Pyles v. Goller

674 A.2d 35, 109 Md. App. 71, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 29, 1996
Docket917, Sept. Term, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 674 A.2d 35 (Pyles v. Goller) 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
Pyles v. Goller, 674 A.2d 35, 109 Md. App. 71, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 47 (Md. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

FISCHER, Judge.

Mr. Norris Pyles and Mr. Charles Dudley Reed (Pyles and Reed collectively) appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for St. Mary’s County (Briscoe, J.) that directed Pyles and Reed to convey a plot of land to Dr. Herbert Goller (Goller). Goller sued Pyles and Reed for specific performance and damages for fraud relating to an auction of real estate owned by Pyles and Reed. Upon a motion by Goller, the circuit court severed the two claims and conducted a bench trial on the specific performance count. After the circuit court ordered specific performance for Goller, it granted Goller’s motion to dismiss the remaining fraud count. 1 Pyles and Reed present the following issue for our review, which has been reworded, clarified, and condensed:

*75 I. Did the circuit court err by granting Goller’s claim for specific performance for the sale of land between Goller and Pyles and Reed?

FACTS

Pyles and Reed owned a plot of land in St. Mary’s County, known as Parlett Farm West (Parlett), as tenants in common. In 1990, they contracted with William Fitzgerald (Fitzgerald), of W.J. Fitzgerald Auctioneers & Co., to sell eleven lots of the Parlett property at public auction. 2

*76 Fitzgerald advertised the auction in the Washington Post. The advertisement: (1) stated that the auction would be an “Absolute Auction” and there would be “No Mínimums;” (2) stated that the auction would be held on October 27,1990; and (3) contained a description of the property and the terms of the sale. An advertisement in an issue of “Homes and Land of Southern Maryland” contained much of the same information as the Washington Post advertisement, except that it included that only two of the lots would be sold “without reserve.”

A pamphlet prepared by Fitzgerald, and sent to Goller, announced that the action would be held by the “High Bidder’s Choice Method.” The pamphlet stated that:

[A] High Bidder Choice Method means the successful bidder has there [sic] choice of any one of the properties being offered. That Parcel is set aside and the properties that are remaining will be the one offered in the same manner until no properties are left.

The pamphlet also included the following terms and procedures with respect to the auction:

A cashier’s check or certified check in the amount of $5,000 will be required in order to bid for each lot you intend to buy.
Term of Sale: At time and place of sale, the purchaser will be required to make a deposit of $5,000 for each lot purchased, payable in cash or certified check----
Two Lots to be determined at the time and place of auction will be sold absolute to the highest bidder, regardless of price. No mínimums, no reserves.
*77 The final high bid on all remaining lots will be irrevocable by the buyer and subject to confirmation by the seller within 48 hours....

It is unclear from the record how strictly Fitzgerald adhered to the registration procedures for the auction. The printed materials required a $5,000 deposit in order to bid on a lot. Under this procedure, once the $5,000 check was filed with or verified by Fitzgerald, he would give the bidder a bidder’s card, which would enable a person to bid at the auction. During direct examination, however, Fitzgerald testified that the $5,000 check was not a requirement to get on the buyer’s registration list.

On October 27, 1990, the day of the auction, only two people registered for the auction; Goller and an unknown bidder. Prior to the start of the auction, Pyles and Reed told Fitzgerald that they were considering bidding on the lots. Fitzgerald testified that he had reservations about letting Pyles and Reed bid on the property, because it was his understanding that “[at] an absolute auction, the owner does not have the ability to bid on his own property.”

Fitzgerald testified that he relayed this information to Goller during a private conversation. Goller, in turn, testified that Fitzgerald told him “that I think that the owners are going to bid on it [the property].”

Before starting the auction, Fitzgerald made, in part, the following announcement to the participants:

We will have high bidder’s choice today. That is where the high bidder wins the right to choose a lot. After the high bidder picks, the lot is set aside and a second round of bidding starts with a high bidder in this round choosing a lot. This is then set aside and so on until all lots are sold. The owner will then choose, within 48 hours, the lot to be sold absolute----

At no time did Fitzgerald announce that Pyles and Reed were going to bid on the Parlett lots.

*78 Fitzgerald started the auction and Goller was the highest and only bidder during the first round. He bid $25,000 and selected lot No. 7. Mr. Pyles was the highest bidder in the second round with a bid of $26,000, and selected lot No. 9. Mr. Reed was the highest bidder in the third round, with a sum of $26,000. He selected lot No. 12. Both Pyles and Reed bid even though they did not present a $5,000 cashier’s check to Fitzgerald. The unknown party was the highest bidder in the fourth round with a bid of $25,000, and he selected lot No. 4. The auction ended after the fourth round. 3

At the conclusion of the auction, Pyles and Reed informed Fitzgerald that they were going to accept their two bids on lots No. 9 and No. 12. They rejected Goller’s bid on lot No. 7. At trial, Mr. Pyles testified that one of the reasons Pyles and Reed did not accept Goller’s bid was that the bid did not equal what Pyles and Reed owed on the lot.

After Fitzgerald informed Goller that his bid was rejected, Goller asked the identity of the “new” owners of the two lots. Fitzgerald informed Goller that Pyles and Reed bought the two lots. Goller became very upset because he was under the impression that the owners were not allowed to bid. After Goller left, Pyles and Reed paid their $5,000 deposit, and eventually executed their contracts of sale, went to settlement, and paid Fitzgerald his commission. 4

*79 Following his rebuff at the auction, Goller filed suit in the circuit court for specific performance and damages for fraud relating to the auction. After a motion for a jury trial, the circuit court severed the two claims. The specific performance claim, because it was based in equity, was tried before the trial judge.

After the testimony, the circuit court ordered Pyles and Reed to convey lot No. 7 to Goller. Following the order for specific performance, the trial judge granted Goller’s motion to dismiss the fraud claim.

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Bluebook (online)
674 A.2d 35, 109 Md. App. 71, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyles-v-goller-mdctspecapp-1996.