Shriver v. Druid Realty Co.

131 A. 815, 149 Md. 385, 1926 Md. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 131 A. 815 (Shriver v. Druid Realty Co.) 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
Shriver v. Druid Realty Co., 131 A. 815, 149 Md. 385, 1926 Md. LEXIS 153 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

■ delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is taken from an order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City overruling the demurrer filed by the appellant, as defendant, to the appellee’s bill of complaint. The grounds of the demurrer are want of equity and laches. The prayers of the bill are for an accounting and an injunction. The bill alleges, in effect, that Joseph Berman was in 1916 the owner of substantially all of the capital stock of a corporation called the Lyon Realty Company, which corporation was seised of a lot of ground in Baltimore City upon which it had erected a large apartment house known as the Riviera; that Berman had practically all his money invested in the capital of this corporation, and that *387 the investment appeared in 1916 to he possibly ruinous and certainly unprofitable; that Berman was advised and convinced that the only way that increasing pecuniary loss and ruin could be avoided was to increase the size of the Biviera by building adjacent apartments of the same general character and putting the whole under one management, thereby reducing overhead charges to such an extent as to convert an unprofitable and perhaps ruinous investment into one which would yield a substantial profit. Acting upon this conviction, and in order to be in a position to carry out his plan, Berman caused, the incorporation of the Druid Bealty Company of Baltimore, the plaintiff below (appellee here), which corporation is practically owned by Berman, he being the owner of all of its capital stock with the exception of ten shares belonging to his son and one share to his son-in-law. After having organized the appellee corporation, the first requirement in Berman’s plan necessitated the expenditure of a large sum of money, and having practically none of his own, this required the borrowing of the necessary money on such terms as he could negotiate. With this end in view, he approached the defendant, who represented himself to be, and in fact was, in control of the money desired, this money belonging either to himself or to- those for whom he had authority to act. The bill also alleges that the defendant knew the imperative need of the appellee obtaining the loan of the necessary funds to enlarge the then existing apartment house, or to build additional ones. The bill alleges that the defendant, when approached by the plaintiff, through Mr. Berman, agreed to furnish the plaintiff $246,600 of the money of which he had control as agent or trustee, at five per cent., and $8,400 of his own money at six per cent. The conditions upon which the loan was to be made were that the five per cent, money was to be secured by a first mortgage running (with some amortization) for twenty years, and that' the six per cent, money was to be secured by a second mortgage running for the same time; that the plaintiff should pay the defendant personally, in addition to the principal *388 and interest on the money borrowed from him, the snm of $90,297.96 in instalments covering twenty years, this sum to be also secured by a second mortgage, without interest. There is a further 'allegation that the plaintiff, being impelled thereto by what it deemed were the necessities of its case, agreed to the terms dictated as above by the defendant, and that the money was lent and secured as above stated; that during the eight years elapsed between the lending of the money in the latter part of the year 1916 and the filing of the bill, the plaintiff has paid the defendant an amount of money equal to all the defendant personally loaned it, all interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, per annum, broker’s commission at two' and one-half per cent, upon the whole amount of money lent both by the defendant himself and' those for whom he was the agent or trustee, and in addition thereto the sum of $16,464.00; but notwithstanding all these payments, the defendant is insisting upon the terms exacted by him when the money was lent, and under these terms the plaintiff is required to pay a further additional sum of $73,440.46 to be paid in instalments during the next twelve years. The plaintiff also alleges in its bill that the terms of this contract are harsh and oppressive, and that notwithstanding the passage of the Act of 1916, ch. 374, forbidding a corporation to set up> the defense of usury, are so manifestly unfair, unreasonable and oppressive that a court of equity will relieve it from said contract upon its paying to the said defendant such an amount as may be found justly and equitably due. The plaintiff then asks for an accounting, and proffers itself ready to bring into court any sum that may be found due, but avers that the above allegations show that the defendant is already largely overpaid.

The substance of these allegations is that Berman was practically the sole owner of the Lyon Realty Co. and all of his money was invested in that company’s stock, the whole of its assets being represented by an unprofitable apartment house'-known as the Riviera; that finding the operation of the Riviera unprofitable, Berman conceived the idea that if *389 he had more apartment houses, thereby lessening the overhead charges, he would be able to convert a losing venture into a profitable one. With that end in view, he organized the Druid Realty Company (appellee here), and sought the defendant as one who would be in a' position to secure a loan for him of the necessary funds to acquire the ground and erect additional apartment houses; the defendant agreed to secure the necessary money, estimated to be $255,000, and did secure the major portion of this sum from friends or relatives, at the same time investing $19,600 under his control as trustee, and $8,400 of his individual money; the sum of $246,600' being secured by first mortgages on the property purchased and built upon, the mortgages to run for twenty years at five per cent., with amortization during this period, and the $8,400 furnished by the defendant individually with interest at six per cent., together with compensation for securing the loan amounting to $90,291.96, to be paid in instalments over a period of twenty years, without interest, secured by second mortgages on the same property purchased and built upon. The bill in this case was filed more than eight years after the consummation of the agreement by the execution of the mortgages, and after the sum of $35,339.50 had been paid to the defendant in pa'rtial payments made at six months’ periods in accordance with the terms contained in the mortgages.

The contention of the appellee is that it was a necessitous borrower; that the defendant was acquainted with the plaintiff’s necessities a'nd able to procure for it the money needed; that by reason of these conditions the defendant exacted a harsh and oppressive contract from the plaintiff, from the results of which a court of equity should grant relief. There is no claim of actual fraud, misrepresentation, mistake, undue influence, fiduciary relation, or other common ground of equity jurisdiction, but the claim of the plaintiff is based upon the allegation that it was a borrower whose financial necessities were taken advantage of by the defendant in compelling a'n extortionate and oppressive contract.

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Bluebook (online)
131 A. 815, 149 Md. 385, 1926 Md. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shriver-v-druid-realty-co-md-1926.