124 N.Y.S. 116 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
The complaint alleges that the defendant on February 28, 1905,. entered into two separate contracts in writing with one John O. Baker, whereby defendant agreed to purchase two separate parcels of real estate in the city of New York for $82,500 and $6,5.00 respectively, and paid $3,500 upon the purchase price, and agreed to pay the balance on April 28,1905, upon the delivery of the deed of said property, by paying $14,300. in cash and giving back purchase-money mortgages on the property for the balance of $71,200; that the plaintiff acted as broker for the said Baker and was entitled upon the making of said contract to a commission of one per cent upon the purchase price thereof, amounting to $825 and $65 respectively ; that the commission of $65 was then paid to plain tiff by said Baker; that plaintiff at the defendant’s request and upon his representation that the said contracts would be fulfilled, agreed with Baker to postpone the payment of his commission of $825 until the title should close under the said contract, and that said Baker, in consideration of said agreement, accepted a smaller payment than he otherwise would; that after the said contracts had been entered into with the said Baker and on the 28th of February, 1905, plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement whereby they agreed that the purchase of said property should be for their joint account and that they would share equally in the payment of the purchase price thereof and in any and- all expenses in connection therewith and in any and all losses or profits "upon a resale of said property and in any enhancement of the value of said property, and agreed to sell said property as soon as a profit of
Upon the trial plaintiff had a verdict for $1,750, one-half of the down payment paid by the plaintiff to the defendant for one-half interest in the contract.
■ The plaintiff was a real estate broker, and had been' interested in transactions in real estate in what is known as the Fort Washington ■ section. The defendant was a shoe dealér. At or about the time of the transactions under consideration there existed what is known as a “boom ” in Fort Washington property. It is apparent from the testimony that the plaintiff represented to the defendant that a profit could be made in dealing in such property by entering into contracts for the purchase thereof, and by selling said contracts at an advance before the time of closing. It is evident that neither ■ party intended to take title. They, hoped, within the sixty days between the date of the contract and the time fixed for closing, tti sell their contract for a profit which, as is clear from the complaint, they hoped would'amount to about $7,000, and they made efforts to ' carry out. their scheme by selling the contract. Unfortunately for them, they seem to have bought at the top of the market and were unable to accomplish their desire.
. The plaintiff himself testified : “ Our sole object was to dispose of these two contracts before they matured, if we could.” Plaintiff testified that on the seventeenth of April, in response to a message from the defendant, he went to his office. “ I asked him what he wanted about the building loan proposition. He said'that there was .
On April twenty-fifth the plaintiff wrote to the defendant: “ Confirming my conversation of the 17th inst. with you when’ I called at your above place with my bookkeeper, I beg to state that I am now and will be ready on the 28th to take title to the extent of my interest in both tiie Wadsworth Avenue block front and the Broadway triangular plot.” At the time of closing neither the plaintiff nor the defendant appeared or tendered performance on their part to Baker, the vendor.
■ The learned court charged as follows : “ If you reach the conclusion on the evidence that the contract was made between Becker and Seggie, and that Becker performed his part of the contract according to its terms .up to the 17th day of April, 1905, and that on that day Mr. Seggie breached the contract, repudiated it, and declared that he would not fulfill or perform it, and’ you find all these facts on a fair preponderance of the credible evidence, then the plaintiff may recover in this action against the defendant,, otherwise not. It is in evidence that Becker, after the 17th of April, 1905, did not tender any moneys to Seggie to close the contract with, and that he did not attend at the place of closing on the 27th or 28th of April, 1905, and that he did not tender the whole or his share of the purchase money to the seller, Baker, at the time of
It seems to me that the verdict of the jury, which must have been based upon the cohtention that there was a contract-bet ween the parties under which the defendant should take the title to the properties in question, was against the weight of evidence ; that the real transaction was simply an agreement to take a contract with the hope and expectation of being able to dispose of it at a profit before the time for completion arrived; that it was a joint venture, and that as it is conceded that both parties did all they could to dispose of this contract without success, and as the object thereof failed by their inability to dispose of it, each must bear the loss.
If, however, this is not so, then I think that the charge of the judge and the refusal to charge as requested was erroneous. If, as the complaint alleges, the plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement whereby they agreed that the purchase of said properties should be for their joint account, and that they would share equally in' the payment of the purchase price thereof, and as the plaintiff testified, “ The first time I made him the proposition that I would go in with him on this joint venture, and put up half the, purchase price and share half the profits,” then it was the obliga
The rule was stated by Lord Esher in Johnstone v. Milling (55 L. J. [N. S.] Q. B. Div. 162): “ That where there has been an anticipatory breach of contract, the repudiation of the contract or total refusal to perform it before the time for performance has arrived does not of- itself amount to a .breach of contract, but it may be acted on by the other party, and adopted by him as a rescission of the contract. That is to say, when one party refuses by anticipation to perform the contract, that is equivalent to a declaration by him that he thereby rescinds the contract so far as he can. But he cannot rescind it by himself. * * * The other party may elect to adopt it as a rescission by acting upon it, and by treating the contract as at an end except for the purpose of bringing an action upon it. He cannot, however, act on the contract as existing for other purposes, and at the same time bring an action upon it as if it had been rescinded. But he need not adopt the repudiation; he may elect not to do so, and may wait for the time when the contract-ought to be performed, and when the breach would naturally occur.”
In Zuck v. McClure & Co. (98 Penn. St. 541) it was held: '“A mere notice of an intended breach is not of itself a breach of the contract. It may become so if accepted and acted on by the other party. If the defendants had accépted the plaintiffs’ notice of breach contained in their letter of November 19th, and acted upon it, there would plainly have been a breach of the contract.”
In Howard v. Daly (61 N. Y. 362) the court cited Cookburn,
Judge Wallace in Marks v. Van Eeghen (85 Fed. Rep. 853), upon an examination of many cases, states the rule tq be: “ Where one party to an executory contract renounces it without cause, ■ before the time for performing it has elapsed, he authorizes the other party to treat it as terminated, without prejudice to a right of action for damages ; and, if the latter elects to treat the contract as terminated, his right of action accrues at once. The latter, however, must elect whether he. will treat the contract as terminated, or as still existing ; and, if he does nót do soy his right of action for a breach can only rest upon the refusal of the other party to, perform the existing contract according to its terms.”
In Bernstein v. Meech (130 N. Y. 354) it was held: “But whatever view may have been taken of the right .of the defendants to treat the-contract for the purposes of its performance as at an end and to áct upon that assumption -when they received the plaintiff’s letter they disposed of that question by their letter to him.. By this it appeared, that the defendants elected to keep the contract in force for the purposes for-which, it was made; This, operated alike upon the'rights of both parties, and the plaintiff, was justified in so understanding it. In that view the contract was kept ajive until the time arrived for performance, and the obligations of .the'defendants no less than those of the plaintiff for that purpose remained effectual.” In the case-at-bar-the plaintiff distinctly notified the defendant that he refused to accept his repudiation of the Contract and would hold him to his performance and would be ready himself to perform, thereby nullifying the alleged anticipatory breach. His own promise to pay one-half of the purchase price was.to be performed
The judgment and order appealed from should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Ingbaham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Milleb, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.