345 A.2d 588 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1975
On October 31, 1972, Alde M. Blackburn proposed, on a printed form supplied by the plaintiff, to purchase land located on Saw Mill Road in Torrington, Connecticut from the defendants for $61,500. The proposal contained the words "subject to the following terms and conditions a formal contract." The words "subject to the following terms and conditions" were printed, and the words "a formal contract" were typewritten. The proposal, which recognized the plaintiff as sole agent and broker in the transaction, also contained terms as to cash, mortgage, zoning, and other matters not essential for the disposition of this appeal. The proposal was signed by Blackburn and approved, agreed to, and signed by the codefendant Peter Zaremski. No formal contract or agreement was executed by Blackburn and the defendants. Subsequently, Blackburn and Zaremski executed a mutual release wherein the amount of $350 was paid to Blackburn by Zaremski. *568
The plaintiff assigns as error the granting of the motion for summary judgment and the entering of judgment for the defendants by the court and its conclusion that there is no material issue of fact.
"A broker has fully performed his task when he brings the parties to an enforceable agreement." Walsh v. Turlick,
In this matter the written proposal and the acceptance by Zaremski did not create a binding and enforceable agreement. The written proposal contained an expressed condition that it was subject to "a formal contract" being prepared and executed. The mere acceptance of the proposal by Zaremski did not create a binding agreement. The phrase "a formal contract was a condition precedent to the completion of a binding and enforceable agreement, and, until such a contract was executed, the parties were still in the stage of negotiation for "a formal contract." The parties did not intend to be bound until "a formal contract" had in fact been executed. The intention of the parties may be implied from the expressed language used. Atlantic Terra Cotta Co. v. Chesapeake Terra Cotta Co.,
We also agree with the trial court that there is no material issue of fact. Where there is no question of fact or law which remains to be answered as appears from the record of this case, a motion for summary judgment should be granted. Howell v. Flemming,
There is no error.
SPONZO, A. ARMENTANO and HAMILL, Js., participated in this decision.