S. & G. Realty Co. v. Woodmoor Realty Corp.

259 A.2d 281, 255 Md. 684, 1969 Md. LEXIS 750
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 3, 1969
Docket[No. 318, September Term, 1968.]
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 259 A.2d 281 (S. & G. Realty Co. v. Woodmoor Realty Corp.) 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
S. & G. Realty Co. v. Woodmoor Realty Corp., 259 A.2d 281, 255 Md. 684, 1969 Md. LEXIS 750 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

Hammond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is another in a series of battles the owners of a store building on a lot adjacent to the parking area of the Woodmoor Shopping Center on Liberty Road in Baltimore County have fought to continue the use of that parking area by patrons of the store building. Each time the judicial holding has been that Woodmoor Realty Corporation (Woodmoor), owner of the shopping center, had validly covenanted that only the tenants and patrons of the center could use the parking area and. therefore, patrons of the adjoining lot could not. Now the present owner of the adjoining lot, its tenant who operates bingo games in the store building, and various religious and charitable corporations who profit from the bingo games, seek to reverse the judicial ban on the use of the shopping center parking lot by bingo players, fighting in court as fiercely it would seem as men once did for gold and glory.

In Maryland Trust Co. v. Tulip Realty Co., 220 Md. 399, 412-414 (1959), we affirmed that part of a decree of Judge Gontrum in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County which directed Woodmoor, in order to keep unauthorized parkers off the shopping center as its covenant obliged it to do, to build a five-foot wire fence along *687 the boundary line dividing the store building lot and the shopping center with an eighteen-foot extension of the fence on the property of Sedgemoor Realty Company, the then owner of the store building lot.

Maryland Trust Company acquired the Sedgemoor lot and building at a foreclosure sale and then again challenged the building of a fence on its land. In Maryland Trust Co. v. Tulip Realty Co., 222 Md. 516, 518 (1960), we said that the decree which ordered erection of most of the fence on the boundary line and the rest on Sedge-moor’s land and enjoined Sedgemoor and Maryland Trust from interfering with the erection or maintenance of the fence, was not only proper but obligatory under the opinion in the first appeal, which had become the law of the case.

S. & G. Realty Company, Inc., the present appellant, acquired the store building in October 1962 with full knowledge, as it expressly concedes, of the prior litigation and the decrees requiring the erection of the fence, partly on the land it bought, and about a year later leased it to Toy-Barn-Liberty, Inc. Woodmoor then began to prepare for the building of the fence. Efforts to enjoin its building and counter efforts to enjoin use of doors in the north wall of the store building for other than ingress and egress of freight followed. In December 1968 Tulip, the store owner in the shopping center who had originally forced Woodmoor to enforce its covenant, sought to have S. & G. and Toy-Barn held in contempt for using the parking lot. Three years later in February 1967, Woodmoor sought contempt orders against S. & G., its president, and one Yerkes, the bingo operator tenant of the store building, on the same grounds.

Judge Raine, having consolidated all the proceedings, heard all parties and overruled motions raising preliminary objections filed by S. & G. and Yerkes, treated the contempt petitions as petitions to modify the amended decree of November 5, 1959 that was passed pursuant to the approving mandates of this Court in the 1959 and *688 1960 appeals, and by decree dated November 30, 1967 (the primary decree) repassed the decree of November 5, 1959, and extended its application to S. & G.. Yerkes and all others in privity with them.

Some two weeks later S. & G. and its president filed a petition to set aside the decree or, in the alternative, to modify it so that it would not bind S. & G.’s president individually. There was also a prayer that “in the event this court does not act to set aside its order or modify, that this petition be considered an appeal therefrom.” Various parties, most of whom were religious or charitable entities that benefited from the bingo games, were permitted to intervene.

On May 27, 1968, Judge Raine heard testimony. On June 17 he filed a memorandum opinion, saying in part:

“Woodmoor and its tenants have a right to the exclusive use of the shopping center parking area. * * * The owners of the adjacent property must resign themselves to this fact. Not once, but twice the highest court in this state has declared that Judge Gontrum’s order was proper, that its purpose was to prevent pedestrian passage from the Woodmoor parking lot to the adjacent building.”

To this we may add that in the second appeal to this Court — 222 Md. 516 — the record and the brief of Maryland Trust reveal that the only point at issue was the power and the right of the court to order any part of the fence to be built on property owned by Maryland Trust and never owned by Woodmoor, 1 and the opinion of this *689 Court on that appeal, rightly or wrongly it now matters not, decided that the fence could and should be built on the land of Maryland Trust. Furthermore, S. & G. bought the land knowing of the burden its purchased land must bear.

On August 7, 1968, Judge Raine ordered and decreed that all pending petitions for modifications of the order of November 30, 1967, be dismissed and that said order should continue to remain in full force and effect. On September 5 next S. & G. entered an order for appeal to this Court from the “order of court dated August 7, 1968, in the above entitled matter.”

Although appellant seeks to present for decision its argument that laches now bars the erection of the fence and its argument that a fence cannot be built and maintained by another on its land, the sole question presented in the present posture of the case is whether there was an abuse of discretion in refusing to disturb the primary decree. This is so because a motion for the setting aside of or modification of a decree is a motion addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge. No appeal was taken from the primary decree of November 30, 1967, and Judge Raine ordered no stay of its operation and effect, either expressly or by necessary implication. Its merits are not before us for review.

In Lancaster v. Gardiner, 225 Md. 260, 266-267, cert. den. 368 U.S. 836, in which the motion for reconsideration was made in June within thirty days of the original decree and heard and decided in October, Chief Judge Bruñe for the Court well summarized the law :

“There had been no order to stay the operation of the decree of May 17th; and so far as *690 we are advised or can discover from the record no request for a stay was made. The decree of May 17th accordingly became enrolled thirty days after its date. Maryland Rule 625; Hancock v. Stull, 199 Md. 434, 437, 86 A. 2d 734, and cases therein cited; Riviere v. Quinlan, 210 Md. 76, 122 A. 2d 332; Monumental Engineering Co. v. Simon, 221 Md. 548, 158 A. 2d 471.

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Bluebook (online)
259 A.2d 281, 255 Md. 684, 1969 Md. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-g-realty-co-v-woodmoor-realty-corp-md-1969.