Robinson v. Marino

125 A. 701, 145 Md. 301, 36 A.L.R. 692, 1924 Md. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 29, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 A. 701 (Robinson v. Marino) 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
Robinson v. Marino, 125 A. 701, 145 Md. 301, 36 A.L.R. 692, 1924 Md. LEXIS 75 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

*303 Adkins, J.,

delivered tlie opinion of the Court.

The allegations in the bill of complaint in this ease are substantially as follows:

That plaintiffs are owners of a large and valuable lot of ground improved with a three-story building to which they acquired title by deed for valuable consideration from Guy Abney and others, dated October 19th, 1922, and duly recorded ; that since the purchase of said real estate they have been in possession of the same, or have leased part thereof unto tenants, excepting a small portion thereof, “the same being an alley-way leading from West Patrick Street along the eastern side of the building on said lot of ground, and which has been closed with boards of lumber on said Patrick Street, and about thirty feet from said Patrick Street, a ■width of about eleven feet, to join the building owned by Ellen Trail Legg et al. on the east, said alley-way as so enclosed having been used and occupied and rented for a number of years by a certain James Dorsey Robinson, or by Anne E. Robinson, his wife, the defendants, and used by them as a shoeshine shop, and who are at the present time still using said premises for said purpose”; that plaintiffs’ grantors acquired title as heirs at law of their mother, Alary Frances Abney, who died intestate, and who was the grantee by deed from Charlotte R. Geisinger, a sister of the said Frances Abney, deceased, dated June 21, 1909, and recorded in Liber No. 316, folio 408, one of the Land Records of Frederick County, Alaryland, the said Charlotte R. Geisinger having acquired title by deed from Frank L. Stoner, trustee, to her, dated August 2nd, 1898, and duly recorded; that the said shoeshine shop was so enclosed, and the user of the same by the defendants was begun and permitted some years ago during the ownership of said real estate by the said Geisinger, with her authority and consent; and to whom the said defendants paid, it is understood and believed, the sum of eight dollars per month as a rental therefor; and that this rental was paid to and for the account of said Geisinger not only during the time she had the title and possession of said real estate, but also by permission of her sister, Alary Fran *304 ces Abney, now deceased, in her lifetime, and after her death, by her children, her heirs at law, up to the time of the sale of said real estate and the conveyance thereof to plaintiffs, the said Geisinger being unmarried, in the care of others, aged and infirm in body and mind; that at the time of the sale and conveyance to plaintiffs, it was understood and believed by the plaintiffs, and also by their grantors, that the said James Dorsey Robinson was a monthly tenant of said shop, and paying the aforesaid rent therefor by permission to the said Geisinger, or to others for her use, and that thei’e was at no time any agreement or contract, either written or verbal, between said Robinson and the said Mary Frances Abney or her heirs, that the said Robinson or any other person should hold the possession of said alley-way as a shoeshine shop, or for any other purpose “than as above stated and set forth”; that since plaintiffs obtained title to said real estate, the defendants have informed them “that they claim the right of possession of the premises being the said alleyway or shoeshine shop, by reason of the fact that they, the defendants have been in continuous, open, notorious and exclusive possession of the premises for twenty-four years, with the said Charlotte R. Geisinger, as their landlady, and by reason of this long-continued user, and under a lease executed by Charlotte R. Geisinger to Annie E. Robinson, the wife of James Dorsey Robinson, bearing date October 28th, 1921, leasing the part of the premises occupied by the defendants, to the Said Annie E. Robinson for a period of five (5) years* commencing October 1, 1921,” and said defendants say they intend to hold the possession of said alleyway or shop until at least the expiration of said alleged lease; that said defendants further deny any right' or title of plaintiff's to said real estate “as will appear by reference to a copy of the Motion or Pleading filed by said defendants before Alban M. Wood, a justice of the peace of the State oí Maryland, in and for Frederick County, in a: proceeding instituted upon the docket of said justice of the peace at the suit of your orators seeking the possession of said premises from the defendants, under a complaint before said justice *305 of the peace of a forcible detainer of said alleyway, and in which said proceeding before said justice of the peace a ‘non pros’ vas entered by order of your orators as plaintiffs or petitioners, the copy of said motion or pleading filed by said defendants before said justice of the peace being herewith filed as part- hereof, marked ‘Exhibit A. E. R.’ ”; that said alleged lease is not the act and deed of said Geisinger, for that said Geisinger, “who is now' an aged and infirm person, both in body and in mind, and who is now and has been for a long time past under the care of others in the City of Frederick, in Frederick County, Maryland, was not on the date when said alleged lease was executed, namely, October 28th, in the year 1921, and for some time prior thereto, and at all times since said date, able and capable to execute a valid deed or contract, and was then and is now of unsound mind”; that said defendants at the time of the execution of said .alleged lease knew that said Geisinger was wreak and unsound of body and mind, and incapable of executing a valid deed or contract, “and so knowing, at that time, as an inducement and in persuasion of the said Charlotte R. Geisinger to sign said alleged lease, told the said Charlotte R. 'Geisinger that they would not give her any trouble about leaving the premises named in said lease at any time, but that they would move from and vacate the possession of said premises at any time they were requested to do so, and woirld give up and vacate their lease of the same”; that at the time of the execution of said alleged lease the said Geisinger had no right or title or authority to execute the same, and the execution thereof was not known to, or authorized by, the then owners of said real estate, and that the execution thereof by the said Geisinger and the obtainment of the same from her by said defendants was -a fraudulent and wrongful act under the circumstances under which the same was executed and obtained, and by the representations made by the defendants, by reason of the condition of said Geisinger, which was known to the defendants; that the claims of the defendants as aforesaid, and the retention of said alleged lease, constitute a cloud upon the title and *306 affect the present valuation of the property; that plaintiffs desire the possession of said shop, or alleyway, to which end they desire to, give a proper legal notice for removal of defendants and dispossession of said premises by said defendants as monthly tenants.

The prayer of the bill is that a decree may be passed declaring said alleged lease to be null and void, requiring the defendants to deliver up and surrender to plaintiffs the said alleged lease; and for further relief. The exhibit referred to is a copy of the motion of the defendants that the proceedings before the justice of the peace be dismissed because:

1. Title to land is involved, as, they say, appears from the following recitals of alleged facts:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Willoughby v. Trevisonno
97 A.2d 307 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1953)
Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Sun Oil Co.
191 F.2d 705 (Fifth Circuit, 1951)
Crocker v. Pitti
16 A.2d 875 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1940)
Scully v. Dermody
8 A.2d 675 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1939)
Hanscom v. Bourne
177 A. 187 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1935)
Whitehurst v. Barnett
157 A. 737 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A. 701, 145 Md. 301, 36 A.L.R. 692, 1924 Md. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-marino-md-1924.