In this action for an accounting and payment of profits due on an oral contract, the defendants moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s amended complaint under Mass.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and 56,
In her amended complaint and affidavit in opposition to the defendants’ rule 56 motion, the plaintiff alleges: (1) that shortly before selling her land to the defendants for $125,000, she discovered that the defendants had negotiated to lease the property to the Commonwealth; (2) that the plaintiff confronted the defendants with her knowledge of the lease, but that she conveyed the land to them anyway in reliance on their oral promise that she could repurchase it at the same price; (3) that thereafter she desired to exercise her option, but the defendants orally promised her that if she would refrain from so doing, she “would be paid one-fourth of the profits from the operation of the premises”; (4) that she decided to accept their offer rather than seek a rescission of the conveyance of the realty to them; and (5) that the defendants have never paid her any of the profits. There is no showing in the plaintiffs complaint and affidavit that, other than subjectively, she ever gave up the purported option to have the property reconveyed. Even assuming the truth of these allegations, we view them as too vague and indefinite to be enforceable. “The difficulty here is that the [agreement] sued on is silent as to material matters important in its interpretation for the ascertainment of the obligations of the parties and the evidence of the circumstances surrounding its making is not such as to permit by inference the supplying of the lack. ‘Many of the essential terms necessarily involved in the proposed undertaking are not set forth and without them no enforceable contract is shown.’ Kaufman v. Lennox,
Because the plaintiff s action was properly dismissed on the basis that the contract was too vague and indefinite to be enforceable, we need not consider the defendants’ alternative grounds in support of the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
