139 A. 559 | Md. | 1927
Katie Mladejovsky, a resident of Baltimore County, died on January 8th, 1926, leaving a will, executed in due form, in which she named John J. Pratt and Anna Helmik executors. The will was probated in ordinary course and, Anna Helmik having died, Pratt qualified as sole executor.
After Pratt had qualified as executor, John Helmik, the appellant, demanded that he convey to him, Helmik, a lot of ground, which he alleged Mrs. Mladejovsky had sold to him by a valid and enforceable contract. Pratt refused to comply with that demand, and on March 15th, 1927, Helmik filed, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, a bill for the specific performance of the alleged contract, against the executor. The defendant demurred to the bill and, the demurrer having been overruled, he answered. The case was tried in open court, and, at the conclusion of the complainant's case, the court declined to hear evidence for the respondent, and later, on May 31st, 1927, signed a decree dismissing the bill. The appeal is from that decree. *687
The contract referred to in the bill of complaint is in the following form:
"Dec. 16, 1926.
"This is to certify that I, the undersigned on the above date sold to John Helmik, one unimproved lot located in Balto. County for the sum of $750.00, seven hundred and fifty dollars for which I have received this date the sum of $600.00, six hundred dollars, the balance to be paid in ninety days from above date.
"Description as follows:
"75 yards facing Back River and running north from a fence surrounding a place known as Charles Wright, thence west 75 yards, parallel with Eastern Ave., thence south 75 yards, thence east to place of beginning. The said lot is a part of what was formerly known as Gilmor property, Fairy Grove and Columbus Park.
"Katie Mladejovsky.
"Test:
"Robert H. Lafferty."
Although the defendant intimates rather than charges in his answer that the signature attached to the contract, and purporting to be that of Mrs. Mladejovsky, is not in fact her signature, the only evidence offered at the trial shows that it was. It further appeared from the testimony of Robert H. Lafferty, the witness to the contract, that it was executed under the following circumstances:
Lafferty, at one time a policeman, is now in the "collection and investigating business" and has, he said, "often made out contracts and leases for people, bills of sale, etc." He knew Mrs. Mladejovsky and was a frequent visitor at her home. In the course of his testimony he said that, on or about December 16th, 1926, he "received a telephone call at my home at about ten thirty in the morning, in which she requested me to come to her home, that she had some writing for me to do, the words she used, and I got on the car that leaves Holliday and Baltimore Streets eleven o'clock, and *688 I suppose I arrived there about 11.20 or 11.25 in the morning. * * * She said, Mr. Lafferty, I want you to do some writing for me, and I said, `What is it, Mrs. Mollie?' She said, `I sold John a piece of land, I want you give him a receipt'; I said, `All right, Mrs. Mollie, what piece of land?' She said, `the piece of land located down there at Charlie Wright's place,' and I said, `It would have to be described,' and I immediately went down with John and Mrs. Mollie and looked at that piece of land, and I described the land as near as I could, as I knew what I thought was looking in an eastern direction which I found out from the survey filed. I was a little northeast and she told me seventy-five yards each way, I thought it was peculiar, seventy-five yards, but I didn't question her, and she said to give him seventy-five yards on Back River and seventy-five yards in a northern direction and seventy-five yards in a southerly direction and seventy-five yards in an eastern direction to the point of beginning, and I wrote the contract as follows: "Beginning at a point at a fence facing Back River and a place called Charles Wright's place, that was as near as I could describe it, and, I said, running north parallel with Back River seventy-five yards, thence in a westerly direction seventy-five yards, and thence in a southerly direction, seventy-five yards and thence in an eastern direction seventy-five yards to the point of beginning seventy-five yards, the property known as Gilmor property, Fairy Grove and also as Columbus Park. I asked her if that was correct. * * * We went on the property and around it both and Mr. Helmik, John, contemplated getting that property. Q. Did they both agree as to where the property was located? A. Absolutely. Q. Was that definitely understood by both? A. Certainly. She showed the land to me and there was nothing else to do; seventy-five square yards, that is all there was to it." He also said that the land described in the contract was the land he went over with her, and that the lot sold to Helmik was part of a larger tract of forty-eight acres owned by Mrs. Mladejovsky.
There was other evidence offered by the complainant tending to corroborate Lafferty, but, since it adds nothing to *689 the legal effect of that to which we have referred, no further reference to it need be made.
After that testimony had been offered, Albert E. Pohmer, a surveyor, who had "worked" all over the land in controversy, was called, apparently to prove, (1) that the land described in the contract could be identified and located, and (2) its value. He testified that he had prepared a plat from field notes of an actual survey which he had made of the property; that he had a copy of the contract, and "from that copy" he "went over the land." He was then asked whether the following description of the property, as given in the bill of complaint: "Beginning at a point on the shore line of Back River, where the southeasternmost outline of the whole tract of land, described in the deed recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore County, in Liber W.P.C. No. 331, folio 197, would intersect the shore line of said river and running thence from said place of beginning and binding on the outlines of the land described in said deed south 28 degrees 54 minutes west 225 feet, thence leaving said outline and running north 40 degrees 35 minutes west 225 feet, thence north 31 degrees 19 minutes east 225 feet, to the shore line and waters of Back River, south 21 degrees 31 minutes east 100 feet and south 54 degrees 44 minutes east 125 feet to the place of beginning," was prepared by him "from the contract." An objection to that question was sustained, and the complainant then offered to prove that "the contract of sale between John Helmik and Katie Mladejovsky admits of no difference of opinion; that the description of the land mentioned in this contract is easily ascertainable and that the said contract is not vague and uncertain, but is definite in its terms and easily understood and described." That offer was also overruled and exceptions noted to these rulings. The complainant then rested, and the court announced that it would write an opinion on the complainant's testimony, and subsequently a decree was filed dismissing the bill. The reasons for that ruling are stated very clearly and forcibly in the court's opinion, in which he says: *690
"The trouble with this description is there is no beginning point. Neither are there any calls — such as to a tree; or a stone or a cove. So that the whole description is based on the point of beginning. If there is no beginning point, there is no description. And the first line of this property `runs north from a fence surrounding a place known as Charles Wright's.' So that this northerly line could run from any point along this fence, no matter how long this fence might be.
"Surely this is entirely too general, vague and indefinite. I hold, therefore, that the description in exhibit one, which is the contract, is really no description at all, for as it begins nowhere it goes nowhere and describes nothing.
"If the description had been such that a surveyor could have located, defined and described the land from it, I would have permitted the surveyor to give in evidence the result of his survey. King v. Kaiser,
From this statement of the case it is apparent that the appellant's right to relief depends upon two propositions: (1) That the contract executed by Mrs. Mladejovsky is sufficiently definite to enable the court to identify and locate definitely and conclusively the land to which it refers; and (2) that the testimony of the surveyor offered to show that the land described in the bill of complaint was the same land as that referred to in the contract should have been admitted.
One absolutely essential term in a contract for the sale of land, which must be shown before it can be specifically enforced, is a description of the land, either complete in itself, or which supplies data and information sufficient to enable the court with proper evidence to identify and locate the land definitely and with certainty. Upon that rule the courts are in substantial accord, but in applying it to specific cases there is no such concord.
In Fry on Specific Performance, par. 342, the rule is stated in this language: "Every valid contract must contain a description of the subject matter; but it is not necessary that it should be so described as to admit of no doubt what *691 it is; for the identity of the actual thing and the thing described may be shown by `extrinsic evidence.' This flows from the very necessity of the case; for all actual things except the contract itself, being outside of and beyond the contract, the connection between the words expressing the contract and things outside it must be established other than by the contract itself, that is, by extrinsic evidence." Plant v. Bourne, 2 Ch. D. (1897), 285; Ogilvie v. Foljambe, 3 Mer. 53; Shardlow v.Cotterell, 20 Ch. D. 90.
Another statement of the rule applicable in such a case is found in Ryan v. United States,
While so broad a statement of the rule may not be universally approved, nevertheless it seems to be in harmony with the trend of the later decisions.
Turning to the decisions of this Court, we find that in Huntt Parks v. Gist, 2 H. J. 498, Parks bound himself to convey to Joshua Cockey all his title and interest in and to "one hundred and twenty acres of land called Parks' Death Knot, situate, lying and being in the County of Baltimore," which was part of other land owned by Parks. On a bill to specifically enforce that contract, Chancellor Kilty found by extrinsic evidence that that description applied to a definite tract of land, and decreed specific performance. On appeal, however, that decree was reversed because "there being no designation of the one hundred and twenty acres of land to be conveyed to Cockey, nor any description whereby the same could be identified and located, parol evidence is not admissible to show that it was intended by the parties that the one hundred and twenty acres were to be laid off at the southernmost part of the tract of land called Parks' Death Knot." But in King v. Kaiser,
The relaxation of the rule against parol evidence has been carried even further in England and by some American courts. InWylson v. Dunn, 34 Ch. Div. 569, the facts of the case, as stated in the syllabus, were these: A proposal has been made that the two plaintiffs should buy a triangular field of about three acres, and that the defendant should *694
buy half an acre of it from them. One of the plaintiffs and the defendant met on the field; the defendant wished to have a piece in one of the angles, and the plaintiff stepped so as to mark out where a base line would cut off half an acre. Some days afterwards the same plaintiff wrote to the defendant asking her to let them have a letter agreeing to purchase the half acre she had selected for £ 350. She wrote back, not expressly referring to the other letter, that she was willing to take half an acre of the land agreed upon for £ 350. The plaintiffs did not obtain a contract with the owner of the land for the purchase until the 4th of November, which was three months afterwards. On the 13th of November the defendant threatened to withdraw, and on the 20th of November her solicitors wrote that she did withdraw from the contract." On these facts it was held that the description was sufficient, and evidence admitted to connect the land described in the contract with the land "stepped off." See also Ogilvie v.Foljambe, supra; Shardlow v. Cotterell, 20 Ch. D. 90; Plant v.Bourne, 2 Ch. D. (1897), 285; Phillips v. Swank, 120 Pa. St. 76. And Pomeroy, in support of his text, cites among other casesHollis v. Gurgess,
From this examination of the authorities, considering, too, that the contract involved in this case must not only meet the requirements exacted by a court of chancery as precedent to a decree for its specific performance, such as certainty, *695 mutuality and fairness, but must also meet the requirement of the Statute of Frauds, 29 Car. 21, ch. 3, par. 4, we have concluded that if the writing itself supplies information from which it may be naturally and legitimately inferred that the parties intended it to affect a certain definite tract of ground, that parol evidence should have been admitted to connect the description contained in the contract with the land to which it refers, but that if it did not supply such information, parol evidence was not admissible. The question then is, whether the contract under consideration did supply that information.
It is in the form of a receipt, and it sets forth precisely the names of the parties, the price to be paid, the exact dimensions of the tract, the property of which it is a part, its location with reference to Back River and Eastern Avenue and a fence surrounding the Wright property, it recites the payment of $600 on account of the purchase price, and fixes the time for the payment of the balance. It may naturally be assumed from that that the vendor intended to sell and the vendee expected to buy a certain definite tract of land owned by the vendor facing Back River and parallel with Eastern Avenue in Baltimore County, for it is not likely that the vendor would have sold a part of her land without knowing what part she sold, or that the vendee would have paid $600 on account of the purchase price without knowing what he was purchasing. And it may be fairly inferred from the contract itself, taken in connection with the evidence as to the circumstances under which it was made, that the parties did deal with reference to definite and specific property, the location of which was known to both of them. Parol evidence was therefore admissible to connect the description in the contract with the land which was intended to be described. To do that, the testimony of the surveyor, offered to establish that connection, which was excluded by the trial court, was relevant and proper, and there was error in excluding it. There was error, too, in dismissing the bill of complaint, because, in view of the appellant's offer, the court was not at liberty to assume that he would *696 not be able by proper evidence to identify the land referred to by the witness Pohmer with the land described in the contract. It will, therefore, be necessary to reverse the decree appealed from and remand the case, in order that the appellant may have an opportunity of adducing such evidence.
We do not, of course, express any opinion as to the ultimate disposition of the case, because, upon the conclusion of the appellant's case, the appellee will have the right to offer any proper evidence tending to support his denial of the allegations of the bill of complaint.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings inaccordance with the views expressed in this opinion, the costs ofthis appeal to be paid by the appellee. *697