Brinn v. the Mennen Co.

68 A.2d 879, 5 N.J. Super. 582, 1949 N.J. Super. LEXIS 720
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 27, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 A.2d 879 (Brinn v. the Mennen Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinn v. the Mennen Co., 68 A.2d 879, 5 N.J. Super. 582, 1949 N.J. Super. LEXIS 720 (N.J. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

This suit is brought to cancel and rescind a contract for the sale of real estate situate in the City of Newark, made between the defendant, The Mennen Company, as seller, and plaintiff's assignor as purchaser, and to impress a lien on the premises in the sum of $15,000 which represents the deposit made on account of the purchase price.

Defendant, The Mary Lou Corporation, was joined because it acquired title to the property with knowledge of the plaintiff's outstanding contract of sale.

The complaint, as amended, sets out three causes of action. The first two concern the defendant, The Mennen Company, since the relief sought is cancellation and rescission and the return of the deposit moneys. The third count is against the defendant, The Mary Lou Corporation, and seeks to impress a lien on the property.

The contract of sale contains a clause which reads:

"The seller's obligation to convey pursuant hereto shall have been performed if it conveys to the purchaser a title which will be guaranteed to the purchaser by Lawyers Title Guaranty Company of New Jersey, subject only to the exceptions herein set forth.

"Immediately upon the execution and delivery hereof the seller will order from Lawyers Title Guaranty Company an examination of title to the premises herein described. In the event of the unwillingness of said Title Company to insure title to said premises subject only to the exceptions specified herein, the seller shall pay the cost of such title examination and return the deposit of $15,000 made upon execution and delivery hereof and thereupon the parties hereto shall be relieved of all further obligations to each other hereunder. In the event that said Title Company reports its willingness to guarantee the title to said premises subject only to the exceptions herein stated, the purchaser shall, if conveyance be made pursuant hereto, contemporaneously with such conveyance pay to the seller the cost of such title examination and shall pay to such Title Company such additional charges as may be made by it for insuring title to said premises, subject only to the exceptions hereinabove specified."

Thus the title must have the stamp of approval of a third party, — Lawyers Title Guaranty Company, — and without such approval, except in the respects set forth in the contract, the parties would be relieved of all obligations thereunder.

The seller ordered an examination of the title from said Title Company and a report thereof was issued on February *Page 585 1, 1948. A current survey also was ordered. Both report of title and survey were forwarded to plaintiff's attorneys on February 18, 1948. The report of title set forth some fifteen or more items of exceptions which were not "specified" in the contract of sale and without which exceptions the Title Company would not guarantee the title.

The Mennen Company, was at no time, and is not now, the owner of the property which it contracted to sell, and the contract so states. The premises in question had for some time been involved in foreclosure proceedings at the instance of the National Commercial Title Mortgage Guaranty Company. A writ of fierifacias had been issued and returned unsatisfied. The Mennen Company undertook to purchase the foreclosure decree and cause the premises to be sold at sheriff's sale so that it, or its nominee, could purchase the property and convey the same to the plaintiff. The contract is dated January 26, 1948, and the sheriff's sale was held the latter part of July and later confirmed. The first title closing was set down during the latter part of August, 1948. The Mennen Company was not ready to convey because its title was not insurable and a stipulation of continuance was signed by the attorneys fixing September 27, 1948, at 12 o'clock noon as the date and hour for closing, and time was made of the essence. On September 27, 1948, the same situation obtained and a similar stipulation, likewise making time of the essence was signed, fixing October 15, 1948, as the closing date. On October 14, 1948, the closing date was again postponed and a third stipulation of continuance was signed fixing October 28, 1948, as the closing date and time was made of the essence.

On September 27, 1948, the plaintiff, with her attorneys, appeared and brought with them the sum of $65,000 in cash. The title was discussed and objections made thereto and the closing was again adjourned to November 3, 1948, at 3 P.M. and again time was made of the essence. On this latter date, plaintiff and her attorneys again appeared but no representative of the Title Company was present; none of the exceptions set forth in the Title Company's report had been removed; the title itself was unmarketable and the attorneys *Page 586 for the defendant, The Mennen Company, had not, as was required of them in the contract of sale, drawn the purchase money bond and mortgage which plaintiff was to execute in part payment of the purchase price. Neither the defendant nor its attorneys took any steps to perform by three o'clock of that date as required in the stipulation which fixed the date and made time of the essence. At three o'clock plaintiff tendered to the defendants' representative and their attorneys, two cashier's checks aggregating $65,000. Plaintiff was, at that date and hour, fully prepared to do and perform all that the contract required of her. This tender was conditioned upon the seller conveying to the plaintiff a title which will be guaranteed to the purchaser by Lawyers Title Guaranty Company of New Jersey, subject only to the exceptions therein set forth. The items of exceptions in the report of title had not been removed, nor were the papers and documents required by the report of title produced or even prepared. After the tender of the purchase price was made, the defendant, The Mennen Company, purported to tender a deed to the plaintiff which was not executed by the defendant, The Mennen Company, but by an unknown corporation, The Mary Lou Corporation, which had only recently been organized and about which neither the plaintiff nor the title company had ever been informed.

The Title Company's report showed that a defect in title existed in that the premises were encumbered by an easement created by express grant as recited in some earlier deeds in the chain of title giving to the adjoining owners and their successors in title the right to have their southerly wall perpetually embedded in the northerly wall of the premises in question. Plaintiff thereupon demanded the return of the deposit money which was refused.

Defendant, The Mary Lou Corporation, has filed its counterclaim for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of its resale of the property for a lesser amount than that named in the contract of sale between the parties named therein. The counterclaimant does not allege it to be the vendor's assignee, and therefore The Mary Lou Corporation *Page 587 has not succeeded to any of the vendor's rights or obligations under the contract for sale of real estate.

Where the seller and purchaser agree that the title to be conveyed will be guaranteed or insured by a Title Company, subject only to specifically named exceptions, the tender of a deed without such a guaranty or title insurance policy is insufficient. The parties are bound by the decision of the Title Company and the purchaser is entitled to its equitable remedy of rescission and cancellation and a vendee's lien for the amount of its down payment.

When time is made of the essence for the closing of title to real estate, it is essential that both parties be able, ready and willing to perform at the time and place fixed.

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90 A.2d 515 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1952)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A.2d 879, 5 N.J. Super. 582, 1949 N.J. Super. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinn-v-the-mennen-co-njsuperctappdiv-1949.