Thе plaintiff (the society), a private, nonprofit organization dedicated to the preservation of historically significant buildings in Worcester, appeals from a judgment of the Housing Court which refused it a rescission of a contract and reconveyance of a house which it had conveyed to the defendant (Trussell) in 1984. The house at that time was vacant and uninhabitable, with no heat, electricity, or *344 plumbing, was in severe disrepair, and had recently been damaged by fire. The sale was for $20,100, Trussell agreeing to abide by historic preservation restrictions and to do a complete historic restoration. The exterior portion was to be completed in one year, failing which the society could, at its option, engage wоrkers to complete the exterior restoration at Trussell’s expense. No time limit was specified for interior restoration. There was no requirement that the house be opened to public viewing or that the house be occupied.
Trussell, prior to the conveyance, gave the society, as required, evidence of his financial ability to invest the purchase price plus $45,000, the then estimated cost of the restoration. About a year and a half after the transfer, however, Trussell lost his job, with the result that work on the house, which had proceeded less rapidly than anticipated, was further slowed. The society sued for rescission in 1986 but then agreed, by way of a stipulation, to stay its hand for a further period. The case was not tried until 1989.
The society put in evidence that the exterior work was at that time still uncompleted, particularly on the rear side of the house, where sash was missing on one or two windows and а porch was supported on jacks. Trussell testified that he had scraped forty to fifty percent of the exterior to bare wood; replaced most of the clapboards on the south, sun-exposed side; prime-coated the entire house and finish-coated sixty percent of it; replaced most of the sash (most of the windows were boarded up befоre the sale); done roof repairs (taking some portions down to the carrying timbers); gutted most of the interior of the house, including all plaster, and carted the materials away. He аcknowledged having done no restoration of the interior. The needed work, he estimated, would cost $100,000, far in excess of what had been estimated at the time of the sale. In general, he painted a picture, which the judge accepted, of meticulous, steady progress on the house, primarily by his own work, but hampered by shortage of funds which he hoped would soon be alleviated by settlement of his father’s estate. The judge found the exterior work to be sixty-five to seventy-five percent com *345 píete. Acting “in [his] discretion,” he refused rescission (the only remedy sought in the complaint) and suggested that the society, if it continued to be dissatisfied with the exterior progress, employ the self-help remedy set out in the contract.
There was nо error based on the findings. There is ample authority for refusing rescission where there has been only a breach of contract rather than an utter failure of consideration or а repudiation by the party in breach. “In the absence of fraud, nothing less than conduct that amounts to an abrogation of the contract, or that goes to the essence of it, оr takes away its foundation, can be made a ground for rescission of it by the other party.”
Runkle
v.
Burrage,
Trussell’s actions certainly have not amounted to a repudiation of the contract; the judge found that he intends to complete the restoration, although the time fixed in the contract for completion of the exterior has been greatly exceeded and may not have been realistic from the start. There has not been a total failure of consideration, Trussell having paid thе purchase price and invested some additional sums and much labor in the restoration work. The visibly uncompleted portions of the exterior restoration are at the rear sidе of the house, the front appearing (in photographs reproduced in the appendix) quite presentable. The society’s concern was focussed primarily, as its directоr testified, on the exterior appearance of the houses it rescued (explaining the cursory treatment of interior renovation in the contract 1 and the absence оf a time limit therefor or of any provision for opening the house to public view). The provisions of the purchase and sale agreement that time was of the essence applied to the closing date of the conveyance, not to the restoration provisions.
Courts have traditionally applied discretion in affording relief by way of rescission, as thеy have with most equitable remedies. See
Lima
v.
Lima,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The contract did not speak of “interior restoration” (the parties infer the requirement from the contract’s requirement that Trussell “complete a certified historic restoration”). The time limit applied only to the exterior restoration, and it was only with respect to the exterior work that the society imposed restrictions on alterations of architectural form.
Even if the expense should cause Trusseil to lose the hоuse, the preservation restrictions, which are recorded, run with the land. Parenthetically, we note that a different case would be presented if the contract contained •а specific provision for reconveyance where the society is dissatisfied with the progress of the restoration.
Although neither party raises any question concerning the jurisdictiоn of the Housing Court, we have considered the question, as we must, see
Goes
v.
Feldman,
