202 Mass. 177 | Mass. | 1909
The defendant’s written offer of November 25,
1903, and the plaintiff’s acceptance of that offer, made by a vote of its directors and communicated to the defendant on the same day, as the jury might have found, were enough, if sufficiently definite in its terms, to constitute a binding contract between the parties. Metropolitan Coal Co. v. Boutell Transportation Towing Co. 196 Mass. 72, 82. Howe v. Watson, 179 Mass. 30, 39. Lydig v. Braman, 177 Mass. 212, 218. Doherty v. Hill, 144 Mass. 465, 468. Sanborn v. Flagler, 9 Allen, 474. But the offer was also accepted in writing by the plaintiff’s letter of December 1; and the plaintiff had, as stated in Metropolitan Coal Co. v. Boutell Transportation & Towing Co., ubi supra, the right to rely upon each one of these acceptances.
The defendant’s contention is that its offer was upon its face
. Nor was the defendant’s offer too uncertain and indefinite to be the foundation of a final agreement. It contemplated the renewal or extension of the first mortgage, of course upon its present rate of interest and other terms and conditions. The provision that it should be placed “ for a term of years ” is not too indefinite; it may be a question of law whether the words “ a term of years ” would be satisfied by a term of one year or would call for at least two years; but such a question of law, which would be decided in accordance with the actual intent of the parties, as shown by the words used, does not make the stip
The defendant has argued that the plaintiff made no acceptance of its offer. But this was plainly a question of fact for the jury-
There was evidence that the defendant on December 15 “ formally and definitely stated to the plaintiff that it would decline to carry out any agreement or to complete any purchase of the property in question unless a three years’ extension of the existing mortgage should be obtained.” There can be no doubt that this was a breach by the defendant of its agreement, which operatéd to excuse the plaintiff from any further performance or
And as to the second count, we are of opinion that the verdict was rightly ordered. The mortgagee refused to make such an extension of the mortgage as was desired, and finally sold the property by public auction under the power of sale contained in the mortgage, for an amount which apparently was only slightly, if at all, more than enough to provide for the payment of that mortgage and the intervening charges. The evidence would not have warranted a finding that there was any conspiracy between the defendant and the mortgagee to deprive the plaintiff of its rights or to disable it from performing its contract. The mortgagee did nothing more than it had a right to do; and the defendant committed no further breach of its agreement with the plaintiff by availing itself of the opportunity offered-by the mortgagee’s action to secure the property for its own benefit, if we assume that this was what it did do, for a smaller price than that stipulated in its agreement with the plaintiff.
Nor did the defendant violate any contractual obligation to the plaintiff by desiring even with insistence that the property should be put up again by the auctioneer when, after it had been knocked down to Mr. Flattery the plaintiff’s representative, he failed to secure the bargain by making the required deposit of $5,000 in cash. The mortgagee’s attorney and the auctioneer had the right to refuse to receive a cashier’s check instead of actual money, especially under the circumstances stated in the bill of exceptions, or to give Mr. Flattery time to procure the money thereon. Whether these circumstances could be made the ground of a bill in equity to avoid the sale is not before us. The decisions of this court are decisive against the plaintiff
But as a general verdict was directed for the defendant, in accordance with the terms of the report there must be a new trial.
So ordered.