Read Drug & Chemical Co. v. Nattans

100 A. 736, 130 Md. 465, 1917 Md. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 100 A. 736 (Read Drug & Chemical Co. v. Nattans) 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
Read Drug & Chemical Co. v. Nattans, 100 A. 736, 130 Md. 465, 1917 Md. LEXIS 145 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Upon a former appeal, this case was presented on demurrer to the bill of complaint (129 Md. 67). It is now to be considered upon the proof. The Record is voluminous, and a detailed review of the testimony would not be practicable within the proper limits of an opinion. The essential facts will be stated in accordance with what the Court regards as the preponderance of the admissible evidence.

The law of the case was settled upon the prior appeal, and we have now only to determine, as a question of fact, whether a definite and mutual agreement has been' proven for the renewal of the existing lease, from the appellee to the appellant, of the. building at the corner of Howard and Lexington .streets, in the City of Baltimore, which the lessee company is using in the conduct of its drug and chemical business. The present lease was executed on January 21, 1908, for a term which will expire on June 30, 1917, and for a yearly rent of $11,000. Mrs. Jennie Nattans, the lessor and appellee, is the owner of the property for life, with remainder in her children, under the will of her husband, Arthur Nattans, who died in the year 1905. The business now in operation on the leased premises was formerly owned by Mr. Nattans and was transferred by him to the appellant corporation, *467 which, he organized and controlled. By his will the entire capital stock of the company, with the exception of four shares belonging to other persons, was bequeathed to trustees who were directed to pay the income from fourteen of the shares to the widow, and from twenty-four shares, to certain employees of the company and a house servant, and from specified allotments of his remaining three hundred and fifty-eight shares to his children, including those by a former marriage. The trustees named in the will were Mrs. Nattans, W. Burns Trundle, Esq., and Mr. Samuel L. Bachrach, husr band of a daughter of the testator by his first wife. Upon Mr. Trundle’s death, Edwin T. Dickerson, Esq., was appointed as his successor in the trusteeship. The affairs of the appellant company were controlled by a board of directors consisting of Mrs. Nattans, her' sons, Ralph and Arthur, and her co-trustee, Air. Bachrach. The presidency of the company was held by Airs. Nattans. Ralph Nattans was its treasurer and general manager, and Arthur Nattans was assistant manager and secretary.

The property leased to the company was used by it in conjunction with an adjacent and communicating building which it held under lease from a trustee representing what is known as the Hamman estate. That lease was for a term of five years ending July 31, 3914. A short time before its expiration an agreement was reached for the renewal of the lease for a term of two years and eleven months. This was the precise period of the unexpdred term of the Nattans lease. The new Hamman lease provided for a further renewal, at the option of the lessee, for an additional term! of ten years. As proceedings in equity were required for the appointment of a trustee to act .for the persons, some of them infants, who were interested in the Hamman property, the new lease, was not ready for execution until December 14, 1914, when it was signed by the trustee, and by Airs. Nattans as president of the Read Drug and Chemical Company.

*468 In August, 1914, the Nattans and. Hamman buildings were both damaged by fire. The insurance on the properties was adjusted in due course and produced funds sufficient to restore the buildings to their former condition. These funds were turned over to the lessee in evident recognition of the contractual liability of the respective lessors to make the necessary restorations. It was proposed, however, by the general manager of the Bead Company, that material changes be made in the structure of the two buildings so as to make them one in external appearance and render them more attractive and convenient for the business to which they were devoted. A special meeting of the board of directors was held on October 27, 1914, when, according to the minutes: “The general manager stated he wanted to spend about $30,-000 in improving and repairing the Nattans and Hamman buildings-, at Howard and Lexington streets, according to plans submitted, provided the owners of said buildings turn over to him the money received from the insurance companies in. settlement of the fire loss, and a lease be obtained from Mrs. Nattans for ten years more after the expiration of the present lease. The following resolution was then passed: Beso-lved that the general manager be authorized to make an agreement with Mrs. Jennie Nattans for the cancellation of the present lease and for the execution of a newi lease for twelve and one-half years, beginning January 1, 1915, at a rental of $16,000 per annum for the first four years, $18,-000 per annum for the second four years, and $20,000 per annum for. the remainder of the term.”

The resolution just quoted was passed by the affirmative vote of all of the directors-, except Mrs. Nattans, who presided and did not vote on the question. A few days later bids were accepted and contracts were entered into by the general manager*, on behalf of the company, for the improvement of the buildings in pursuance of the plans he had submitted. The total cost of the improvements was $20,493.69, and the additional sum of $18,671.97 was spent for furni *469 ture and fixtures. All of the payments for those purposes were made by cheeks of the Bead Company signed by Mrs. Nattans as president and by Balph Nattans as treasurer. The insurance money received on account of the damage to, the buildings amounted to $6,903.81, which reduced to $13,-589.88, the sum which the company paid out of its own funds for the structural changes and improvements. About sixty per cent of the total amount applied to permanent improvements was expended on the Nattans property.

In the early part of December, 1914, Mr. Dickerson, as counsel for Mrs. Nattans, was instructed by her as to certain stipulations she desired to have incorporated in the new lease for which the resolution of October 21 had made provision. The clauses thus suggested had reference to the payment of water rent and to the restoration of the division wall between the Nattans and Hamman buildings at the expiration of the new term. Mr. Dickerson had already received from Balph Nattans the current lease of the property, and after his interview with Mrs. Nattans, he prepared a draft of a lease from her to the company for the term and rental stated in the October resolution, and included in substance the incidental provisions of the present lease and the additional ones which Mrs-. Nattans had specially mentioned. The draft of the new lease, as written by Mr. Dickerson, was delivered by him to Balph Nattans, who in turn handed it to his own counsel, Mr. Meyer, for examination, and the latter rewrote it with some slight amendments. On December 8, 1914, the draft prepared by Mr. Meyer was taken to the apartments of Mrs. Nattans on the occasion of a conference at which she and the other directors of the company were present, with their respective counsel, and when the clauses she had suggested for the lease were briefly discussed, but no question was raised by any one as to its main terms or as to the intention of the parties that it should be eventually executed.

*470

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Bluebook (online)
100 A. 736, 130 Md. 465, 1917 Md. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-drug-chemical-co-v-nattans-md-1917.