158 N.Y.S. 944 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1916
Plaintiff brings this action for the cancellation of a certain instrument dated May 21, 1914, whereby defendant offered to give to plaintiff $25;000 for his farm located partly in the city of Bochester, and partly in the town of Brighton, Monroe county, containing 100 acres of land, which instrument provided that defendant would pay $100 down upon plaintiff’s accepting the offer, and “ six months after or before pay $9,900.00 of the purchase price, and also give a mortgage for the balance of $15,000.00 payable in ten years, or before, with interest at 5% per annum.” The instrument also provided that plaintiff was to furnish a warranty deed, good title, tax searches, etc. Both parties signed the instrument and defendánt paid to plaintiff $100.
The time for the payment of the $9,900 expired, according to the terms of this instrument, on the 21st day of November, 1914. Defendant did not make the payment, and offered as an excuse for such failure that owing to the European war there had arisen an unexpected stringency in the money market.
At least two or three times between the date of the instrument and the 21st day of November, 1914, when the $9,900 was to be paid, plaintiff informed defendant that he desired to know whether defendant would perform his part of the contract, and pay this money on or before the 21st day of November, 1914, because
On the 21st day of November, 1914, which was the last day stated in the instrument in question for the payment of the $9,900, defendant and his counsel saw plaintiff, and requested further time within which to make.the payment, which was due that day. Plaintiff asked defendant how long a time he would want, and defendant, or his attorney, replied that they could not tell, but they would get the money as soon as possible, but did not fix any time within which he would make the payment.
Plaintiff refused to grant any extension of time. He had on several occasions inquired of defendant if he was going to fulfill his agreement and make the payment by November twenty-first, and had received no reply. The latter knew ever since the instrument had been made that not later than November 21, 1914, he must pay the $9,900, and not until the last day had he asked for any extension of time. Plaintiff not receiving any reply to his inquiries as to whether or not defendant would make his payment, and receiving no promise or agreement as to any definite time when defendant would make the payment, went on and planted nursery stock on portions of the land in question, as he had a right to do.
On the 19th of January, 1915, and nearly two months after the time provided for in the instrument in question for the payment of the $9,900, defendant recorded
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the instrument in question was a mere option. Defendant’s contention is that it is a land contract, and on its execution he became the equitable owner of the property in question, subject to plaintiff’s lien for the balance of the unpaid purchase price of the property.
Whether the instrument in question is an option or land contract, I am satisfied that under the evidence in this case, and in view of the use made of this property, which was well known to defendant, portions of it being used for the planting and raising of nursery stock, and in view of plaintiff’s frequent inquiry of defendant before November 21, 1914, whether or not he expected to fulfill the agreement, to which inquiries defendant made no reply, it must be held that time was of the essence of the agreement, but if there was any doubt about it, under the terms of the instrument itself, the actions of the parties clearly made it so, for when plaintiff refused defendant’s request for an extension of payment to an indefinite time, they then and there made time of the essence of the transaction. "
When he asked for an extension plaintiff did not at first refuse it, but asked how long a time he wanted, or when he would be able to make the payment, or that in substance, and defendant replied in a most unsatisfactory way, saying that he could not tell how long, but that he would get the money as soon as possible. That really meant nothing to the plaintiff, and it would be most unreasonable and inequitable to expect plaintiff to hold his property and stand ready to convey it to defendant at any time when the latter could not or would not give him any sort of assurance as to when the payment would be made.
Much stress is laid by defendant on the fact that the instrument itself does not state the precise date on which the deed was to be delivered. The instrument was made May 21, 1914. It provided for the payment of $100 down, and ‘ ‘ six months after or before ’ ’ $9,900 of the purchase price was to be paid, and then a mortgage for the balance of $15,000 was to be given back to plaintiff, and it said “you (plaintiff) to furnish warranty deed,” etc. That plainly meant that at the latest, that is, the last day of the six months, the $9,900 was to be paid and at that time the deed was to be deliv
The instrument was not drawn by a lawyer, but by the defendant, and no other construction can properly be spelled out of the language used, than that when the $9,900 was paid and the mortgage given for the balance of the purchase price the deed was to be delivered. The practical construction placed on the instrument by the parties themselves justifies this interpretation, for on that very day plaintiff prepared, executed and tendered to defendant a deed of the premises and demanded his money, which defendant refused to pay for the reasons, above stated, and then plaintiff plainly notified him that the agreement was terminated, and in view of the circumstances established here it must be held that what he told defendant at that time, together with the correspondence and inquiries between the parties prior to that time as to whether or not defendant would make the payment when due, to which inquiries he made no reply, taken together, constituted a sufficient notice to defendant that upon his failure to live up to his part of the agreement the plaintiff regarded the incident as" closed.
It will be noticed that when this agreement was made the payment made by defendant was not a substantial one. His offer to purchase the farm for $25,000 was in pursuance of a venture to speculate in this property by dividing it up into city lots and selling them. It would be a manifest injustice to plaintiff to say that defendant could hold him indefinitely under an agreement to sell this farm when so small a payment had been made, when the property was advancing in value, when defendant defaulted in his first substantial payment and gave no reasonable encouragement as to when any future payment would be made.
Under these circumstances defendant is not entitled
Nearly two months after his default defendant placed this instrument on record in Monroe county clerk’s office, and while it stands on the record it would embarrass plaintiff if he should desire to dispose of his property, and he can maintain an action to remove this apparent cloud on his title. Stokes v. Houghton, 16 App. Div. 381; Code Civ. Pro., §§ 1638, 1639.
Under the circumstances specific performance must be denied the defendant, and plaintiff is entitled to be relieved from the cloud on Ms title.
Judgment is, therefore, directed in favor of plaintiff for the relief demanded in the complaint, with costs to be taxed.
Judgment for plaintiff, with costs.