123 Misc. 339 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1924
The equities in this case are, in my opinion, all with the plaintiff. He purchased the defendant Frank Talbot’s glass business as a going concern for $8,000. As part of the understanding then had, he was to receive a lease of the real estate in which Frank Talbot was conducting the business, together with an option to purchase the said real estate for $20,000 within a certain period. This understanding was carried out in the lease in evidence containing such option. The lease was made by Frank Talbot, who represented that he owned the real estate. His wife, in fact, holding the title to the real estate, knew of the negotiations with the plaintiff, was present at intervals during the time the papers were being prepared, and although, in my opinion, under a clear duty to assert to the plaintiff her title to the real estate, remained silent. She never asserted her ownership of the real estate, although she did intimate that she would not move out of the premises. With her husband and family she did remove therefrom after the deal was consummated. I find that she had full knowledge of all those negotiations between her husband and the plaintiff, that to a certain extent she took part therein, and that her husband was her duly authorized agent fully empowered to sign the lease containing the option. Good conscience dictates that the bargain which was then made by the plaintiff should be carried out by both defendants, unless the law of the state, referred to in the learned brief of the defendants’ counsel, requires otherwise. The lot in question was placed in the name of the defendant wife, although purchased with the defendant Frank Talbot’s money exclusively. It was his money also with which the building was erected. At all times up to the date of the trial, without his wife’s protest and with her tacit consent, the defendant Frank Talbot was allowed to take all the rents, to pay all the carrying charges, to use the property as his own and the net proceeds of the rents for his own purposes. The defendant Jessie Talbot never made any demand upon him for payment for his use of the property
The option reads as follows: “ The landlord hereby grants to the tenant the sole option of purchasing the premises hereby demised at any time within a period of two years from April 1, 1922, for the sum of $20,000, of which $5,000 is to be paid in cash on the closing and $500 on the signing of the contract by the landlord; and in the event of such option being exercised the landlord agrees to give a full covenant and warranty deed to said premises.”
The defendant husband’s authority while ample for the purpose, was not in writing. It was not by law required to be in writing. Real Prop. Law, § 259. The option is, indeed, informal in that while it is definite in stating the purchase price as $20,000, the items of the payments to be made before or on the closing do not aggregate the amount of the full agreed purchase price. Of
As I have found that authority existed in the defendant Frank Talbot to sign the option on behalf of his wife, and that the accepted option is complete and enforcible against the now disclosed principal, Jessie Talbot, it follows that there must be judgment in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants for specific performance of the contract to sell the premises to the plaintiff for $20,000, which should be paid in cash to the defendant Jessie Talbot, who, in law, to the exclusion of her husband, owns the property. Both defendants will be directed to join in the deed, but as the defendant Frank Talbot was only his wife’s agent in the transaction, she alone should be bound by the covenants of title to be inserted in the form of deed required by the terms of the option. The plaintiff should have due credit upon the purchase price for any rent paid by him since the time of his acceptance of the option.
While I believe that the foregoing views are in accordance with the laws of the state and are also consonant with principles of exact justice in the instant case, I realize from the able brief of the defendants’ counsel that my conclusion may not be wholly free from doubt. I have studied with care the evidence in the light of. his earnest suggestion that whatever the defendant Jessie Talbot may have authorized her husband to do on her behalf in relation to the property, she did not authorize him to sell it, or know of the option. This suggestion I have overruled because I find that there is ample evidence of his general authority to deal with the property in every way on her behalf. I believe further that if the defendants, or either of them, desire to appeal from this determination, then upon such terms as may be found just, there should be a stay of proceedings pending a more authoritative ruling upon the rights of the parties.
Judgment for the plaintiff as indicated, with taxable costs and disbursements against the defendants. Thirty days stay to the defendants and sixty days to make a case. Decision signed. Defendants’ requests passed upon.
Judgment accordingly.