62 A.2d 516 | Conn. | 1948
The plaintiff brought this action on a written contract for the sale of the defendant's apartment house and furniture therein, seeking specific performance of the agreement, a decree for a conveyance, and damages. The plaintiff's claims for a jury trial were overruled and the court, having concluded that the plaintiff was not ready and willing to perform its *155 part of the agreement and that the defendant was ready, willing and able to do so, rendered judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff has appealed.
As presented upon the argument before us, the undisputed facts found by the court may be thus summarized: The defendant owned an apartment house in New Haven and on May 6, 1946, entered into a written agreement to sell it to the plaintiff. A down payment of $300 was then made to the defendant as therein provided. A further provision of the agreement was: "It is understood and agreed between the Seller and the Buyer herein that all of the furniture now found and located in the various apartments and belonging to the Seller goes with this sale and is to be transferred by Bill of Sale from the Seller to the Buyer at the time of the closing of this transaction." When the agreement was executed the parties understood and intended that this provision applied to the furniture in three only of the apartments, since that in the other twelve belonged to the tenants, as the plaintiff well knew. By the terms of the agreement $18,000 was the purchase price, which the plaintiff was to pay by assuming an existing first mortgage of $9792.91, executing a second mortgage of $2207.09, and paying the balance, above the $300 deposit, in cash, and it was "understood that the transaction shall be closed on or before May 31, 1946 at the offices of Samuel M. Silver, Attorney." At about 3 p.m. on that day the parties, each acting by its president, met at Silver's office for the purpose of completing the sale.
Attorney Silver represented both parties. He had prepared a warranty deed of the premises, a mortgage deed and note, and a memorandum of various adjustments involved in the sale showing a balance of $5991.63 due from the plaintiff to the defendant. *156 Since he had no list of the furniture, he had not prepared a bill of sale of the personalty to be transferred. After the warranty deed and a copy of the adjustment sheet had been handed to the defendant, and the mortgage deed and note and a copy of the sheet to the plaintiff, a dispute arose as to the furniture to be included in the bill of sale, the plaintiff claiming to be entitled to all of the furniture in the building, while the defendant insisted that the agreement called for that in the three apartments only, which it stated it was willing to transfer. After an hour and a half of discussion during which the plaintiff's president acted threateningly, he finally stated in substance that he did not want the property, swore and left. The defendant was ready, willing and able to give a deed in accord with the agreement. The plaintiff failed to perform its part of the agreement and the meeting concluded without any of the papers being signed and without any check being written or tendered for the purchase price, though the plaintiff had sufficient funds in its checking account to cover the cash payment called for under the adjustment sheet. On June 4, 1946, the plaintiff's certified check for $5991.63, the amount shown due by the adjustment sheet, was handed to attorney Silver at the county courthouse in New Haven. At no time did he receive word from the plaintiff of any change in its demand for all of the furniture in the apartments as indicated at the meeting on May 31. The only information he was able to elicit by a telephone call to the plaintiff was that the certified check was being left with him. After the plaintiff had disregarded several requests by Silver to call for the check, he returned it on June 27, 1946.
The agreement was plainly a bilateral contract providing for certain payments by the plaintiff and conveyances by the defendant. "It contained mutual and *157
dependent covenants demanding of each of the parties readiness and willingness to perform, and required as a condition of judicial enforcement or redress for breach at the complaint of either such readiness and willingness on the part of the complaining party or a showing of sufficient excuse for their absence. Lunde v. Minch,
The theory of the plaintiff's contention is that the defendant's failure to have a bill of sale prepared constituted a prevention of performance by the plaintiff within the principle stated in Godburn v. Meserve,
The plaintiff makes the further claim that time was not of the essence under this contract and that therefore the delivery of the certified check to Silver on June 4 constituted a tender of performance entitling it to relief. It is a sufficient answer that no such claim was made in the trial court. Practice Book 157, 363; Conn. App. Proc. 44; Boardman v. Burlingame,
Error is also assigned in the court's denial of a jury trial to the plaintiff. The essential right asserted in the plaintiff's prayers for relief upon its complaint, however, is equitable in its nature, and damages are sought in lieu of equitable relief or as supplemental to it in order to make that relief complete. The whole action is one in equity and the plaintiff was not entitled as a matter of right to a jury trial. Malkan v. Hemming,
The plaintiff's final claim is that the court erred in stating in its memorandum of decision that "the plaintiff's breach of the contract bars it, in an action on the contract, from recovering the $300 paid on account of the purchase price." No such conclusion appears in the finding, the memorandum of decision was not made a part of it, and no issue as to the plaintiff's right to recover this deposit is presented by the pleadings. The judgment involves no determination of this issue, and the plaintiff was not prejudiced by the court's statement quoted.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.