97 N.J. Eq. 91 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1925
After this cause was decided counsel for the complainants suggested that the question of specific performance, with an abatement of the purchase price, had not been sufficiently argued. Leave to reargue this point was given.
The complainants cite Luczak v. Mariove,
In Rittenhouse v. Swieciki,
In Coltinuk v. Hockstein,
In Epstein v. Mundweiler,
In the foregoing cases the clauses were inserted for the benefit of the vendee. Here there was an exchange of properties, and the clause inserted was for the benefit of both parties, namely, that, if either party was unable to perform, the contract was to be at an end, and neither party was to *94 be liable to the other thereunder; and, in order to effectuate this, as the party of the first part received a deposit of $500, which was paid as the difference between the values of the properties to be exchanged, this sum was to be returned by the defendants to the complainants.
The defendants cite Bateman v. Riley,
There is also absent from this case what has frequently appeared in others, namely, that the refusal of the wife to convey was due to an increase in the value of the property, or other circumstances which would move the defendants not to convey.
I, therefore, see no reason to change the view expressed in my memorandum filed March 2d 1925. *95