water, and telegraphed on March 16th, 1926, to the Orange Home, Inc., that, if the report were true, he would recommend that the contract of sale be rescinded. But the money was not refunded, and, Purdum not being willing to have a conference in reference to the matter if attorneys were present, the appellees brought an action of deceit against the four appellants. The contract was not rescinded by mutual consent or by judgment,- and so, since it did not affirmatively appear that the appellees had definitely exercised their election to rescind before the institution of these proceedings, their action of deceit is not barred. Bower on Actionable Misrepre sentation, sec. 217, p. 211; Adams v. Anderson, 4 H. & J. 558; Weaver v. Shriver, 79 Md. 530, 543. See Bolton Mines Co. v. Stokes, 82 Md. 50.

While the proof on the part of the appellants is to* the effect that the lot sold was not covered by water, yet they admit that it was low and soggy and that the lots fronting the lake would have to be filled in before they could be used. In fact, the defense is that Purdum informed Edwards of this situation, and of the plan to pump the sand out of the shallow part of the lake on the low lying adjacent lots, so that, with one operation, the lake would be deepened in order to provide sufficient water for boats to land at the shore line and the lots would he filled so as to become suitable for building purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
141 A. 550, 155 Md. 178, 1928 Md. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purdum-v-edwards-md-1928.