Plaintiff Clark Hinsdale appeals from a decision of the Chittenden Superior Court granting defendants Crosby and Helen Sherman’s motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to VR.C.R 12(c). The court ruled that defendants’ purchase of a lot of land according to an existing purchase and sale agreement did not trigger plaintiff’s later-granted option to purchase the same land. On appeal, plaintiff argues that defendants took the land subject to the option contract because, at the time of purchase, defendants had notice of the option. We affirm.
This action arose from a series of agreements that defendants Arthur and Martha Burleigh made regarding the conveyance of Lot No. 3 of the Cedar Crest at Spear Development. On April 11, 1994, the Burleighs entered into a purchase and sale agreement with the Shermans to purchase Lot No. 3 for $51,000. On May 31, 1994, the Burleighs executed a “Right of First Refusal” to plaintiff for Lot No. 3. Specifically, the Burleighs granted plaintiff the right to purchase Lot No. 3 “[i]n the event that [Burleighs] shall not convey lot 3 according to the terms of a certain purchase and sale agreement between [Burleighs] and [Shermans], and amendments thereto” (emphasis added). On June 10, 1994,
Plaintiff brought suit, claiming that by reducing the price of Lot No. 3 from $51,000 to $47,000, defendants failed to convey the property “according to the terms” of the Sherman/Burleigh purchase and sale agreement and this reduction triggered his right to purchase the lot. The Shermans moved for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to VR.C.R 12(c). The trial court held that the minor price reduction did not trigger plaintiff’s option to purchase under the Hinsdale/ Burleigh agreement because the Burleighs did not break free from their contract with the Shermans. Plaintiff appeals, arguing that because the Shermans knew of the Hinsdale/Burleigh agreement when they closed on Lot No. 3, they took the property subject to plaintiff’s option.
On review of a motion for judgment on the pleadings, we will consider “all the factual allegations in the pleadings of the nonmoving party and all reasonable inferences that can be drawn from them to be true and allegations to the contrary by the moving party to be false.” In re Estate of Gorton,
The only question we must address is whether the terms of the sale of Lot No. 3 between the Shermans and the Burleighs triggered plaintiff’s option to purchase the lot. Although the Hinsdale/ Burleigh agreement was titled “Right of First Refusal,” in actuality the contract more closely resembled an option contract — plaintiff had the option to buy Lot No. 3 if and when the deal between the Shermans and the Burleighs was not completed. See Cameron v. Double A. Services, Inc.,
The interpretation of the Hinsdale/ Burleigh contract is a matter of law. Morrisseau v. Fayette,
Plaintiff argues that because the Shermans knew of the Hinsdale/Burleigh
Affirmed.
