99 N.J. Eq. 563 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1926
The bill, as supplemented, is by the vendee against the vendors to compel them to convey a parcel of land in South Orange as they had contracted to do.
In the preface to the contract, dated March 10th, 1924, it is recited that the complainant was willing to buy if it could obtain a permit from the village of South Orange to erect on the land a four-story apartment-house, and that the defendants were willing to enter into a contract of sale and to give to the complainants until May 1st, 1924, to obtain the permit, and that the complainant was willing to enter into such a "conditional agreement," with the understanding that time was of the essence of the contract, and that in the event that the complainant failed to obtain a permit, or declined to take the property without a permit, on or before May 1st, the contract should be void upon the return to the complainant of its deposit of $1,000. In the body of the agreement the defendants bound themselves to convey the land to the complainant on May 1st, 1924, for the consideration therein stated, the contract, however, to be binding upon the complainant forthwith upon obtaining the permit by May 1st, and that title should be closed within thirty days after obtaining it, or such longer time as might be agreed upon; and if the complainant failed to obtain the permit before May 1st, the agreement should be null and void upon the return of the deposit. It was further agreed that if the complainant failed to apply for the permit within twenty-one days after the court of errors and appeals handed down a favorable decision in theNutley Zoning Case (Ignaciunas v. Nutley,
A word as to the practice. Setting up a maintainable new and inconsistent cause of action is not allowable after issue. The course is to take a dismissal without prejudice and start anew.Coddington v. Mott,
The complainant having by its original bill elected to be no longer bound by the contract is not privileged to again choose to be bound. Having committed itself to a recovery of the deposit, its right to have the property is forever gone. The election is irrevocable. Claron v. Thommessen,
It is the contention of the complainant that the subsequent conduct of the defendants, and the dealings of the parties, released it of its election, or, if not released, that the defendants are estopped from setting up the election. An election once made, being irrevocable, nothing short of a contract reviving the lost remedy will restore it. In Moller v. *570 Tuska,
While a contract of release, or a counter estoppel, is not deemed available to the complainant, nevertheless the reasons upon which it seeks to avoid the effect of its election will be considered and disposed of.
It cannot be said that the answer to the suit for the deposit, that it was not due because the time of performance had been extended until the decision in the mandamus suit, waived the election. The answer amounted to a denial of liability at that time, and the allegations therein of an agreement to extend the time was expressly denied by the complainant in its replication and its right to recover the money was re-asserted. The replication constituted a renewal of the disaffirmance of the contract. Nor can the complainant's choice of remedy be considered as falling within the class of cases where relief is given because of mistake of fact or law, *571 for, if there was, in fact, an extension of the time of performance, as the defendants alleged and the complainant denied, and which denial the complainant by its supplemental bill retracts, and wherein it affirms the contract, the complainant cannot escape the indictment that it brought its suit in bad faith and that it made its election with full knowledge of the agreement to which it was a party, if it be true, as it now claims, that there was such an agreement.
The representation of the complainant's counsel at the time he sought an adjournment of the hearing in January, 1925, that his client intended to take the property if the mandamus suit resulted favorably to his client, was merely by way of inducement to a consent to the postponement of the trial of the issue then before the court. There was no retreat by the complainant, or withdrawal of its repudiation of the contract; it was simply a self-serving assurance that it would take if the outcome of the suit at law, and the taking, would be advantageous, but otherwise it would adhere to its disaffirmance.
The willingness and the offer of the defendants to perform the contract after the supreme court ordered a permit was purely voluntary, without consideration, unaccepted until after withdrawal, and unexecuted, and it was only after a sharp rise in the value of the property (nearly double the contract price) pricked the cupidity of the complainant that the supplemental bill was filed.
The complainant must be held to its election and the bill will be dismissed. *572