92 N.J. Eq. 487 | New York Court of Chancery | 1921
It may be here assumed that the parties to a contract for the sale of real estate are privileged to contract that the time stipulated for payment of the purchase price shall be deemed essential, to the end that failure of the purchaser to pay at the time named shall terminate his right to enforce the contract.
It is a wholly different and independent question whether in such a contract in which the payments are .to be made in a series of installments a failure to pay an installment on a stipulated day will be operative to forfeit all prior payments under a clause of the contract providing that in case of default the amount theretofore paid shall be deemed liquidated damages; in such circumstances the drastic or unconscionable stipulated effect of a failure to pay a relatively insignificant and perhaps final installment on the day named may well justify a court in regarding the forfeiture clause a penalty and unenforceable as such.
In this case the right of defendant to retain the moneys paid is not involved. The question here presented is whether time is so far the essence of the contract as to deny to complainant the right to its specific enforcement.
In contracts of the nature of the one here in question time is not of the essence of the contract unless made so by the terms of the contract, or by circumstances of the case which are not here present. In this contract, however, it is specifically stipulated that time of payment is to be regarded as of its essence.
But while the parties are privileged to make a binding stipulation of that nature, they are equally privileged to unmake it after it has been made.
The present contract made the purchase price of the lots $300. It stipulated that $10 should be paid in cash at the signing of the contract, and that the balance should be paid in monthly payments of $6 each until the full purchase price should be paid. The initial payment of $10 was made pursuant to the contract, and thereafter eighteen payments were made and accepted by the vendor in practically total disregard of the stipulations of the contract touching the times and amounts of payment. These several nineteen payments embraced a period from June 10th, 1915, the date of the contract, to February 11th, 1919,'and left
From all the testimony it seems clear that the attitude of defendant in relation to this contract, and the consequent course of dealing of the parties with reference to it, was such as to fully justify complainant in the confident belief which he undoubtedly
My conclusion is that the terms of the contract here in question, in so far as they may be said to have privileged defendant to terminate the contract without notice to complainant by reason of delinquency in payment became inoperative and unenforceable by defendant without notice to complainant by reason of the fact that the negotiations and long continued course of dealings of the parties under the contract fully justified complainant in acting under that assumption.
■ Complainant elects to accept a decree for specific performance, subject to the rights of Mrs. Gallagher, as lessee, with option of purchase. Such an election is permissible; so long as the decree
A decree of that nature will be advised. Defendant will account for any rents received under the Gallagher lease. Unless the amount can be agreed upon a reference will be made.