OPINION OF THE COURT
On December 13, 1995, defendants Mehmet and Susan Erk signed a real estate contract to purchase the home of plaintiffs James J. and Kathleen D. Moran, a 5,000-square-foot ranch-style house located in Clarence, New York. The contract, which was executed by the Morans on December 22, 1995, provided for a purchase price of $505,000, and contained a rider with an “ATTORNEY APPROVAL CONTINGENCY” stating as follows:
“This Contract is contingent upon approval by attorneys for Seller and Purchaser by the third business day following each party’s attorney’s receipt of a copy of the fully executed Contract (the ‘Approval Period’). ... If either party’s attorney disapproves this Contract before the end of the Approval Period, it is void and the entire deposit shall be returned.”
Both the contract and the rider were form documents copyrighted and approved by the Greater Buffalo Association of Realtors, Inc. and the Bar Association of Erie County. *
After signing the contract, the Erks developed qualms about purchasing the Morans’ house. They discussed their misgivings
The Morans—who had moved out of their Clarence residence in September 1995—kept the house on the market until it was eventually sold for $385,000 in late 1998. Shortly thereafter, they sued the Erks in Supreme Court, alleging breach of contract. They sought to recover as damages the difference between the contract price of $505,000 and the eventual sale price of $385,000, as well as “carrying costs” for marketing the Clarence property for almost three years beyond the date of the 1995 contract with the Erks.
After a bench trial, Supreme Court found in the Morans’ favor, and entered a judgment against the Erks for $234,065.75, which represented the difference between the contract price and the eventual sale price, plus statutory interest. Citing
McKenna v Case
(
Attorney approval contingencies are routinely included in real estate contracts in upstate New York
(see e.g.
Dorothy H. Ferguson,
Subject to the Approval of My Attorney Clauses,
35 NY Real Prop LJ 35 [spring/summer 2007]; Alice M. Noble-Allgire,
Attorney Approval Clauses in Residential Real Estate Contracts—Is Haifa Loaf Better than None?,
48 U Kan L Rev 339, 342 [2000]). Requiring a real estate contract to be “subject to” or “contingent upon” the approval of attorneys for both contracting par
Here, as previously noted, the contract between the Erks and the Morans explicitly stated that “[t]his Contract is contingent upon approval by attorneys for Seller and Purchaser by the third business day following each party’s attorney’s receipt of a copy of the fully executed Contract,” and further provided that “[i]f either party’s attorney disapproves this Contract before the end of the Approval Period, it is void” (emphases added). The Morans argue that the contract nonetheless created an implied limitation upon an attorney’s discretion to approve or disapprove the contract. We do not ordinarily read implied limitations into unambiguously worded contractual provisions designed to protect contracting parties. The Morans, however, contend—and the lower courts apparently agreed—that the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing implicitly limits an attorney’s ability to approve or disapprove a real estate contract pursuant to an attorney approval contingency. This argument misconstrues the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing under New York law.
The implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing between parties to a contract embraces a pledge that “neither party shall do anything which will have the effect of destroying or injuring the right of the other party to receive the fruits of the contract”
(511 W. 232nd Owners Corp. v Jennifer Realty Co.,
Further, considerations of clarity, predictability, and professional responsibility weigh against reading an implied limitation into the attorney approval contingency. Clarity and predictability are particularly important in the interpretation of contracts
(see Maxton Bldrs. v Lo Galbo,
In
McKenna,
a short memorandum opinion, the Appellate Division held that an attorney’s disapproval pursuant to an attorney approval contingency “would terminate plaintiffs rights under the contract,
unless said disapproval is occasioned by bad
faith” (
“While the issue of ‘bad faith’ usually raises a question of fact precluding summary judgment, the uncontradicted proof demonstrates conclusively that defendant acted in bad faith by instructing his attorney to disapprove the contract. Defendant, by interfering and preventing his attorney from considering the contract, acted in bad faith and, therefore, the condition that the contract be approved by seller’s attorney must be deemed waived and the contract formed” (id. [citation omitted]).
Reading a bad faith exception into an attorney approval contingency would create—as the
McKenna
court itself recog
The circumstances of this case illustrate the chanciness inherent in a bad faith rule. The Erks’ attorney disapproved the contract for the sale of the Morans’ Clarence house in late 1995. The Erks soon bought a house in a different community, and continued on with their lives, relying on their attorney’s disapproval of a contract that declared that such disapproval rendered it “void.” Some three years after their last contact with the Morans, the Erks were served with the complaint in this breach-of-contract lawsuit. Now—10 years after their attorney disapproved the contract within a three-day disapproval period—the Erks are fighting a six-figure judgment for putatively breaching an unwritten covenant because of something Mrs. Erk may have said or neglected to say in a single conversation with her attorney.
Indeed, any inquiry into whether a particular attorney disapproval was motivated by bad faith will likely require factual examination of communications between the disapproving attorney and that attorney’s client
(see e.g. McKenna,
All these potential problems vanish when an attorney approval contingency is interpreted according to its plain meaning, as our sister state of New Jersey has long done
(see New Jersey State Bar Assn. v New Jersey Assn. of Realtor Bds.,
186 NJ Super 391, 395,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur.
Order reversed, etc.
Notes
The form contract, which is available electronically on the Bar Association’s Web site (see http://www.eriebar.org/pdfs/Contract.pdf [last accessed Nov. 17, 2008]), contains the subject attorney approval contingency as
“ATTORNEY APPROVAL CONTINGENCY. CAUTION: The deletion or modification of Paragraph ATC1 (A) or Paragraph ATC1 (B), unless such modification extends the Attorney Approval Period or Addendum Approval Period, shall result in the automatic withdrawal of any bar association approval of this form” (id. at 9).
