Baker v. Packard

112 A.D. 543, 98 N.Y.S. 804, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 721
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 2, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 A.D. 543 (Baker v. Packard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Packard, 112 A.D. 543, 98 N.Y.S. 804, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 721 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

McLennan, P. J.:

The facts are not in dispute. The only question presented by this appeal is whether or not the correspondence which passed between the parties, consisting of three letters, two written for and on behalf of the plaintiff and one by the defendant, constitutes a valid and binding contract.

On the 24th day of October, 1903, McG-uire & Wood, attorneys at Rochester, FT. Y., for and on behalf of the plaintiff wrote to the defendant as follows:

[544]*544“Dear Sir.— We are authorized by Miss Frances A. Baker, of this city, to give you on her behalf, and you may consider, this letter, an option to purchase, at any -time within ten days from this date, the sixteen thousand dollars’ worth of second mortgage bonds of the Consolidated Gas & Electric Company of Batavia, FT. Y., owned by her, upon the following terms, and conditions: (1) She to retain and collect the past due unpaid interest coupons, the same to be collected as soon as may be without prejudicing the foreclosure action now pending; (2) You to pay eight thousand dollars in cash, and our bill for services and disbursements in the matter to date of transfer, not exceeding, say, four hundred dollars; (3) If you take the bonds under the foregoing conditions, and sell them, or they are paid or otherwise realized upon, and you afe not obliged to bid in the property on the foreclosure sale, you to give Miss Baker, in addition to the above amounts one-half of your profits on . the bonds; (4) This option to be void and inoperative after ten days from date.
“We found the inclosed copy of. the. second mortgage in our papers, which we are glad to let you have.
“'Yours very truly,
“MoGUIBE & WOOD.”

On FTovember 2, 1903, the defendant wrote to McGuire & Wood the following letter:

'“ Gertlemer.— Replying to yours of Oct. 24, beg to say that I elect to purchase these bonds, and wish you would kindly set a date at which we can get together.
• “Please say nothing to the Consolidated Gas'& Electric Co. about this nor to, any one else in fact.- '
“Yours truly,
“MARK PACKARD.”

On the following day, FTovember 3, 1903, McGuire & Wood mailed to the defendant the following letter:

“ Dear Sir.— We would be glad to have you call here to-morrow to make transfer mentioned fin 'yours of yesterday. Wire when you will arrive and we will have client here.
“Yours truly,
“MoGUIBE & WOOD”

[545]*545When this letter reached the office of the defendant- on November 4, 1903, he was out of the - city of Buffalo and continued to be away for a week thereafter, and no reply was received from him in answer thereto. Tire defendant refused to accept or pay for the bonds referred to in the letter of October twenty-fourth, although requested so to do, and they were duly tendered to him, . and thereupon this action was brought. No question is raised but that the judgment represents the correct amount in case the plaintiff is entitled to recover. „

We think the correspondence, consisting of the three letters referred to, makes a valid and .binding contract, and that upon a breach thereof the plaintiff was entitled to recover the damages sustained. The letter of October twenty-fourth is clear and explicit. It states exactly-upon what terms and -conditions the defendant, might purchase the bonds in question. Before the ten days mentioned therein-expired, and by his letter of November second"' thfe defendant said in effect that he elected to purchase the bonds upon the conditions stated in plaintiff’s letter of October twenty-fourth, and he asked in substance that the plaintiff’s representatives fix a day certain when the transfer might be made and the purchase price paid. The plaintiff’s representatives designated the day following as the time to make such transfer'".and complete the transaction^ The correspondence is in effect an offer by the plaintiff to sell certain property to be transferred by the seller and paid for by the buyer within ten days; a statement by the purchaser that'he accepts the offer, and a request that the seller fix a date when the transfer may be made and money paid, which is fixed at a day within the ten-day period. The offer and acceptance, with request that a date be fixed for the completion of the transaction and the fixing of such date by the plaintiff, made the contract. It cannot be questioned but that if the defendant had appeared in'Bochester on the third day of November and demanded of the plaintiff the bonds in suit, she would have been obligated to have delivered the same upon compliance by him with the conditions specified in the option. The fact that after the expiration of such time the contract may have ceased to have been binding upon her in case the defendant made default by refusing to pay,, we consider of no importance. The defendant [546]*546would then have been in the-position of having made default, but the plaintiff having been at all times ready and willing to- perform, he could not' urge the default upon his part as a ground for insisting that the agreement was not enforcible by her.

The alleged agreement "is not, as it seems tó us, novel or unusual. A person offers to sell property belonging to him at a certain price to be received and paid for within a certain specified time. The offer is accepted and the seller is asked to fix a day certain within the option period when the property may be delivered and the purchase price paid,, which the seller does. Can there be any doubt but that under such circumstances a valid contract has been made ? In the case at bar, if the plaintiff in her letter of October twenty-fourth had asked the defendant) in case he accepted her offer, to fix a place and time within-the ten days limited when the'bonds might be delivered "and the purchase price paid, and the defendant had fixed such time and place which was assented to by the- plaintiff, could there have been any doubt but that if the plaintiff had appeared at such time and place ready to fulfill upon her part, that the defendant upon his failure to perform would have been liable as upon breach of contract ? The' case at bar as proven by the correspondence in question is no different upon'principle. The defendant in effect stated' to the plaintiff: “ I accept yotir proposition to sell, but you fix a time and place where my acceptance of your option may be consummated.” This the plaintiff did, and we can-hardly conceive of correspondence which more effectually makes a contract alike binding, upon both parties.

The case of Blanchard v. Archer (93 App. Div. 459), relied upon by. appellant’s counsel, we do not consider in point. There the question related to the sale of real property. In that- case the party ^seeking to enforce the contract was the person who had not complied with its conditions within the time specified, and there Was no suggestion, as in this case, that the seller fix the date for the consummation of the agreement. >

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 A.D. 543, 98 N.Y.S. 804, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-packard-nyappdiv-1906.