Standard Industries, Inc. v. Alexander Smith, Inc.

133 A.2d 460, 214 Md. 214, 61 A.L.R. 2d 1433, 1957 Md. LEXIS 439
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 1957
Docket[No. 243, October Term, 1956.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 A.2d 460 (Standard Industries, Inc. v. Alexander Smith, Inc.) 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
Standard Industries, Inc. v. Alexander Smith, Inc., 133 A.2d 460, 214 Md. 214, 61 A.L.R. 2d 1433, 1957 Md. LEXIS 439 (Md. 1957).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The suit below was a bill by a landlord, Standard Industries, Inc., seeking a declaration that a lease between it and Alexander Smith, Inc., tenant, was binding until the expiration of its stated term, June 30, 1956. In August, 1955, the property was flooded during the passage of Hurricane Connie and the tenant, claiming that resulting damage justified the action, cancelled the lease. The case was tried in open court and on the third day of the trial, the tenant asked and received leave to amend its answer to add a prayer for loss of rent sustained by it when its sub-tenant cancelled its lease. The chancellor dismissed the landlord’s bill and denied the tenant’s prayer for loss of rent. Each appealed.

Standard owns some ten acres in Southeast Baltimore, improved by a brick platform type single story building containing approximately 110,000 square feet. The property is lo *218 cated in a low area bounded on the west by the North Point Road, on the north by the B. & O. railroad tracks on an embankment eighteen feet high, on the east by Herring Run, and on the south by a farm. A considerable portion of the building is built over a pit eight feet deep, two hundred twenty feet long and thirty-six feet wide, into which drains excess water coming onto the lot. This reservoir holds nine thousand gallons of water and when the water reaches a certain level, automatic pumps begin to work.

In 1946 Smith became interested in leasing the property and several of its officials came down to view it, including one Miller, manager of the region of which Baltimore was a part, and one Boal, who was in charge of all real estate operations, and two engineers. At that time the property was in the “middle of a marsh” and Standard was starting to build a dike between Herring Run and the property. In April, 1946, Standard and Smith executed a lease for a term of five years, beginning July 1, 1946, with the option in the tenant to renew for an additional term of five years, at an annual rental of $27,200. The premises demised consisted only of a portion of the building known' as Building “A”, comprising approximately 68,000 square feet. The lease provided that the tenant was to make all repairs necessary to maintain the demised premises, “excepting repairs of a structural nature” which were the obligation of the landlord. There was this further provision:

“If, during the term of this Lease, or any renewal thereof, said demis.ed premises shall be substantially destroyed by fire, the elements or any other cause not the fault of the Lessee, then this Lease, at the option of the Lessee and upon notice in writing to the Lessor, shall cease and terminate, and each Party shall be released from further obligation hereunder, and Lessor shall refund to Lessee any portion of the rent paid in advance and not earned at the time of such destruction.
“If, however, during the term hereof, the said premises shall be only partly destroyed by fire, the *219 elements or any other cause not the fault of the Lessee, then the Lessor shall repair such premises as speedily as possible at Lessor’s expense, and until the completion of such repairs Lessee shall be entitled to a reduction of rent in proportion to the amount of floor space of which they are deprived the use while such repairs are being made.
“Damage to such extent as to render fifty (50%) per centum or more of the floor space unusable for the purpose of Lessee’s business shall be deemed a ‘substantial destruction’ within the meaning of this agreement, and damage which renders less than fifty (50%) per centum of the floor space unusable for the purpose of Lessee’s business, but which cannot be repaired within ninety (90) days shall likewise be deemed to be a ‘substantial destruction’. Damage which renders less than fifty (50%) per centum of the floor space unusable for the purpose of Lessee’s business, and which can be repaired within ninety (90) days shall be deemed to be a ‘Partial destruction’ within the meaning of the agreement.”

In the Fall of 1946, there was a heavy rain and Herring Run broke through the dike near the B. & O. railroad tracks and inundated the leased building to a depth of between one and two feet. Standard thereupon replaced the section of the dike in question with a different kind of earth and built it to a higher level. In 1947 the combination of roof leaks and outside water caused about four inches of water to come in the warehouse, damaging materials of Smith, which thereafter put its merchandise on skids or platforms above the floor level. Standard again raised the level of the dikes. Early in 1948, Smith took over the whole of the leased premises, (a portion had previously been sub-let) and sent its employees, Barrett and LeNaire, both qualified engineers, to “study the flood control situation around the warehouse”. LeNaire filed with Smith a report and a plat, a copy being sent to Standard for its information. The report outlines the problems and discusses a plan, explained to LeNaire by *220 Standard’s manager, for the control of flooding in the future. Included in the measures to be taken (and that were taken) were an extension in length and addition in height to the dikes, the digging of a new drainage ditch on the north side of the property, and the placing of a new pump, the capacity of which was to be increased if the one proposed proved to be inadequate. LeNaire’s conclusion in the report was “that the proposed method seemed logical to me.” In June, 1948, during a heavy rain, water entered the property again and inundated the motors of the heating system which had to be taken out and dried.

By a letter dated August 8, 1949, Smith, without even suggesting a change in the language of the lease, exercised its option to renew the lease for an additional five-year term ending June 30, 1956.

In September, 1950, the premises were flooded to a depth of four feet throughout. Water covered desks, files and office equipment, soaked the motors of the sewage pumps which Smith had installed, making it necessary to bake them out and rewind them, covered the walls and floor with mud, silt and dirt, and damaged Smith’s inventory to the amount of over $250,000. When the flood receded, Smith took five days to evacuate much of its merchandise and then washed off the walls and scrubbed most of the floors and continued to use the building. Immediately after the flood of 1950, Standard increased the height of the dikes seven to nine feet above the normal level of Herring Run, and Smith built brick sills in the doorways and later raised the Herring Run dikes with earth fills supplied by Standard to a height of ten or eleven feet, even higher than Standard had raised it immediately after the storm. Standard extended its dike on the south side all the way to North Point Road. From this time until the date of Hurricane Connie, in August 1955, no water entered the building. Smith continued to occupy the leased premises until 1951, when it made plans to transfer its warehouse to a new building on Erdman Ave. There was testimony that the move was because Smith was not willing to risk further floods. Smith wrote to this effect to the National Production Authority of the U. S. Department of Commerce in 1951 *221

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Bluebook (online)
133 A.2d 460, 214 Md. 214, 61 A.L.R. 2d 1433, 1957 Md. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-industries-inc-v-alexander-smith-inc-md-1957.