OPINION OF THE COURT
In July 1988, defendant Victor Cornelius (hereinafter defendant) became the sole owner of a parcel of real property known as “Teviotdale”, a large historic home located in the Town of Livingston, Columbia County. Subject to a mortgage foreclosure proceeding by August 1991, defendant was receptive to plaintiffs unsolicited inquiry about its availability. An agreement was ultimately reached on September 10, 1991 wherein plaintiff purchased a one-half interest in the property for $300,000 pursuant to a joint tenancy agreement which specified that for the next four years, they were to share the property 10 months per year and that each would have sole use thereof for one month. Defendant was also granted, and did ultimately exercise, the right to buy plaintiffs share of the property within three months after the fourth anniversary of the closing. The agreement further provided, inter alia, as follows: “Should either party purchase the entire property and within twenty years thereafter offer it for sale, the other party has the option to purchase the property for $800,000.00 plus a sum reflecting the benefit of any capital improvements made subsequent to the buyout.” This action addresses whether the above provision created an option to purchase, triggered when the property was listed for sale in August 1997 with a real estate broker,
A right of first refusal binds a party who wishes to sell property not to do so without first giving another the opportunity to purchase such property at a specified price (see, LIN Broadcasting Corp. v Metromedia, Inc.,
Finding the terms of the contract to be clear and unambiguous, we need not resort to extrinsic evidence (see, Chimart Assocs. v Paul,
Mercure, J. P., Crew III, Spain and Graffeo, JJ., concur.
Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
Notes
Defendant maintains that he had never authorized any listing of Teviotdale, other than to rent the recently renovated basement apartment. He simply inquired, while discussing such rental, whether the broker could ascertain its current market value. Whether such listing was intentional or inadvertent is not relevant to the determination of this appeal.
