Spedden v. Fentress

3 Balt. C. Rep. 13
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 13 (Spedden v. Fentress) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spedden v. Fentress, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 13 (Md. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

SHARP, J.—

These proceeding’s were instituted to obtain a decree for the specific performance of a contract.

In July, 1906, Robert M. Spodden and A. IS. Booth, Richard B. Fentress, Peter 10. Tome and Summertiold Medairy were partners in business and the owners of certain property.

On July 28th, 1906, the plaintiffs, together with their associates, Peter E. Tome, Summerfield B. Medairy, made an offer to Richard B. Fentress as follows :

“2. We hereby offer to sell to you for the sum of twenty-four thousand dollars ($24,000) cash; six thousand dollars ($6,000) to be paid to each of the undersigned upon the execution and delivery to you by each of us respectively, of an assignment of all of our respective rights, title and interest in and to said electric franchise and in ana to all property and assets, including money belonging to the Baltimore Electric Light and Power Company, the co-partnership now operating under said franchise in this city, you to pay all obligations of said co-partnership, and in addition, as part of this second imposition, you shall buy at the sum of eighty-five hundred dollars ($8,500), one-tenth thereof cash upon the [14]*14acceiRanee oí tliis proposition and tlie balance cash with interest within sixty days thereafter, the negro schpolhouse property adjoining the property of the Baltimore Refrigerating and Heating Company in Baltimore City, which schoolliouse property was caused to be purchased by the undersigned, Richard M. Spedden, for account of the owners of said electric franchise at tlieir request.”

Mr. Fentress accepted the proposition in a letter dated August 2nd, enclosing in the letter a cheek for $850 as stipulated by the parties except as to the schoolhouse, and perhaps some other details which need not be considered at this time. The 'twenty-four thousand dollars ($24,000) was paid and an assignment made of the property referred to.

Mr. Fentress refused to pay the balance of the purchase money for the schoolhouse, or to accept a transfer, and this bill was filed to obtain a decree for a specific performance of the contract. After the execution of the contract, and before the bill in this ease was filed, Mr. Medairy died intestate, and his widow, Rachael B. Me-dairy, and John M. Garter, esquire, were appointed his administrators.

The bill was filed by Messrs. Sped-den and Booth. The defendants are Mr. Fentress, Mr. Tome, the administrators of Mr. Medairy, and Mr. Norton. The schoolhouse property had been bought for the partnership by Mr. Norton. Title was taken in his name as agent for the partners. He still holds the title.

Answers were filed by Mr. Tome, the administrators of Mr. Medairy and Mr. Norton, consenting to a decree for specific performance. Messrs. Spedden and Booth are the active parties in the management of the case.

Mr. Fentress admits the execution of the contract and resists a specific performance for the following reasons :

1. Because the contract is not sufficiently specific and certain, either as to the location of the property, the estate to be conveyed, or the party to convey.

2. He also relies on the Statute of Frauds as a defense.

3. Because of misrepresentations made to Mr. Fentress by Mr. Spedden, (acting for himself and the other vendors) to Mr. Fentress concerning the value of the property.

4. Because of the want of mutuality in the contract.

These defenses will be considered in the order in which they have been mentioned.

It is an elementary proposition that in order to obtain the specific performance of a contract in equity the “contract must be certain and definite in its terms and free from ambiguity.”

But this means a reasonable and practical certainty and not the greatest scientific precision. The court will not be subtle and astute in construing a contract or by ingenious speculations over remote and improbable contingencies, raise an uncertainty, and defeat a just claim.

Of all things the law must be practical. The practical difficulty in many of these cases is to determine where to draw the line between the certainty the law requires and the uncertainty which defeats the right to specific performance.

It should be observed that the parties to the contract under consideration were not strangers to each other, they had been partners since 1904. Nor were they without full information concerning the exact location of the property and the estate held. The firm had owned the property for more than a year before the contract was made and used it for the purposes of the partnership. It had been purchased by the partners after full consideration for a definite prarpose. Mr. Fentress was personally active in the initial proceedings.

Indeed, Mr. Fentress does not contend either in his answer or testimony that he was, in fact, ignorant of the location of the property, or in any way injured by what he considers the inadequate description of the property in the contract. He relies entirely on this branch of the case on the rule in equity regarding certainty in the terms of the contract, and the statute of frauds for defense.

The property is described in the contract as the “negro schoolhouse property adjoining the property of the Baltimore Refrigerating and Heating Company, which schoolhouse property was caused to be purchased by the undersigned, Robert M. Spedden, for account of the owners of said electric franchise at their request.”

The suggestion that there may have been some- other “negro schoolhouse” adjoining, some other property of the [15]*15Baltimore Refrigerating ¡mil Heating Company, which other selioolhouse had ¡Uso been purchased by Mr. Siiedden for the firm and therefore the contract is uncertain, is perhaps within the limits of possibility, but it is most improbable. Snell a contingency is too remote to be practical. It is mere speculation.

It appears from the evidence that this property originally belonged to the. City of Baltimore. Mr. Fentress, Mr. Spedden and their associates, believing it ¡ill to be a desirable and much needed addition to the property belonging to them, desired to purchase it. Mr. Spedden was directed to buy it for the firm. Up to this point Mr. Fentress concedes he knew- all about the transaction.

It was thought best to proceed indirectly to some outsider to prevent the property “being run up” on the firm, as Mr. Fentress expressed it in his testimony. Mr. Spedden requested Mr. Norton to act as agent which he accordingly did. He bought the property, paid for it and took the title in his own name. This was all done at the instance and for the benefit of the firm. The advertisement of the sale and the deed eonsumating the transaction described the property by metes and bounds.

From these documents it appears that the negro selioolhouse property adjoining the property of Baltimore Refrigerating and Heating Company caused to be purchased by Mr. Spedden was ¡1 property described in the bill in this case, viz.: Beginning on the northwest side of Barre street, ¡it the distance of 100 feet northeasterly from the nortlieasternmost corner of Barre and Little Green streets, running thence northeasterly binding- on Barre street, 51 feet 10 inches; thence northerly, about 23 feet and so forth.

“Id cert urn est quod, cerium rcd<M potest.”

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Related

Dorsey v. Hobbs
10 Md. 412 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1857)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spedden-v-fentress-mdcirctctbalt-1909.