Parkside Terrace Apartments, Inc. v. Lindner
Decision Date | 05 February 1969 |
Docket Number | No. 57,57 |
Citation | 249 A.2d 717,252 Md. 271 |
Parties | PARKSIDE TERRACE APARTMENTS, INC. v. Emma R. LINDNER. |
Court | Maryland Court of Appeals |
Thomas M. O'Malley and Michael F. X. Dolan, Washington, D. C., for appellant.
Stanley Klavan, Paul H. Mannes, D. Randolph Cole, Jr., and Frank E. Scrivener, Washington, D. C., for appellee.
Submitted to HAMMOND, C. J., and MARBURY, FINAN, SINGLEY and SMITH, JJ.
As we see this case, a detailed review of the facts which gave rise to this controversy is not particularly rewarding. Parkside Terrace Apartments, Inc. (the Parkside Corporation), a body corporate of the District of Columbia, filed articles of dissolution with the Office of Recorder of Deeds of the District on 2 November 1965.
On 21 January 1966, the Parkside Corporation instituted suit in the Circuit Court for Prince George's County against Emma R. Lindner and Kenneth Minchew, claiming damages in the amount of $26,222.70 for breach of warranty in a real estate transaction which had taken place in the District. The action was dismissed as to Minchew, but continued as to Mrs. Lindner who, in due course, filed pleas which included a denial of Parkside Corporation's standing to bring the suit. At the conclusion of the plaintiff's case, Mrs. Lindner moved for a directed verdict on grounds which included Parkside Corporation's lack of standing. It was from the granting of this motion that the present appeal was taken.
The lower court predicated its ruling on the motion for directed verdict upon a finding that there was no fraud and that the action was barred by limitations. We agree with the result reached by the lower court, but for a reason which we regard as more compelling, making unnecessary a consideration of the points raised by Parkside Corporation.
Under Maryland Code Art. 23, § 78 , the directors of a dissolved corporation are constituted trustees, who '* * * may sue or be sued in their own names as trustees, or, notwithstanding such dissolution, (the trustees may sue) in the name of the corporation; * * *.' See also, Atlantic Mill & Lumber Realty Co. v. Keefer, 179 Md. 496, 500, 20 A.2d 178, 180 (1941), which quoted with approval 19 C.J.S. Corporations § 1772 (1940) at 1562; 'After a corporation has become effectively dissolved in any mode known to the law, its power to sue or be sued, either in actions in personam or in rem, in its corporate name is extinguished * * *.' (Emphasis added); Callahan v. Clemens, 184 Md. 520, 41 A.2d 473 (1945); and In re Hare, 205 F.Supp. 881 (D.Md.1962).
The Parkside Corporation would like to rely on District of Columbia law, which it says is to the contrary. We find no indication in the record that the Parkside Corporation took the steps required to invoke the benefit of foreign law.
Maryland has adopted the Uniform Judicial Notice of Foreign Law Act, Code Art. 35, §§ 47-53 . § 50 of the Act provides that:
'Any party may also present to the trial court any admissible evidence of such laws, but, to enable a party to offer evidence of the law in another jurisdiction or to ask that judicial notice be taken thereof, reasonable notice shall be given to the adverse parties either in the pleadings or otherwise.'
This Court, speaking through Judge Johnson, pointed out in Prudential Insurance Co. v. Shumaker, 178 Md. 189, 12 A.2d 618 (1940) that,
'* * * in order for a litigant to invoke the benefits of such foreign law it...
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...upheld the forfeiture of a down payment amounting to 10% of the purchase price of a shopping center.4 See Parkside Terrace Apts. v. Lindner, 252 Md. 271, 249 A.2d 717 (1969).5 The jury had been instructed concerning whether or not the contract had been 'voided' predicated upon the testimony......
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