Baerenklau v. Peerless Realty Co.

83 A. 375, 80 N.J. Eq. 26, 10 Buchanan 26, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 66
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 21, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 83 A. 375 (Baerenklau v. Peerless Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baerenklau v. Peerless Realty Co., 83 A. 375, 80 N.J. Eq. 26, 10 Buchanan 26, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 66 (N.J. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C. (orally).

I shall first dispose of the case of Albert Baerenklau and August Faust against the Peerless Realty Company, which was tried and argued day before yesterday.

The suit is brought by these complainants to compel the specific performance of a contract to convey real estate in the town of Woodbridge, Middlesex county, in this state. The owner of the properly who entered into,the contract with the complainants, which contract is now before me, at that time was the Rahway Park Realty Company. The contract was made between the Rah-way Park Realty Company of the first part, and these complainants, Baerenklau and Faust of the second part. It bears date February 16th, 1909, and provides for the sale of thirty lots in a large tract, which the company had laid out, to the complainants for the price of $1,200, which was to be paid as follows: One hundred dollars at or before the signing of the agreement, and at least $40 on or before the sixteenth day of every month thereafter, béginning April 16th, 1909. After a number of instalments had been paid, including the first instalment of $100, all the interest of the Rahway Park Realty Company was transferred to the Peerless Realty Company, the present defendant, no new equity having been in any way introduced into the case by this assignment. The Peerless company took the place of the Rahway Park Realty Company and assumed its obligations.

The complainants paid their $100, and then, from month to month, made, I think, twenty-two payments—was it, Mr. Dobbins?

Mr. Dobbins—“I think it was.”

■—making, in all, $980, and then they tendered a. payment of $40 to the company and the company declined to accept it. A little later, I think a month or two later, the complainants tendered the entire balance of the purchase price, with interest, amounting to $260 or $270 to the company and demanded their deed, and this tender was refused. The complainants now file this bill to [28]*28compel the specific performance of this contract to get their deed upon their paying the remainder of the purchase price.

•The only defence set up in the answer, apart from mere formal denials which were not sustained by the evidence, is based upon the following covenant in this contract of February 16th, 1909:

“The party of the second part agrees that should any default be made in the payment of any installments as herein provided, and such default continues for sixty days, all installments previously paid shall, at the option of the party of the first part, without any notice or demand, be and become forfeited irrevocably and beyond demand and be retained by the party of the first part as liquidated damages, and thereupon this agreement shall determine and be of no further effect. The party of the first part, however, in the event of default as aforesaid, has the right to enforce' specific performance of this agreement.”

Although it is not perhaps a very important feature of the case, it is worth while to point out at the start the hardship of this contract—the one-sidedness of it. The realty company at all times, in case of a default for sixty days in the payment of any one of these instalments, has the option, if we take this contract just as it reads, either to compel the purchasers, these complainants, to pay the rest of the price and take their deed—which, no doubt, they would do if the land declined in value, or if the price was a large price compared with the value of the land and the default had been made at an early stage of this business when only perhaps one instalment had been paid—or to keep all that had been paid and declare the contract ended and all rights of the purchasers extinguished, which, of course, they would have a powerful, selfish motive to do in this ease, as $980 of the $1,200 had been paid.

The defendants stand before this court with $980 of the complainants’ money in its treasury, the land not having declined in value, and they say: “We will keep the land; we won’t accept your $270, the remainder of the principal and interest; we will keep your money and we will keep your land.” It is a case of very, very great hardship. It would, perhaps, be singular if nowhere in law or equity any escape could be found for these unfortunate complainants.

I want, at the beginning, to advert to the legal character of this contract and its legal construction, a matter which was sug[29]*29gestea to counsel during the argument, but which they did not consider. I should not at present discuss the matter at all if the decision of this case turned upon it—turned upon the legal construction of this contract or the extent of its enforceability in the courts of law. It would be my duty, I think, to order a reargument. But the decision in this court is controlled by another point, and inasmuch as the case may go to the áppellate court for final determination, it may be worth while, and I think it is proper to suggest to counsel some of the strictly legal questions which appear upon the face of this covenant for a forfeiture.

Of course, it is now familiar law that, in both courts of law and equity, a penalty, so called, in a contract is oftentimes construed as a liquidation of damages—as an alternative amount which the parties agree shall be paid in lieu of the ascertainment and award of damages, and, on the other hand, courts are very courageous in construing an agreement which expressly provides for liquidated damages as an agreement providing for a penalty only.

A great deal of the law on this subject, illustrating how the phrase “liquidated damages” has been construed as equivalent to “penalty,” has arisen in cases where an agreement has contained a great many different covenants relating to different things, the breach of which involved different amounts of damage, and then there is, in conclusion, a sweeping provision that if there is any default in any of the covenants in the agreement contained, the party of the one part shall pay to the party of the other part a certain specified sum of money which shall be deemed liquidated damages and not , a penalty. The courts have refused in very many eases.to enforce that sort of a contract. They have treated the sum specified as a penalty.

The leading case in this state is Whitfield v. Levy, 35 N. J. Law (6 Vr.) 139, a decision of the court of errors and appeals, in which Mr. Justice Depue, with his characteristic industry and learning, examines a long series of authorities. In that case Mr. Justice Depue points out that oftentimes the courts will find, in a contract which provides for the payment of a sum as liquidated damages, an intent otherwise in the minds of the contracting parties—an intent to secure performance—an intent, perhaps, gen[30]*30eralfy to provide for compensation for a breach, and that there really is not an intention, as the parties seem to say, that a large sum of money shall be paid, in the event of the breach of a condition of one covenant among a number where the damages, in fact, must be very-small.

Well, perhaps, that is as far as we have gone in New Jersey in dealing with this subject, but there is a-line of cases, I think, in England, and I think in many of the states in this country, which are more courageous and take a different view. .'These cases'are cited, to some extent, in the article on liquidated damages in the nineteenth volume of the American and English Encyclopedia of Law, pages 410 and 411. I will read the section—one of the sections—on that page.

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Bluebook (online)
83 A. 375, 80 N.J. Eq. 26, 10 Buchanan 26, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baerenklau-v-peerless-realty-co-njch-1912.