92 A.D.2d 1 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1983
OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant, vendee appeals from a judgment which compels him to specifically perform an agreement to purchase real and personal property associated with an automobile dealership operated by plaintiff Hadcock Motors, Inc. The underlying issue is whether defendant’s repudiation of the contract excuses the plaintiff vendors’ failure to perform, after the commencement of the specific performance action, an explicit contractual condition. We hold that plaintiffs’ inability to prove performance of the condition constitutes a bar to the grant of specific performance.
On April 6, 1979 the parties entered into a “Buy and Sell” agreement which included assets used in the conduct of a Chevrolet agency in Fair Haven, New York, consisting of: (1) described real property, (2) furniture, fixtures, equipment and tools which were itemized and described in an attached Exhibit B which specified their location in “sales office”, “outer office”, “parts department” and “shop” and, (3) all inventory of parts, accessories, batteries, tires, gas and oil “on premises on date of transfer”. The purchase price was apportioned in dollar amount respectively to land, buildings, equipment and inventory. An adjustment of the price of the inventory based on the value of these items on the premises on the date of transfer was provided for. Accounts payable and receivable and unfilled orders for Chevrolet products were not subject to the purchase agreement and remained plaintiffs’ property and responsibility. As conditions precedent to the sale, the agreement required written approval of the transaction by General Motors and “[alpproval of the [pjurchaser as a dealer by the General Motors Corporation, Chevrolet Division” prior to July 16, 1979, the designated closing date of the transaction. Further, and of more central concern on this appeal, the agreement contained the proviso that, pending the closing, plaintiffs shall continue to conduct the “agency in
On or about July 24, 1979 the parties were notified orally by a representative of the Chevrolet regional office that the transaction involving the change of ownership had been approved and that General Motors had approved defendant’s proposal for a Chevrolet franchise. The franchise approval was in writing, although no copy was forwarded to defendant. Thereafter, defendant communicated a request for an October 1, 1979 closing date which met with plaintiffs’ approval. On October 9, 1979 redated abstracts of title and a survey map were transmitted to defendant’s attorney by plaintiffs’ attorney who requested an early closing date. A copy of the proposed deed and an amended survey map was forwarded on October 11, 1979. On October 10,1979 defendant advertised the introduction of the new 1980 Chevrolet and invited the public to visit “Metzger Chevrolet”, the “new Chevrolet dealer in Fair Haven”. At the showing he introduced himself as the new owner of the dealership. On October 22, 1979 defendant’s attorney raised objection to the title, returned the abstracts and requested a fee title insurance policy for reasons stated in his transmittál letter. He also requested compliance with the “Bulk Sales Act”
Following a nonjury trial, specific performance was granted to plaintiffs and defendant was directed to pay the purchase price expressed in the contract with an abatement for the value of the equipment described in Exhibit B
While we agree that defendant complied with or waived the conditions precedent concerning General Motors’ approval, that plaintiff established its ability to convey clear title and to comply with the “Bulk Sales Act”
Specific performance is a discretionary remedy which is an alternative to the award of damages as a means of enforcing a contract. A party who seeks specific performance must prove that he has substantially performed his contractual obligations or tendered performance within the time specified in the agreement or within a reasonable time thereafter; that he is ready, willing and able to perform those contractual obligations not yet performed and not waived by the defendant; and that, except where
If we were able to find that the contract at issue was essentially one for the sale of real property, there would be no difficulty in concluding that plaintiffs are entitled to specific performance with abatement. Plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that they stand willing to perform their obligations and responsibilities under the contract. A title policy admitted into evidence and the testimony of the title insurance underwriter substantiate the claim that plaintiffs were ready, willing and able to convey good, and marketable title to the real property. Although defendant argues that the wives of the individual plaintiffs who had an interest in the property would not execute the necessary documents for the sale, there was no evidence to this effect and this was a question of fact which was determined in plaintiffs’ favor. Further, it was defendant’s duty to obtain the written approval of General Motors and, since he never requested such approval, this condition precedent was waived. In any event, plaintiffs met their burden of proof on this issue since the evidence shows that the failure to perform this condition was due to defendant’s conduct and that General Motors’ policy is to provide written approval only after the resignation of the existing dealer has been submitted (see Weisner v 791 Park Ave. Corp., 6 NY2d 426; Norgate Homes v Central State Bank, 82 AD2d 849, 850; Alderman v Central N. Y. Arterial Markets, 24 AD2d 1046).
However, before decreeing specific performance, a court of equity must look at the substance and not merely the letter of the contract to determine the intent of the parties
There is no doubt and the record establishes that defendant’s repudiation of the contract was a factor in the chain of events which led to plaintiffs’ surrender of the franchise, and undoubtedly had an effect on plaintiffs’ ability to continue the operation of the business. Used cars which were not included in the sale were wholesaled and new vehicles were minimally ordered in anticipation of defendant’s takeover. During this period there was a general downswing in automobile sales and interest rates increased. Moreover, there is evidence that plaintiffs’ operation lost credibility due to defendant’s announcement of
This condition was an integral part of the contract and its performance by the parties seeking enforcement of the contract was a prerequisite to the conveyance of the real and personal property. It was not a useless condition and defendant’s repudiation of the contract did not excuse plaintiffs from their obligation of proving its performance (see Ufitec, S.A. v Trade Bank & Trust Co., 21 AD2d 187, 190, affd 16 NY2d 698). So long as they insisted upon specific performance, they waived defendant’s repudiation of the contract (see Bowen v Horgan, 259 NY 267). Proof of performance of the condition, or at least a willingness to perform it or defendant’s waiver of default, was an essential element of their cause of action for specific performance. The proof demonstrates, however, that plaintiffs, for whatever reason, made an independent judgment during the pendency of this action to surrender the franchise, to put it beyond their power to perform the contractual condition and to destroy the basis of the contract. Their voluntary surrender of the franchise heralded their inability to comply with the contractual condition after that date.
Specific performance should “ ‘be withheld when * * * it appears that it will produce hardship or injustice to either of the parties.’ ” (Gordon v Mazur, 284 App Div 289, 293, affd 308 NY 861, supra.) It will not be decreed where it would violate the spirit of the contract or defeat the object for which the contract was made (see Phalen v United States Trust Co. of N. Y., 186 NY 178; see, also, 55 NY Jur,
By granting specific performance to plaintiffs the trial court, in essence, rewrote the contract between the parties to delete any implication of their intent to transfer an operating agency, made a new contract between them and directed the enforcement of a contract not intended by them. Under the conditions in this case specific performance is oppressive and inequitable and produces a harsh and unfair result. Simply put, equity will not grant specific performance in these circumstances because it will not aid a party who is himself in default of performance and it cannot decree that which plaintiffs are unable to perform.
Accordingly, specific performance should be denied to plaintiffs and the complaint dismissed.
Dillon, P. J., Callahan, Denman, and Boomer, JJ., concur.
Judgment unanimously reversed, on the law and facts, without costs, and complaint dismissed.
. Plaintiffs have not alleged a cause of action for damages.
. Uniform Commercial Code — Bulk Transfers (Uniform Commercial Code, § 6-101 et seg.). ■
. No proof was adduced as to the nature of the specific equipment that was available for conveyance under the agreement.
. The trial court found that from the act of surrendering the franchise “it can be assumed that business has not been conducted in the same manner since that time”.