Steffey, Inc. v. Bridges

117 A. 887, 140 Md. 429, 1922 Md. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 27, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 117 A. 887 (Steffey, Inc. v. Bridges) 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
Steffey, Inc. v. Bridges, 117 A. 887, 140 Md. 429, 1922 Md. LEXIS 54 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Bbisooe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit at law, brought by Charles II. Steffey, Incorporated, plaintiff, a .real estate company, against John S, *430 Bridges, defendant, in the Baltimore City Court, to recover certain commissions alleged to be due and owing the plaintiff for services rendered in securing and procuring a tenant for certain property belonging to the defendant, and situate at Maryland Avenue and Oliver Street, Baltimore City.

The questions for our review arise upon the pleadings, and are presented by the rulings of the court in sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s amended declaration, with leave to amend.

The plaintiff declined to amend and, from a judgment on the demurrer for the defendant for costs, the plaintiff has taken thisi appeal.

The amended declaration contains the six common counts in assumpsit and the seventh, a special count, containing and setting forth the special fact relied upon by the plaintiff to secure a recovery in the case.

As the facts of the case, upon which the decision must turn, appear from the pleadings, the seventh special count, and the bill of particulars, annexed to the amended declaration, will be here set out and stated somewhat at length.

By the seventh count of the amended declaration, after stating that the plaintiff secured for the defendant a tenant, it is averred that, “on or about April 23rd, 1919, the Post Office Department accepted a proposal by the defendant to lease a garage for the use of the Post Office Department situated on the defendant’s premises aforesaid, for the term of ten years, the lease to run from the date of occupancy of such garage, which was to be erected by the defendant; that at the date of filing this amended declaration, the said garage has been occupied, by the Post Office Department of the United States Government since July 1st, 1920, and the formal lease, running from July 1st, 1920, has either been executed, or is ready for execution awaiting the signature of the defendant; that under the terms of the lease, being the terms agreed upon between the defendant and the Post Office Department prior to the institution of this suit, the amount which the tenant promises to pay to the defendant is fifteen *431 thousand dollars a year, and the term of the tenancy is ten years from the date of occupancy of the premises to wit, July 1st, 1920; that the established and customary commissions for such services a.re five per cent of the first year’s rental and one per cent, of the rental for each year, exclusive of the rental for the first and second year, as was well known to the defendant; that there is due and owing to the plaintiff from the defendant the sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars plus eight times one hundred and fifty dollars, viz.: twelve hundred and fifty dollars, or in all nineteen hundred and fifty dollars; that notwithstanding the defendant’s promise and the services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant, and notwithstanding a demand by the plaintiff made of the defendant for the payment of this sum, the defendant has failed and refused to pay it, or any part thereof, and that there is justly due and owing from the defendant to the plaintiff the sum of nineteen hundred and fifty dollars, with interest” thereon.

The hill of particulars filed with the declaration sets out the following cause of action:

“To amount due for services rendered in aiding and securing lease and commissions due for lease of the premises situated at Maryland Avenue and Oliver Streets at the rental of Fifteen Thousand Dollars ($15,000) a year for a term of ten years from date of occupancy, by the defendant to the Post Office Department of the United States Government at the established and customary commissions for such services of 5% on the first year’s rental and 1% of the rental for each year thereafter, exclusive of the rental for the first and second years; the plaintiff having been engaged and the services having been begun by the plaintiff for the defendant in February, 1919, and a proposal of the defendant’s to lease a garage upon terms as above mentioned to the Post Office Department having been made by the defendant subsequent, to February, 1919, and accepted by the Post Office Department on or about April 23rd, 1919, the de *432 fendant to erect the garage thereafter to be occupied and the terms of the lease to run from date of occupancy, to wit, July 1, 1920, $1,950.00.”

The demurrer was to the whole amended declaration, and stated that the declaration and the several counts thereof were bad in substance, and insufficient in law, and, as stated, the demurrer was sustained and a judgment on the demurrer in favor of the defendant was entered by the court below.

In support of the demurrer, it is contended that the contract set up' by the plaintiff was not only illegal and against public policy, but it was directly in contravention of the Postal Laws and Regulations of the Post Office Department of .the United States, in force at the time of the contract detclared upon between the plaintiff and defendant.

By an agreement between the parties, filed in the case, it is stipulated that section 56%, Postal Laws and Regulations of the United States, as adopted August 30th, 1918, reads as follows:

“All contracts entered into by the Post Office Department shall contain the following covenant:
“The contractor expressly warrants that he has employed no third person to solicit or obtain this contract in his behalf, or to cause or procure the same to be obtained upon compensation in any way contingent, in whole or in part, upon such procurement; and that he has not paid or promised or agreed to pay, to any third person, in consideration of such procurement, or in compensation for services in connection therewith, any brokerage, commission, or percentage upon the amount receivable by him hereunder; and that he has not, in estimating the contract price demanded by him, included any sum by reason of any such brokerage, commission or percentage; and that all money payable to him hereunder is free from obligation to any other person for services rendered or supposed to be have been rendered, in the procurement of this contract. He further agrees that any *433 breach of this warranty shall constitute adequate cause for the annulment of this contract by the United States, and that the United States may retain to its own use from any sums due or to become due thereunder an amount equal to any brokerage, commission, or percentage so paid or agreed to he paid.”
That on October 6, 1919, it was added to as follows: “Provided, however, that this covenant does not apply to contracts for the sale of rental of real estate made by or through a bona fide, established and recognized real estate agency.”

That on December 4, 1919, it was changed to read as follows :

“Provided, however, it is understood that this covenant does not apply to the selling of goods through a bona fide

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 A. 887, 140 Md. 429, 1922 Md. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steffey-inc-v-bridges-md-1922.