163 F. Supp. 810 | D. Maryland | 1958
The petition of Suburban Club Carbonated Beverage Co. seeks review of a decision of the referee herein denying Suburban’s petition to be reimbursed out of the bankrupt estate of the Gos-man Beverage Co. for $726.32 paid by
Gosman, as assignee, was tenant of the Debelius Avenue property under a lease which provided for a deposit to be retained by the landlord as security for the performance by the tenant of the covenants of the lease, which included, inter alia, the payment of rent and the payment of all charges for water used in the demised premises. The deposit was subject to reduction annually, and the landlord had the right to apply so much of the deposit as might be necessary toward any damages sustained by the landlord upon breach by the tenant of the terms of the lease.
At the time its offer to purchase was made and accepted, Suburban believed that the balance in the deposit was $1,-768.36, although no representation to that effect had been made by the receiver or the landlord. After the sale had been consummated, Suburban discovered that Gosman had failed to pay bills for water service to the demised premises for a period of more than six months before July 5, 1956.
The petition in bankruptcy was filed herein on July 10, 1956, and Gosman was duly adjudicated bankrupt. On or about November 8, 1956, to avoid an interruption of the water service, Suburban paid $726.32 to the City for unpaid water charges to August 17, 1956. Suburban then filed a petition for a refund out of the bankrupt estate of the entire amount of $726.32. This petition was denied by the referee. Suburban’s petition for review raises four questions: (1) Was the water rent a lien on the property? (2) Was the water rent a lien on the leasehold interest sold to petitioner? (3) Was such a lien on the leasehold interest included in' the warranty against liens in the last paragraph of the offer and of the bill of sale? (4) Does the bankrupt estate have to assume the burden of such a warranty?
(1) Water rent is a charge within the meaning of sec. 6(18) of the Baltimore City Charter of 1946 and is a charge in the nature of taxes within the meaning of sec. 52. A charge for water rent is a lien on the property unless and
(2) Such a charge is a lien on the entire fee simple interest in the property, both leasehold and reversion, and may be enforced against either the leasehold or the reversion or both. See Eschbach v. Pitts, 6 Md. 71.
(3) The principal question is whether the overdue water rent should be considered “overdue rent and taxes” for which the purchaser assumed liability under paragraph 5 of the offer and of the bill of sale, or should be included among the “liens and encumbrances” covered by the warranty in the last paragraph. If we were dealing with taxes rather than with- water rent, it would be clear that the liability was to be assumed by the purchaser, and that such taxes were not “liens and encumbrances” from which the seller warranted the property to be free. Charges for. water rent are not taxes, Wolff v. Quick, 3 Balto. City Rep. 152, but they are charges and liens in the nature of taxes. City Charter, secs. 6(18), 46(b) and 52; Lee v. Keech, 151 Md. 34, 37, 133 A. 835, 46 A.L.R. 1488. I conclude that under the terms of the offer and bill of sale, water rent should be treated in the same way as taxes, and that those documents should be so construed as to require the' purchaser to assume liability for overdue water rent.
This conclusion is supported by the fact that the property sold to Suburban included “the balance, if any, of a deposit in escrow given to the landlord to secure the payment of rent.” Since the deposit also secured the payment of all charges for water used in the demised premises, the money to pay the charges for water should be taken out of the balance of the deposit rather than out of the proceeds of sale turned over by the receiver to the trustee in bankruptcy.
(4) These considerations require the court to affirm the decision of the referee denying Suburban’s claim against the bankrupt estate.
It is so ordered.
11-21-55 to 2-21-56 $270.40
2-21-56 to 5-22-56 . 289.10
5-22-56 to date of salo undetermined