Witmer v. Bloom

288 A.2d 323, 265 Md. 173, 1972 Md. LEXIS 936
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 21, 1972
Docket[No. 252, September Term, 1971.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 288 A.2d 323 (Witmer v. Bloom) 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
Witmer v. Bloom, 288 A.2d 323, 265 Md. 173, 1972 Md. LEXIS 936 (Md. 1972).

Opinion

Finan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal requires us to again construe the legal effect of the phrase “more or less” in relation to its use in the description of the quantity of acreage in a contract for the sale of land.

A helpful case note is found in 24 Maryland Law Review 210 (1964), titled, Qualifying Terms and Relief For Deficiency in Land Sales, wherein the author, capsulizing the state of the law on this matter in his final paragraph, concludes:

“With the decision in Carozza v. Peacock Land Corp., the Maryland Court of Appeals has now construed the qualifying terms most often used to modify statements of quantity in land sale contracts. ‘About,’ as construed in Baltimore Permanent Bldg. & Land Soc’y v. Smith, and ‘approximately,’ as construed in the instant case, are merely factors in determining the intent of the parties by normal principles of contract construction. A similar construction was placed on ‘more or less’ in the Kriel case, although this interpretation was weakened by *175 the language in the Brodsky case. Since ‘about,’ ‘more or less’ and ‘approximately’ are generally considered equivalent, the Court of Appeals, by distinguishing ‘more or less’ and ‘approximately,’ perhaps has missed an opportunity to reiterate the Kriel case and clear away the complicating vestiges of Jones v. Plater and Hurt v. Stull.”

We shall again revisit Kriel 1 and the cases cited in the case note.

The appellees, John H. Bloom, James O. Bloom, Louise V. Duff and Frances I. Peters, sought and obtained from the Circuit Court for Howard County (Mayfield, J.) a decree for the specific performance of a real estate contract of sale by the appellant, Dr. Fred E. Witmer. The contract of sale dated April 5, 1970, described the property to be conveyed by the appellees to the appellant as:

“* * * situate and lying in Howard County, known as the John H. Bloom property, at the eastern end of Maxine St., * * *, consisting of 26.6 acres more or less, improved with a frame house, barn and sheds.”

The primary issue for consideration on appeal is whether this contract is for the sale of land in gross (sometimes referred to as a contract of hazard) or a sale by the acre.

The testimony taken in the court below reveals that the appellant requested Mr. Peter Congedo (Congedo), a real estate salesman in the employ of the Columbia Real Estate Company, to search for property which he might be interested in purchasing. In March, 1970, Congedo telephoned Dr. Witmer and informed him that the Bloom property was for sale. After Dr. Witmer inspected the property and expressed interest in its possible purchase, Congedo contacted the real estate broker with whom it was listed, one Eric Lassotovitch (Lassotovitch) and presented him a contract of sale which was prepared in *176 the office of the Columbia Real Estate Company. The contract noted that the property contained 26.6 acres more or less, however, an attachment to the contract, consisting of a portion of the Howard County Tax Plats, depicted the Bloom property as containing 26.16 acres. John C. Davis, a real estate broker who assisted Congedo in drafting the contract, testified that the 26.6 figure was in error and that the figure intended to be used was 26.16 acres. It is also significant to note that the contract provided that, “[t]his contract is subject to survey Of said property, to be made by the buyer within 30 days from acceptance of this contract.”

Lassotovitch communicated the appellant’s offer to the appellees; however, when they received the contract for signature, they responded by increasing the price of the land from $70,000.00 to $72,500.00 and by reserving for themselves a right of way through the property. These modifications were made on the contract submitted by Dr. Witmer and were initialed by the appellees. Dr. Witmer accepted the "counter-offer on the day it was to expire, April 13, 1970.

Around April 26, 1970, Dr. Witmer’s father, a civil engineer, began a search of the land records of Howard County with reference to the Bloom property and found a deficiency in the acreage as stated in the contract. Upon being informed of this fact, Dr. Witmer wrote a letter to Lassotovitch with copies to the appellees, notifying them of the deficiency. On May 18,1970, after a meeting with the appellees concerning the shortage, Dr. Witmer employed the engineering firm of Purdum & Jeschke to prepare a field survey. The results of this survey showed that the property contained 23.264 acres, including in that amount .306 of an acre which was a part of Maxine Street, a public way. On July 24, 1970, Dr. Witmer, through counsel, notified the attorney for the appellees that he no longer wished to proceed with the purchase, and on September 15, 1970, the appellees filed a bill for specific performance of the contract.

The court below, although finding Kriel v. Cullison, *177 165 Md. 402, 169 A. 2d 203 (1933), to be controlling and quoting from Kriel to the effect that:

“* * * the words ‘more or less’, when used to qualify a representation of quantity in a contract to convey land, will be construed, whether found in an executed or an executory contract, as indicating an intention on the part of the parties to the contract to assume the risk of quantity, which, until rebutted by evidence of a different intent inherent in the instrument or extrinsic to it, will be recognized and enforced. * * 165 Md. at 411, 412.

found no evidence to refute the meaning of the words “more or less.” Judge Mayfield accordingly held that the appellant had assumed the risk of the deficiency and entered the decree for specific performance from which Dr. Witmer appeals.

On appeal, Dr. Witmer has raised four points; however, we regard it necessary to discuss only one, namely, whether the chancellor erred in his determination that the intention of the contracting parties was to have entered into a sale in gross, as opposed to a sale by the acre. The appellant contends that the wording of the contract as well as the testimony elicited from him in the lower court affirmatively shows that the specific amount of acreage to be conveyed was a material element in his acceptance of the appellees’ counter-offer. He particularly emphasizes that the contractural provision expressly stating that the contract was to be subject to survey is an indication of an intent to sell by the acre.

To provide some background into the nature of a sale in gross and the interpretation of the words “more or less” when describing acreage in a contract to convey land, we quote from Kriel which contains an exhaustive study of Maryland cases construing the latter phrase:

“A sale in gross, sometimes called a ‘contract *178 of hazard’, is where specific designated parcels of land are sold as a whole and there is no warranty, express or implied, as to quantity. 2

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Bluebook (online)
288 A.2d 323, 265 Md. 173, 1972 Md. LEXIS 936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witmer-v-bloom-md-1972.