16 N.Y.S. 578 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
Lead Opinion
We think this judgment must be reversed, because no contract was ever completely made between the plaintiff and the defendant Patrick for the purchase.and sale of the premises. On the 14th of January, 1885, the plaintiff sent by one Truesdell to the defendant Patrick a writing signed by herself, as follows:
“I, Edwin L. Patrick, hereby agree to sell, and Jennie K. Hamilton agrees to buy, for two hundred dollars, the following described premises, located in the town of Caldwell, county of Warren, and state of New York, viz.: [Here follows a description.] A deed of said premises, with the usual full covenants of warranty, etc., in which deed the wife of said Edwin L. Patrick shall join, is to be executed and delivered to said Jennie K. Hamilton on or before March first, 1885, at which date said money shall be paid. This contract is to bind the heirs, executors, and administrators of each party.
“Dated January 14,1885. Jennie IC. Hamilton.”
The defendant Patrick received the writing, and added thereto at the bottom thereof the following, and signed the same, and delivered it to Truesdell for the plaintiff:
“I sign this contract with the consideration that you agree to build all of the line fence on said south line, running from said road described above' to the shore of Lake George, so that I have no expense.
“E. L. Patrick.
It was not necessary that the plaintiff should sign the contract as modified by the addition made to it by Patrick. Justice v. Lang, 42 N. Y. 493; McCrea v. Purmort, 16 Wend. 465. But it was necessary that the plaintiff should in some way assent to it in its modified form; otherwise there would be no meeting of the minds of the parties; and it was necessary that she should communicate that assent or acceptance to Patrick within a reasonable time, or place the notice of assent or acceptance in the proper way of reaching him within a reasonable time. White v. Corlies, 46 N. Y. 467. The court said in the case cited: “ Where the offer is made by one party to another when they are not together, the acceptance of it by that other must be manifested by some appropriate act. * * * A mental determination, not indicated by speech, or put in course of indication by act to the other party, is not an acceptance which will bind the other. ” An acceptance not thus communicated to the proposer or his agent does nob make a contract. Railroad Co. v. Dane, 43 N. Y. 240; Pol. Cont. 26; Mclver v. Richardson, 1 Maule & S. 557; Mozley v. Tinkler, 1 Cromp. M. & R. 692; Russell v. Thornton, 4 Hurl. & N. 788.
Where the parties are together, and the proposal as written and signed is delivered and received as a completed contract, the assent thereto of the non-signing party may be inferred from the transaction. Here the plaintiff was in New York, and the defendant Patrick at Lake George, and until the plaintiff should communicate or transmit her acceptance to Patrick there would be no actual meeting of the minds of the parties. The appeal-book recites: “The contract [that is, the writing] was put in evidence, its execution being admitted, marked, ‘ Plff. 24.’” This was an admission of the execution of the paper, but no admission of anything else,—certainly not that
The letter written by plaintiff’s husband to Brown, the surveyor, and Brown’s communication of its contents to Patrick, was not the act of the plaintiff. But, if it had been, it fell short of an acceptance; it was rather an act showing that acceptance was held in abeyance. The letter stated: “We desire to have included in the piece of land as much of the shore as can fairly and properly be done under the contract, and as many of the trees as can fairly be included within the lines. If there is any vagueness or error in the description, I hope you will confer with Dr. Patrick, and have it made right. I drew the description in the contract ‘A ’ without being on the spot, and for that reason it may need correcting. ” Nothing was said in the letter about the line fence, but Patrick at the time told Brown that tie would not sell the land unless plaintiff would build the line fence. Thus the-plaintiff’s husband clearly intimated his fear that the “contract” was inadequate to secure to him all the land he wanted, and Patrick was still uncertain as to whether his proposition about the line fence was acceptable, or would be accepted. One party kept aloof from closing the contract until the survey should prove satisfactory, and the other kept aloof until the line fence should be brought within the agreement. They never by mutual acts came any nearer together. A proposal may by its terms limit the time for acceptance. Especially is this so in the sale of an option, or where the contract embraces one. In such cases the right of acceptance is a contract right, and the proposal cannot be revoked otherwise than within the terms of the contract. When no limitation is expressed in terms in cases where the right of acceptance is a contract right, the rule is that the acceptance must'be made within a reasonable time, and w'hat is a reasonable time depends upon the circumstances. Fitzpatrick, v. Woodruff, 96 N. Y. 561; Wooster v. Sage, 67 N. Y. 68. When Patrick, made the addition to the plaintiff’s proposal, the whole paper became Patrick’s proposal. It was not founded upon any consideration. Patrick proposed in anticipation of receiving an acceptance, not in consideration of any present1 promise or benefit. His proposal, therefore, vested no contract right in the plaintiff. The only right she had was to accept the proposal while it was open. As it was a purely voluntary proposal, Patrick could withdraw it at his pleasure. It is plain that he kept it open until the 1st day of March had passed. It' is not clear tiiat he kept it open any longer. The proposal itself implies the necessity of acceptance on or before that day. It is therein proposed that the deed should be executed and delivered to the plaintiff “on or before March 1, 1885, at which date said money shall be paid.” Acceptance must precede any obligation to perform, and of necessity must be made so as to admit of performance as proposed. Any subsequent acceptance would imply a contract different from the terms proposed. " Such a change cannot be unilateral, but must be mutual. Patrick could not be forced by the plaintiff to make any change, however slight. Parties may be as unreasonable as they please about entering into a contract. The equitable rules which the .courts sometimes resort to in construing a contract after it is made cannot be resorted to to compel a party to adhere to his voluntary proposal to make one. A proposal may be revoked at any time before acceptance. Quick v. Wheeler, 78 N. Y. 300. It is plain that an offer to sell, made without consideration, is a nudum pactum, and therefore the proposer may change his mind; if the■otlier party accepts after such change, their two minds do not meet,- and hence mo contract is made. It will not, however, be presumed that he has changed Ms mind within the time obviously allowed for acceptance, unless he does some act indicating such change. Suppose that, notwithstanding March 1st
The defendant Mrs. Tremain urges further grounds for reversal, based in part upon facts touching the good faith of her purchase from Patrick. As the judgment must be reversed for the reasons, above considered, we do not deem it needful to set forth such facts or prolong this discussion. Judgment reversed, new trial granted, costs of this appeal to abide event.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) The complaint alleges that by a writing dated January 14, 1885, signed by plaintiff and defendant Edwin L. Patrick, the said defendant contracted to sell a certain lot of land to plaintiff for a certain price, and that a copy of the agieement is annexed, marked “A;” that subsequently plaintiff caused the land to be surveyed, and a description made, and that the same was submitted to Patrick, and approved by him; and that it was agreed that the land should be conveyed by that description. The answer of defendant Patrick admits that at the time of the execution of the agreement referred to in the complaint he owned the land; that the agreement referred to in the complaint was signed by himself and plaintiff, and was similar to Schedule A, but he cannot state whether said copy is an exact copy of the agreement or not. He avers that by the terms of the agreement the purchase price was to be paid on delivery of the deed. He admits the making of the survey and the description, and avers that he and his wife did, on or before March 1, 1885, execute and tender to plaintiff a deed substantially according to said description. He avers that on, and for a long while prior to, the 1st of March, 1885, and at all times, he was ready and willing and able to perform said agreement with plaintiff, until plaintiff failed and refused to perform it on her part, and that she failed to perform it on her part for many weeks after March 1, 1885. On the trial the original contract was put in evidence, and its execution admitted.- It agrees with Schedule A, attached to the complaint.
If, then, this written contract was binding, its terms were that Patrick and his wife were to execute and deliver the deed to plaintiff on or before March 1, 1885, at which date the money was to be paid. * The defendant Patrick and his wife executed the deed about February 24th. Ho doubt existed in their minds at that time that Patrick had contracted in writing to sell the land to plaintiff; and he supposed that; unless plaintiff paid him the money by March 1st, the contract was at an end, and he might make a better bargain if he could. It is evident from the letter of Patrick that, in his view of plaintiff’s rights, she “slept on her privilege, ” and, by neglecting to tender him the $200 on or before March 1st, lost all claim to the land. In that belief he proceeded subsequently to sell it to Mrs. Tremain, one of the defendants. The delivery of the deed and the payment of the money were to be contemporaneous. If either party, therefore, would put the other in default, he must tender performance, and demand performance from the other. Time is not generally regarded in equity as the essence of the contract. Duffy v. O’Donovan, 46 N. Y. 223; Hubbell v. Van Schoeing, 49 N. Y. 326; Edgerton v. Peckham, 11 Paige, 352. From the time of making the contract equity regards the vendee as the owner of the property, and the vendor as a creditor for the purchase money, with security therefor on the land. Lewis v. Smith, 9 N. Y. 502. Hence it comes that, as the vendor is treated as equitably a mortgagee, the vendee is not to lose his equitably mortgaged land by mere non-payment of the debt at the law day. The rules on this point are well settled in Webb v. Hughes, L. R. 10 Eq. 281, where it is said: “A purchaser may by the terms of the agreement make time the essence of the contract, but it requires a very strict stipulation to effect that object. ” 3 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 1208; 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 776. How, it appears from the testimony of defendant Patrick that he heard that plaintiff and her husband were sick; then that they were getting better; and it came so near the 1st of March that he felt anxious about the money. He did not, however, write to plaintiff, who was then in Hew York, nor did he tender, or cause to be tendered, to her the deed. His daughter,
We think that the finding of the court that defendants Mrs. and Mr. Tremain had notice of plaintiff’s contract with Patrick before the deed was delivered to Mrs. Tremain is sustained by the evidence. Mrs. Tremain drew up the deed to herself from the dictation of Patrick. He read from the deed which he had executed to plaintiff, and told her what that deed was. She said she was astonished, and that, if plaintiff had any rights, she (Mrs. Tremain) would have nothing to do with it. Patrick said plaintiff had none, and Mrs. Tremain said she would take his word for it. A letter of Patrick to Mrs. Tremain of March 12th refers to the contract. It is not necessary to repeat the other testimony tending to show either actual notice or facts sufficient to put Mr. and Mrs. Tremain upon inquiry. They did not inquire of the persons who could have told them,—their near neighbors and old friends, plaintiff and her husband. Reed v. Gannon, 50 N. Y. 349. In my opinion, the judgment of the court below was right, and should be affirmed, with costs.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring.) I do not think the answer in this case was such an of the terms of the contract, as alleged in the complaint, as to justify the plaintiff’s recovery upon the pleadings alone. The proof at the trial fails to show that the minds of the parties met upon the proposition as to building fence, imposed by the defendant as a condition of signing the proposed contract.