In a written agreement, plaintiff Gerald J. Ashkouti agreed to purchase certain real estate from defendants Patricia Marie Widener and Janet Widener Sims, Trustees of the Item VI Trust under the will of Marie Louise Browne Widener. When no closing took place within 45 days after the Gwinnett County Commission refused to rezone the property as plaintiff desired, defendants considered the agreement expired, returned plaintiff’s escrow money, and sold the property to a third party. Plaintiff sued for an alleged anticipatory breach of the sales agreement, and in
Ashkouti v. Widener,
Case No. A99A1084
In two related enumerations of error, defendants contend the trial court erred in concluding that a valid, enforceable contract existed between the parties and further erred in concluding that defendants had breached that contract.
1. The existence of a valid, enforceable contract is the law of the case, based on this Court’s decision in the prior appeal, deciding all contentions raised adversely to defendants.
“The law of the case rule is abolished; but. . . any ruling by the Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals in a case shall be binding in all subsequent proceedings in that case in the lower court and in the Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals as the case may be.” OCGA § 9-11-60 (h). Thus, in this civil action, the superior court, as well as this Court, would certainly be bound by the previous rulings in
Ashkouti v. Widener,
2. Since it is undisputed that defendants refused to rescind their
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sales agreement with the third party after plaintiff informed them, during the existence of the contract as extended by amendment, of his waiver of the rezoning condition precedent, it follows the trial court correctly granted partial summary judgment as to liability against defendants for their unqualified anticipatory repudiation of the executory real estate sales agreement with plaintiff.
Clark v. Cox,
Case No. A99A1085
3. In this cross-appeal, plaintiff contends the trial court erred in denying his motion for summary judgment as to the amount of damages. He argues the subsequent sale of the property for $3,200,000 conclusively establishes the fair market value of the property, resulting in fixed damages to him of $200,000. We disagree.
“It has long been the rule that the measure of damages for breach of a contract to sell land is the difference between the contract price and the fair market value of the land
at the time of the breach.
[Cits.]” (Emphasis supplied.)
Quigley v. Jones,
We judicially know that values do fluctuate, sometimes up and sometimes down. If this were not so, proof of the market value of any item at a given time would suffice for all time to come. Real estate, as well as stocks and bonds, fluctuates in value, albeit at a less rapid pace. What it may have brought or what it may have been regarded as being worth on the market at times relatively close to the date [of the breach] may be considered as aids in arriving at market value at the time of [the breach] — which is what the [trior of facts] is charged with determining in [this action for breach of a real estate sales contract]. But at last value on the date of [the breach] is a factual question to be resolved by the trior of facts.
Thompson v. Maslia,
Judgments affirmed.
