Yerkie v. Salisbury

287 A.2d 498, 264 Md. 598, 1972 Md. LEXIS 1175
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 22, 1972
Docket[No. 235, September Term, 1971.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 287 A.2d 498 (Yerkie v. Salisbury) 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
Yerkie v. Salisbury, 287 A.2d 498, 264 Md. 598, 1972 Md. LEXIS 1175 (Md. 1972).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1959 Homer and Dorothy Salisbury became the owners of a house and 15,524 square feet of land (the property) on the north side of Allentown Road about 220 yards from the main entrance to Andrews Air Force *599 Base (Andrews). It was their first real estate transaction. She is employed at Andrews as a clerk typist; he, because of heart disease, has been retired from the government service. They have four children, two teenagers at home, two married and living away from home.

In May 1966 Fred Ziesing visited the Salisburys. He was, at the time, a salesman for a broker named Webster. He told them he had been trying to sell an abutting property and that he thought its marketability would be improved if he could include their property. He persuaded them to sign a paper appointing Webster their “sole and exclusive broker for the purpose of selling the property * * * at the price and terms, within the time limit specified * * The price listed was $2.25 per square foot. The terms were all cash, “[p]roperty to be sold subject to zoning.” The contract was to expire “when sold.” Ziesing later added the words “or 1 yr. from date” to his copy without the knowledge or consent of the Salisburys. The printed provision for a 6% commission was amended by inserting “10%.” The paper was dated 17 May 1966.

On the very next day Ziesing presented to the Salisburys a document, dated 18 May 1966, which he had prepared and which we shall describe in some detail. A combination of printing and typewriting, it recited the receipt from the appellant (Yerkie), a confessed land speculator, of the sum of $300 as a “part payment of the purchase of” the property at a total price of $24,062.20 ($1.55 per square foot), Yerkie’s agreement to pay $7,-000 in cash “at the date of conveyance,” and his readiness to assume an existing trust of $11,000; the balance was to be secured by a second trust to be paid in three annual installments. There were inserted the typewritten words, “Property purchased subject to being [re]zoned C-2, also at purchaser’s expense.” Settlement was to be “[w]ithin 100 days after final zoning approval.” Ziesing had signed it as “Agent.” Below Ziesing’s signature are the words, “We, the undersigned, hereby ratify, accept and agree to the above memorandum of sale and acknowl *600 edge it to be our contract.” Next appears the date “4/18, 1966” and Yerkie’s signature.

The Salisburys understandably took a dim view of an offer based on $1.55 per square foot, especially since the listing agreement stated a selling price based on $2.25 per square foot. Dorothy said there was some discussion about it and that “it was hassled back and forth a few times” with Ziesing. Finally they were persuaded to accept $1.65 per square foot. Ziesing testified, five years later, that they told him they were in no hurry to move because their son’s automobile was stored in the garage. He further testified that when he presented the amended contract to Yerkie, he (Yerkie) “didn’t feel that he would apply for it [zoning], that it wasn’t yet ready at this time to be applied for.” He doubted he could get it “the way he wanted it” at that time. In June 1967 Ziesing said he was asked by Dorothy “were we going in for zoning, and if not why not.”

In August 1967 the Salisburys consulted counsel who, on 18 August, sent to Yerkie a letter from which we quote:

“In view of the fact that no deposit 1 was made as provided by the contract and no efforts made to rezone the property as required, I have advised Mr. and Mrs. Salisbury that in my opinion the contract has been abandoned and is void and is of no effect as of August 15th, 1967.”

Except for the fact that Yerkie recorded the contract in February 1968 things drifted on for almost another year. In July 1968 he asked the Salisburys to sign an application to reclassify the property from R-R to C-2. They refused. Two years and three months later Yerkie filed a bill of complaint praying the specific enforcement of the contract of sale. We found in the transcript an affidavit by Ziesing and one by Yerkie. A letter of trans *601 mittal suggests they were filed at the request of the chancellor, Parker, J. We quote from Ziesing’s affidavit:

“That it is your Affiant’s belief that the contract was ultimately accepted by the Salisburys when they were assured by your Affiant, after consultation with John W. Yerkie, Jr., that they would not have to leave the property within a period of one year to one year and one-half, and that in order to assure this, the petition for rezoning referred to in the contract would not be filed until it was agreeable with them.” (Emphasis added.)

Now we quote from Yerkie’s affidavit:

“That at the time your Affiant entered into the contract, and as a condition to entering into the contract, it was agreed and understood between your Affiant and Homer L. and Dorothy I. Salisbury, Defendants in the above-captioned action and the sellers under said contract, that they were in no hurry to have the property rezoned and would extend the time to apply for the rezoning; that there was no specific agreement between the parties as to when the rezoning would be applied for other than it would be at a time mutually acceptable to both parties * * (Emphasis added.)

What follows is an excerpt from the cross-examination of Yerkie at the hearing before the chancellor, R. B'. Mathias, J., on 6 July 1971:

“Mr. Yerkie, wasn’t it understood under your contract that if you didn’t file within six months the contract was void?
“A. Was it understood?
“Q. Yes. Wasn’t that part of the contract, part of the deal?
*602 “A. If I didn’t file in six months it was void?
“Q. Yes.
“A. No.
“Q. Well, when would it have been void?
“A. I don’t know when it would have been void.”
* * *
“Q. There is nothing legally requiring you to file at any time; isn’t that right? There is no legal requirement in the contract you have to file?
“A. I don’t think there is anything in the contract that states I have to file any certain day.” (Emphasis added.)

We quote from the oral argument that took place after the evidence had been concluded:

“THE COURT [Judge Mathias] : I want you to tell me, Mr. Edwards [Yerkie’s counsel], just as simple as you can where the parties stand with reference to this explanation of when this zoning should be applied for. You have talked about parol evidence, and in his affidavit and on the stand he said when the parties mutually agreed on the application for zoning is when, they should have done it. Now, when is that time?

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Bluebook (online)
287 A.2d 498, 264 Md. 598, 1972 Md. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yerkie-v-salisbury-md-1972.