110 Misc. 668 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1920
On or about the 29th day of August, 1919, the parties entered into a written agreement whereby the plaintiff agreed to purchase and the defendant agreed to sell a restaurant owned by the defendant. The contract provides that 1 ‘ the price is $20,000,. payable as follows: $1,000 as deposit, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged.” The remainder, under the terms of the contract, was payable at the time of the delivery of the bill of sale partly in cash and partly through the giving of a mortgage or mortgages. The plaintiff paid to the defendant $1,000 in accordance with the terms of the contract, and thereafter refused to proceed further with the
The plaintiff does not claim that the defendant has breached its contract to sell the restaurant by any failure or refusal to transfer the property it agreed to sell, but the trial justice ruled that the plaintiff can recover the amount paid on the contract even though the failure to consummate the contract is due to the plaintiff’s refusal to proceed, provided the moneys paid upon the contract were paid as a deposit and not as part of the purchase price, and he submitted to the jury the question whether in this case the moneys had in fact been paid by the plaintiff as a deposit or as part of the purchase price.
The plaintiff is clearly not entitled to recover in this action if the money was deposited as part payment under the contract of sale. “It is never permitted either at law or in equity, for one to recover back money paid on an executory contract that he had refused or neglected to perform. The plaintiff in the action before us sues for the whole amount of the money paid by the vendee. The defendant came by it rightfully; in pursuance of a contract lawfully made, between competent parties. He has made no breach of that contract. He has failed in no duty to the vendee. Wherefore, then, should he give up that which was rightfully his own! When and whereby did it cease to be his and be due to the vendee! If the contract had been kept by both parties, the money paid would still be his of right. The contract would have been kept but for the breach of it by the vendee. To allow a recovery of this money would be to sustain an action by a party on his own breach of his own contract,
Judgment reversed, with thirty dollars costs, and the complaint dismissed on the merits, with costs.
Fihch and Mullah, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with thirty dollars costs.