| Md. | Jun 30, 1909

By this appeal the pending case is brought before us for the second time. The first case is reported in 106 Md. 536" court="Md." date_filed="1907-11-21" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/acker-merrall--condit-co-v-mcgaw-3482749?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3482749">106 Md. 536. The declaration in that suit contained two causes of action incorporated in one count. It was alleged that the defendant had committed two breaches of duty which he owed to the plaintiff whereby in each instance it suffered loss. This defect in the declaration was noticed in the opinion of this Court, and as the judgment was reversed and the case remanded, it was said that the declaration could be amended before the retrial of the case. It was accordingly amended. The narr. in the present case contains three counts. The first and second counts declare upon the two causes of action contained in the declaration in the former case, and the third count assigns a new ground of action. Briefly stated, the causes of action relied upon in the respective counts of the narr. in this case are: First, that the defendant committed an actionable wrong in taking the lease in his own name when he could and should have taken it in the name of the plaintiff; secondly, that he refused to make any effort to procure the consent of the trustees to the assignment of the lease to the plaintiff, but permitted himself to be used as a guarantor for an increased offer of rent for the premises made by Hopper and Warden; thirdly, that it was the duty of the defendant to aid the plaintiff in procuring the assent of the trustees to the assignment of the lease, and that he refused to aid them, whereby loss accrued to the plaintiff. The first and second counts set out causes of action identical with those contained in the declaration which appeared in the record on the former appeal.

In the trial of that case the lower Court directed a verdict for the defendant upon the ground that there had been no evidence *158 offered legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover. We held that there was legally sufficient evidence to support both causes of action upon which the plaintiff relied in that case, which, as we have stated, are set out in the first and second counts in the declaration appearing in this record. Upon the new trial the plaintiff recovered a judgment, and the defendant has brought this appeal. The record contains no exceptions to the ruling of the Court upon questions of evidence.

At the close of the whole case the plaintiff offered seven prayers, and the defendant fourteen for instructions. The defendant filed special exceptions to the plaintiff's first, third and fourth prayers. The Court overruled the special exceptions and granted the plaintiff's first, second, third and fourth prayers, and rejected its fifth, sixth and seventh. The defendant's twelfth prayer was conceded, and all its other prayers were refused. He excepted to the ruling of the Court upon his prayers and special exceptions, and this constitutes the only exception before us.

The reporter will set out the plaintiff's granted prayers and also the defendant's twelfth prayer. The defendant's first, second, third, fourth, sixth, eighth, thirteenth and fourteenth prayers concluded in some instances against the right of the plaintiff to recover and in others denies his right to recover upon certain counts of the declaration. They raised practically the same questions presented by the special exceptions to the plaintiff's prayers.

The Court was asked by the defendant's fifth prayer to tell the jury that inasmuch as the uncontradicted evidence showed that all relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant terminated on the 8th of December, 1905, the defendant was not liable for anything he did, or omitted to do after that date. This prayer was not supported by the evidence, and was properly refused. Mr. McGaw did not sever his relation as a director of the plaintiff corporation until January 13, 1906, and for any actionable breach of duty committed by him as such director he was liable. The defendant *159 by his seventh prayer asked the Court to rule as a matter of law that there was no evidence legally sufficient to show that when the defendant secured the lease in his own name he could have secured a similar lease for the plaintiff corporation at the same rental. This prayer was properly rejected for reasons which will be presently stated. His eleventh prayer asserts, but states no legal conclusion, that the uncontradicted evidence shows that the defendant was at no time authorized to take the lease of the premises in the name of the plaintiff corporation. While it is true the defendant was not expressly told to rent the premises and take the lease in the plaintiff's name, there is ample evidence from which a jury might have found that he had authority to do so. The prayer was not only indefinite and inconclusive, but was misleading, and it tended to divert attention from the real issues made by the pleadings. The evidence produced in support of the plaintiff's case is substantially the same as that contained in the record on the former appeal. It is in no essential particular different. Assuming that the Court was right in rejecting the defendant's ninth and tenth prayers, a reference to the statement of facts contained in the opinion in the former case and to the conclusion reached by the Court is sufficient to show that the trial Judge committed no error in granting the plaintiff's first and fourth prayers. Those prayers are based upon the first and second counts of the amended declaration which set up the precise causes of action alleged in the narr. in the former case, and we there said that the evidence was legally sufficient to be submitted to a jury in support of both causes of action. We, therefore, hold that the decision in the former case is conclusive of all questions raised by the special exceptions and prayers of the defendant to take the case from the jury for lack of legally sufficient evidence to support either of these counts.

The evidence produced on behalf of the defendant on the retrial of the case consisted of that of Mr. McGaw, Frank W. Hopper, and certain extracts from the minute book of the plaintiff corporation. We find nothing in this evidence to *160 induce us to hold that the principles announced in the former case should not be applied to this. It is fair to say that Mr. McGaw was not conscious of any intentional wrong doing, and that he believed he had a perfect right to do what he did do; but if the facts stated either in the first or fourth prayers of the plaintiff be true, he must be held liable for such loss as the plaintiff thereby incurred.

The plaintiff's second prayer is said to be objectionable, because it allows the recovery of such reasonable and necessary costs as the plaintiff was put to in procuring the new lease. These costs consisted of a counsel fee of two hundred and fifty dollars paid Mr. Steele, and certain expenses incurred by officials of the plaintiff company in procuring the leasehold title to the premises. The counsel fee and costs which the Court allowed the plaintiff to recover are not the counsel fees and costs involved in this litigation; but such only as were incurred in securing the new lease in its name after the defendant had, as alleged, wrongfully secured in his own name a lease of the property. These expenses were paid by the plaintiff and proven at the trial, and it is not denied that they were reasonable, and there seems to be no doubt that they were necessarily incurred.

The general rule is that costs and expenses of litigation, other than the usual and ordinary Court costs, are not recoverable in an action for damages, nor are such costs even recoverable in a subsequent action; but where the wrongful acts of the defendant has involved the plaintiff in litigation with others, or placed him in such relations with others as make it necessary to incur expense to protect his interest, such costs and expense should be treated as the legal consequences of the original wrongful act. If the plaintiff's evidence be true, it was about to lose possession of the premises by the wrongful act of the defendant, and it was obliged to employ professional aid and incur expense to retain possession of the premises to which, as between itself and the defendant, it was entitled, and the necessary expenses it incurred to regain the possession is an element of the injury. *161 Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341; Fustenberg v. Fawsett,61 Md. 191-2; Kemp v. City Passenger Railway Company,61 Md. 75; Webster v. Woolford, 80 Md. 329; Sutherland on Damages, 2nd Ed., Vol. 1, sec. 58.

The other objection to this prayer is disposed of by what we have said in passing on the first prayer of the plaintiff.

It clearly appears that the defendant was not injured by the granting of the plaintiff's third prayer. That prayer is based upon the third count of the declaration, and it is shown that the verdict and judgment were entered under the first count, and that the Court would not have found for the plaintiff under either of the other counts. If, therefore, there were error in granting that prayer — and we are not to be understood as so deciding — it was not reversible error, as no harm whatever was done to the defendant, and this is likewise true of the asserted inconsistency between the defendant's twelfth prayer, which, being conceded, became the law of the case (Gans Salvage Co. v.Byrnes, 102 Md. 245), and the third and fourth granted prayers of the plaintiff.

The defendant's ninth prayer asked the Court to declare that upon the uncontradicted evidence in the case the trustees of the Estate of John and James Gregg participated in the defendant's wrongful act in securing the lease in his own name. It is argued that as the trustees, with full knowledge, participated in the defendant's violation of duty, a resulting trust was thereby created in favor of the plaintiff which it could have enforced against the trustees and Mr. McGaw, and, therefore, there was no necessity for the payment of the increased rent. The defendant's tenth prayer rests upon the same proposition. It may well be conceded that Mr. McGaw held the lease of October 26th, 1905, as trustee for the plaintiff, and that it could have compelled him to assign it; but the uncontradicted evidence does not show that the trustees knew that the defendant was violating his duty to the plaintiff at the time they executed the lease, or that they participated in any breach of duty which may have been committed by the defendant. On the contrary, it tends to show *162 that their conduct was in all respects fair and proper. There is certainly nothing in the conduct of the trustees that would authorize the Court to hold, as a matter of law, that the defendant was thereby relieved of liability in this suit. We find no reversible error in any of the rulings of the trial Court, and the judgment appealed from will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.

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