Walker v. Washington Grove Ass'n

96 A. 682, 127 Md. 564, 1916 Md. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 96 A. 682 (Walker v. Washington Grove Ass'n) 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
Walker v. Washington Grove Ass'n, 96 A. 682, 127 Md. 564, 1916 Md. LEXIS 23 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

*565 Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a bill in equity filed by the appellant against the appellee to require the latter to execute and deliver unto the former a deed of the reversion in fee in the lot of ground described, under the provisions of Article 21, section 92 of the Code. The appellee was originally incorporated under the Act of 1874, Chapter 135, by the name of the “Washington Grove Camp-Meeting Association of the District of Columbia and Maryland.” The name was changed by Chapter 467 of the Acts of 1908 by striking out “Camp-Meeting.” On the 6th of October, 1886, the appellee leased unto John N. Bovee a lot “known and designated as Lot 23, Grove Ave., on the map of the cottage department of the ground belonging to the said association, known as Washington Grove,” for the term of ninety-nine years, renewable on the same conditions for like term of years forever, “paying for said demised premises to the said association, their successors or assigns, annually, such sum of money not to exceed six per cent., per annum of the par value of said five shares of stock as may be from time to time assessed by the said association, their successors or assigns, subject, however, nevertheless and this lease is granted and accepted according to such regulations as have been, (or) which shall at any time hereafter be adopted, for the government of said camp-meeting grounds, and which are made part of this indenture as fully and to all intents and purposes as if they were incorporated herein.”

The preamble of the leases is: “Whereas, John N. Bovee, of Washington, D. C., being the owner of five shares of the capital stock of the ‘Washington Grove Camp-Meeting Association of the District of Columbia and Maryland,’ is entitled to have one of the lots or parcels of ground situate in the cottage department of the grounds belonging to said association.” The consideration mentioned is one dollar and “the waiver and release by him of all rights and claims in and to any and all dividend or dividends, gain or gains which may hereafter, so long as this indenture shall remain in full *566 force and. value, accrue and be due and payable on the said five shares of stock, as well as in consideration of the covenants and promises of the said John N. Bovee hereinafter contained,” etc. He covenanted to waive and relinquish the dividends and gains accruing to the five shares of stock and “to pay any assessments hereinbefore provided within 30 days after notice of the same shall have been given.” He also covenanted as to the use of the property and not at any time during the term to “give, demise, let or assign, or in any manner dispose of the hereby demised premises, or any part thereof, for all or any part of the term hereby granted, to any person or persons, without the consent in writing of the said association, or their successors or assigns, first had and obtained.” Hpon neglect or refusal to pay any assessment, or to perform the covenants, it was made lawful for the association, their successors and assigns, to enter upon the premises and at the option of the association the lease was to be “null and void and the estate hereby granted, cease and absolutely determine.”

The association gave its consent to the assignment of the lease first to Christiana B. Schively, and then by her to the appellant. The answer denies that the indenture is a lease, and alleges that the respondent had no power to make such a lease, etc.; but we will not discuss those questions and will treat it as a lease. The appellee also contends that the Act of 1884, Chapter 485 (now included in section 92 of Article 21 and also section 24 of Article 53), if applicable to this lease, would be inoperative, because it would have the effect of impairing the obligation of the contract created by the Act of 1874 — its charter. It is only necessary to refer to Washington Hospital v. Mealey, 121 Md. 274, in which, on page 282, some prior cases on the subject are cited, as that case sufficiently answers the contention. The only point in this case which requires our consideration is the one which was decided by the learned Judge in the Circuit Court — • whether the lease is subject to the Act of 1884. It was made in 1886, and hence after the Act of 1884 was passed, and *567 before tbe Act of 1888, Chapter 395. We are therefore only called upon, to consider the Act of 1884, which was in effect when the lease was made. At that time there was a by-law in force which provided that

“Hereafter title to selected lots shall be by lease, for a period of ninety-nine years, subject to conditions imposed by these by-laws, or which may hereafter be imposed by such by-laws of the Association as are in force when .said lease is executed; and no condition shall be imposed having a retrospective effect.”

In the stipulation of facts filed it is stated:

“That whenever a stockholder who had located by his certificate, and prior to November 20, 1905, requested the Board of Trustees or directors to issue papers similar to the paper purporting to be a lease filed with the bill, on said lots in connection with said certificate of stock, such papers were issued, and at all times whenever the stockholder sold his stock and lot and the purchaser was accepted by the Board of Trustees, new stock was issued to the purchaser, and located on the same lot, and if the paper purporting to be a lease had already been granted, and the request was made for that purpose, the trustees would consent to its transfer or assignment to the new holder. No papers purporting to be leases were issued after the revision of the by-laws on April 12th, 1907. None of the papers purporting to be leases were issued to any one, except they were stockholders and had located their stock on the particular lot or lots.”

The Court below held that the lease was not subject to the Act of 1884 by reason of the indefiniteness of the amount to be paid, but the appellant contends that inasmuch as she offered to pay the highest amount of assessments' that could he assessed, she is entitled to a deed.

We fully appreciate the importance of the legislation which is now embraced in the two sections referred to — the begin *568 ning of which was the Act of 1884. Judge Stone, in Stewart v. Gorter, 70 Md. 242, said, that the legislation “was the result of a well grounded belief that these long leases, with their covenants of renewal, were injurious to the prosperity of the City of Baltimore, and that sound public policy demanded that all leases hereafter made, if for more than fifteen years, might be ended at the option of the tenant or lessee, upon paying the capitalization of his ground rent, at six per centum. It was the system of these long leases, irredeemable until the end of tire term, that the Legislature wished to break up, rather than for any special consideration for the lessees, that caused the Act.” It has been held by us that the legislation was remedial in its character, and is “to be liberally construed so,as to advance the remedy and suppress or prevent the mischief against which it is directed.” Swan v. Kemp, 97 Md. 686. The subject has been before us as late as in the case of

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 682, 127 Md. 564, 1916 Md. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-washington-grove-assn-md-1916.