417 So. 2d 701 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1982
The appellants, Mr. and Mrs. Chambers, appeal from a final judgment denying them specific performance of a contract for the sale of land located in Orange County, Florida.
The evidence at trial indicates that in early 1980, Mrs. Chambers, who lived in Arizona, contacted Mr. Siler, an Ohio resident, about selling his Florida property. Mrs. Chambers testified that she told Siler that she could not close until after July 2, 1980, when some certificates of deposit matured. She offered him a $1,000 deposit and the balance of $24,000 in cash at closing. Mrs. Chambers said she called Siler on the 5th of July and told him she was ready to complete the deal. She said she called him on several occasions, and that he told her not to worry.
Siler would not sign the contract without the $1,000 deposit; on September 30, 1980,
At trial, the Chamberses’ attorney introduced a warranty deed that had been executed in Ohio by Siler’s wife. The deed had been prepared by the Chamberses’ attorney, and named them grantees. At the end of the trial, the trial judge orally found for the Silers, and had their attorney draft a final order. This appeal ensued.
The trial court set forth several bases to support its conclusion that the contract was unenforceable. One of those bases was “that the Plaintiffs made an election of remedies on January 14, 1981 (under paragraph 4 of the Contract) by instructing their attorney to demand the return of the deposit, and that Defendants accepted said election and tendered the return of the deposit.”
The proof in this regard is that on January 14, 1981, the Chamberses’ attorney sent Siler a letter which said in relevant part:
This is also to advise you that if this transaction is not closed by February 1, 1981, my clients have instructed me that they will want all of their money back and that they will not proceed any further in this matter.
The question, then, is whether or not Siler tendered the $1,000 back to the attorney for the Chamberses prior to the filing of the specific performance suit on January 23, 1981. The evidence in this regard is that sometime between Siler’s receipt of the aforesaid letter and February 1, 1981, he went to the office of Attorney McLeod, who
AFFIRMED.
. While the $1,000 deposit demanded by Siler was not even sent until September 30, 1980, the contract itself had a “time for acceptance” date, J.e., the date by which both parties were required to execute the contract for it to be effective, of June 27.