Straus v. Madden

150 A.2d 230, 219 Md. 535, 1959 Md. LEXIS 385
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 16, 1959
Docket[No. 196, September Term, 1958.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 150 A.2d 230 (Straus v. Madden) 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
Straus v. Madden, 150 A.2d 230, 219 Md. 535, 1959 Md. LEXIS 385 (Md. 1959).

Opinion

Bruñe, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The trial court entered a decree for the rescission of a transaction or series of transactions between Bartholomew Properties, Inc. (“the Company”) and Ralph D. Rocks (sometimes referred to below as “the Purchaser”) and his nominees or straw parties, the defendants Justine A. Straus and Dorothy M. Parkison. The suit was originally brought on July 15, 1957, by Margaret E. Madden, a minority stockholder of the Company, against the Company, Orlo A. Bartholomew, the President and a Director of the Company, and Beulah Bartholomew (wife of Orlo A.), the Secretary and a Director of the Company, and sought the appointment of a receiver for the Company and kindred relief on the grounds of fraud and mismanagement. The bill was subsequently amended so as *538 to join Straus and Parkison as parties and to seek relief by-rescission and cancellation. Rocks was not joined as a defendant, but he testified as a witness and stated that he was the real party in interest in the case and that Straus and Parkison were his straw parties. He appears to have assumed and controlled the defense of the case. A demurrer filed by Straus and Parkison did not present as one of its grounds the non-joinder of Rocks, and we shall not consider further in this opinion any such objection which might have been raised, nor do we express any view as to its validity, if it had been raised. Straus and Parkison are the appellants of record.

The Company, which was organized in May, 1954, acquired as actually or practically its only asset, a tract of 30.33 acres of land at the northwest corner of the intersection of the Baltimore-Washington Parkway and Riverdale Road, in Prince George’s County. Apparently, most of its authorized stock was issued for this property, which was conveyed to the Company by Orlo A. and Beulah Bartholomew. 188 shares, out of an authorized 1500 shares, of the par value of $100 per share, were issued to the plaintiff for cash. Their validity is not challenged, nor is the validity of the issuance of other shares involved on this appeal, though the record may suggest some questions. The Bartholomews seem to have run the Company as if they owned it—which was far from the fact. It would be difficult to imagine a corporation whose affairs were conducted with less regard for proper corporate procedure.

The transaction or transactions involved in this appeal resulted in the execution of the following documents: (1) a contract of sale dated June 14, 1957, between the Company as vendor and Rocks as purchaser, covering seven acres of the above tract, and a collateral so-called guaranty by Rocks; (2) a deed of trust dated July 1, 1957, from the Company to John M. Conroy and John D. Gilmore, Jr., as Trustees, to secure an alleged indebtedness of $75,000 to Dorothy M. Parkison; (3) a promissory note of the Company for $75,000, payable to Dorothy M. Parkison, dated July 1, 1957, secured by the deed of trust of the same date; (4) an escrow agree *539 ment, also dated July 1, 1957, between the Company, Rocks, and Edward W. Nylen and John D. Gilmore, Jr., as Trustees; 1 (5) a deed dated July 3, 1957, from the Company to Justine A. Straus and Dorothy M. Parkison conveying the seven-acre tract referred to in the contract of sale dated June 14, 1957.

The 30.33 acre tract is somewhat irregularly shaped. It has a total frontage of about 2287feet along the right of way of the Expressway, of about 452J4 feet on Riverdale Road, and of just under 2100 feet on 64th Street. At the northwest corner of the tract is what may be called a sac having a frontage of about 491 feet on Brier Boulevard, which runs off at an angle of about 125 degrees from the north end of 64th Street. The northern line of the property from the Parkway to the sac runs southwesterly from the Parkway at an angle of about 70 degrees for approximately 842^2 feet. The northerly 20 acres of the tract were so zoned as to permit motel use; the southerly ten acres were zoned only for residential use. The seven acres covered by the contract of sale of June 14th and by the deed of July 3, 1957, form a parallelogram lying in the twenty-acre area where motel use is permitted and are in the northeast corner of the whole 30.33 acre tract and have a frontage of 800 feet on the Expressway. An appraiser, Mr. Dunn, called by the plaintiff, valued the twenty acres of land zoned to permit motel use at $8,000 an acre, or $160,000, and the remaining ten acres, zoned residential, at $4,000 an acre, or $40,000.

In addition to the seven acre tract, the Purchaser was to acquire a 26-foot right of way along the Expressway frontage from the seven acre tract to Riverdale Road, a distance of nearly 1500 feet. Under the deed of July 3, an exclusive right of way was granted to the Purchaser’s nominees.

At the start of the conference of June 14, 1957, at the end of which the contract of sale of that date was executed, Rocks *540 had made what was represented as an offer of $200,000 for the whole 30.33 acres. In fact, the making of such an offer was a condition to the calling of the conference. One-half of the consideration was to be represented by five acres of land in Prince George’s County zoned as commercial. This offer was neither accepted nor rejected. The Bartholomews’ friend and adviser, Judge J. Warren Madden of the U. S. Court of Claims, attended the conference with the Bartholomews and was also a representative of the plaintiff as a minority stockholder. Also present were Mr. Rocks, his attorney, Mr. M. J. Cuff, Mr. Casey, a real estate salesman employed by B. F. Saul Company, brokers (who had been employed by the Company to sell part or all of its property under a non-exclusive agency) and, at times, a Mr. Eawler, an employee of Rocks. Judge Madden expressed disappointment at the amount of the offer (which only matched the amount of a conditional offer received by the Company in November, 1955, and fell $100,000 short of that offer, if a zoning change could have been obtained), and he also stated his inability to value the property offered in exchange. The conference began at or after 4 P. M. and Judge Madden left at 6 P. M., with no agreement made or in sight on the $200,000 offer, and no other proposition before the meeting.

After Judge Madden left, the Bartholomews remained and agreed, in the name of the Company, to sell the seven acres, to give the Purchaser the 26-foot right of way above mentioned, and to permit him to put up a sign for his motel in the southeast corner of the 30 acre tract, and further covenanted not to permit the use of any of the remaining 23 acres for a motel. The consideration moving to the Company was to be $30,000 made up as follows: (1) cash at or before settlement, $2,500 ($1,000 of which was paid as a deposit) ; (2) $12,131 through the assumption by the Purchaser of 7/30 of the first trust on the property of $52,000, conditioned upon an arrangement satisfactory to the Purchaser and to the holder of the note securing the first trust being made; (3) the transfer of notes, or the proceeds thereof, of a construction company secured by deeds of trust in the aggregate principal amount of $15,099 (plus, apparently, $270 accrued *541 interest on one of the notes). By a separate instrument Rocks “guaranteed” payment of these notes, but not as to the time of payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 A.2d 230, 219 Md. 535, 1959 Md. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/straus-v-madden-md-1959.