Brown, J.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court which required the defendant Pet Incorporated (Pet) to convey the property located at 16-24 West Street, Boston, to the plaintiff, Costello, or his nominee. The judgment also nullified a conveyance of the property by Pet to its codefendant, 16-24 West Street Company, Inc. (West).
Factual Background.
By 1975, the building in question (premises) had become an increasing burden for Pet. The annual bill from the city for taxes and water charges had risen to about $52,000, and the premises were vacant and deteriorating. Desiring to shed itself of the albatross, Pet placed the property on the market. In August, 1975, Costello made an offer to purchase the premises through a completed purchase and sale form agreement which was sent to a real estate broker, Carpenter & Company, Inc. (Carpenter). The essence of the proposed deal was a sale of the premises for an assumption by Costello (or his nominee) of unpaid tax and water bills from 1973 and 1974, for which the city had imposed a tax lien of approximately $14,000, as shown by a municipal lien certificate dated June 9, 1975. Charges for 1975 were to be apportioned as of the date of the delivery of the deed. Thus, the deal was to have had the unusual feature that the only money to be passed at the closing was to be from the vendor to the purchaser.
On August 29, Pet executed the agreement and notified Carpenter of this action by telephone; Carpenter in turn promptly notified Costello. Pet returned the completed form to Costello (by way of Carpenter) and included a cover letter which purported to “clarify” the agreement. The letter expressly stated that Pet did not “view this letter as an amendment or counter offer with respect to the Agreement or property since these matters are implicit in the Agreement but merely need clarification.” In pertinent part, the letter expressed Pet’s understanding that “Pet will convey the property to Thomas Costello, or his nominee,
provided the nominee is financially capable”
(emphasis supplied) . Costello denies that the requirement of financial capacity of the nominee was ever part of the agreement.
After Costello informed Pet that he would nominate himself as trustee for an as yet nonexistent realty trust, Pet “requested] an indemnification agreement to be signed by Mr. Costello individually.” This indemnification issue proved to be the crucial stumbling block that prevented the completion of the deal.
On September 29, the date set for the closing,
the attorney acting for Pet informed Costello that he did not have authority to complete the transaction unless Costello first signed the indemnification agreement. Costello refused to do so, and the deal was not completed, although negotiations continued. A new point of conflict emerged as to which party would pay additional charges for the period from September 29 until the eventual closing date.
When Pet insisted that Costello bear this burden and reiterated its requirement that Costello sign the indemnification agreement, Costello filed this present action on October 14. Pet counterclaimed alleging breach of contract. On December 19, 1975, Pet attempted to settle the dispute by tendering to Costello a deed for the property as well as two checks which totalled some $26,000 to cover municipal tax and water charges to date. This offer, however, did not resolve the indemnification dispute because the deed was made out to
Costello individually. Costello refused the tender, and the property was sold on December 30, 1975, to the defendant West, which took with full notice of the pending litigation. West’s sole asset was title to the premises.
Pet paid the city the outstanding taxes and water charges from 1973 and 1974 and some of those for 1975. Subsequent bills remained unpaid and apparently had accumulated to well over $200,000 by the time the judgment was entered in the trial court. The value of the property had also risen, however, and by Costello’s own acknowledgment was over $400,000. After a jury-waived trial, the Superior Court judge, in a ruling favoring Costello, (1) set aside the transaction from Pet to West, (2) dismissed Pet’s counterclaim, and (3) required Pet to transfer to Costello or his nominee a warranty deed either free of the accrued tax and water charges or with an amount of money sufficient to satisfy them. The original findings issued on August 5, 1982; they were amended in some minor respects on April 5, 1983.
The Contract and Its Breach.
Costello’s offer was presented in a purchase and sale form agreement which explicitly stated that Costello
or his nominee
would assume the outstanding tax and water bills. “The use of a nominee is uniformly recognized as an ap
proved practice in limiting the liability of principals in real estate transactions.”
Lee
v.
Ravanis,
349 Mass. 742, 746 (1965), quoting from
Barkhausen
v.
Continental Ill. Natl. Bank & Trust Co., 3
Ill.2d 254, 264 (1954). The purpose of including the reference to the nominee would be frustrated unless the nominee were to be solely responsible for the outstanding liability. See
Lee, supra
(vendor held in breach of contract for refusing to convey property to nominee of purchaser unless purchaser accepted personal liability on a second mortgage given by the vendor). The nominee provision in the purchase and sale form is unambiguous,
and cannot be said to include an implied requirement that Costello assume personal liability or that the nominee meet certain standards of financial capacity. Cf.
Montgomery
v.
DePicot,
153 Cal. 509, 514 (1908) (“It is a very easy matter when reliance is intended to be placed on the financial responsibility of the original vendee to specify in the contract that ... his personal obligation shall be given”).
Given the lack of ambiguity of the nominee provision in Costello’s offer, the only substantial question presented here is the effect of Pet’s purported acceptance of this offer and the return of the completed agreement with the letter of “clarification.”
The inclusion of a cover letter containing terms at variance with a completed form agreement may in some circumstances convert an ostensible acceptance into a counter offer. See, e.g.,
Gateway Co., Inc.
v.
Charlotte Theatres, Inc.,
297 F.2d 483, 486 (1st Cir. 1961). How
ever, a request for a modification accompanying an acceptance does not prevent the formation of a contract where it is clear that the offeree intended to accept whether or not the modification was accepted.
Nelson
v.
Hamlin,
258 Mass.
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Brown, J.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court which required the defendant Pet Incorporated (Pet) to convey the property located at 16-24 West Street, Boston, to the plaintiff, Costello, or his nominee. The judgment also nullified a conveyance of the property by Pet to its codefendant, 16-24 West Street Company, Inc. (West).
Factual Background.
By 1975, the building in question (premises) had become an increasing burden for Pet. The annual bill from the city for taxes and water charges had risen to about $52,000, and the premises were vacant and deteriorating. Desiring to shed itself of the albatross, Pet placed the property on the market. In August, 1975, Costello made an offer to purchase the premises through a completed purchase and sale form agreement which was sent to a real estate broker, Carpenter & Company, Inc. (Carpenter). The essence of the proposed deal was a sale of the premises for an assumption by Costello (or his nominee) of unpaid tax and water bills from 1973 and 1974, for which the city had imposed a tax lien of approximately $14,000, as shown by a municipal lien certificate dated June 9, 1975. Charges for 1975 were to be apportioned as of the date of the delivery of the deed. Thus, the deal was to have had the unusual feature that the only money to be passed at the closing was to be from the vendor to the purchaser.
On August 29, Pet executed the agreement and notified Carpenter of this action by telephone; Carpenter in turn promptly notified Costello. Pet returned the completed form to Costello (by way of Carpenter) and included a cover letter which purported to “clarify” the agreement. The letter expressly stated that Pet did not “view this letter as an amendment or counter offer with respect to the Agreement or property since these matters are implicit in the Agreement but merely need clarification.” In pertinent part, the letter expressed Pet’s understanding that “Pet will convey the property to Thomas Costello, or his nominee,
provided the nominee is financially capable”
(emphasis supplied) . Costello denies that the requirement of financial capacity of the nominee was ever part of the agreement.
After Costello informed Pet that he would nominate himself as trustee for an as yet nonexistent realty trust, Pet “requested] an indemnification agreement to be signed by Mr. Costello individually.” This indemnification issue proved to be the crucial stumbling block that prevented the completion of the deal.
On September 29, the date set for the closing,
the attorney acting for Pet informed Costello that he did not have authority to complete the transaction unless Costello first signed the indemnification agreement. Costello refused to do so, and the deal was not completed, although negotiations continued. A new point of conflict emerged as to which party would pay additional charges for the period from September 29 until the eventual closing date.
When Pet insisted that Costello bear this burden and reiterated its requirement that Costello sign the indemnification agreement, Costello filed this present action on October 14. Pet counterclaimed alleging breach of contract. On December 19, 1975, Pet attempted to settle the dispute by tendering to Costello a deed for the property as well as two checks which totalled some $26,000 to cover municipal tax and water charges to date. This offer, however, did not resolve the indemnification dispute because the deed was made out to
Costello individually. Costello refused the tender, and the property was sold on December 30, 1975, to the defendant West, which took with full notice of the pending litigation. West’s sole asset was title to the premises.
Pet paid the city the outstanding taxes and water charges from 1973 and 1974 and some of those for 1975. Subsequent bills remained unpaid and apparently had accumulated to well over $200,000 by the time the judgment was entered in the trial court. The value of the property had also risen, however, and by Costello’s own acknowledgment was over $400,000. After a jury-waived trial, the Superior Court judge, in a ruling favoring Costello, (1) set aside the transaction from Pet to West, (2) dismissed Pet’s counterclaim, and (3) required Pet to transfer to Costello or his nominee a warranty deed either free of the accrued tax and water charges or with an amount of money sufficient to satisfy them. The original findings issued on August 5, 1982; they were amended in some minor respects on April 5, 1983.
The Contract and Its Breach.
Costello’s offer was presented in a purchase and sale form agreement which explicitly stated that Costello
or his nominee
would assume the outstanding tax and water bills. “The use of a nominee is uniformly recognized as an ap
proved practice in limiting the liability of principals in real estate transactions.”
Lee
v.
Ravanis,
349 Mass. 742, 746 (1965), quoting from
Barkhausen
v.
Continental Ill. Natl. Bank & Trust Co., 3
Ill.2d 254, 264 (1954). The purpose of including the reference to the nominee would be frustrated unless the nominee were to be solely responsible for the outstanding liability. See
Lee, supra
(vendor held in breach of contract for refusing to convey property to nominee of purchaser unless purchaser accepted personal liability on a second mortgage given by the vendor). The nominee provision in the purchase and sale form is unambiguous,
and cannot be said to include an implied requirement that Costello assume personal liability or that the nominee meet certain standards of financial capacity. Cf.
Montgomery
v.
DePicot,
153 Cal. 509, 514 (1908) (“It is a very easy matter when reliance is intended to be placed on the financial responsibility of the original vendee to specify in the contract that ... his personal obligation shall be given”).
Given the lack of ambiguity of the nominee provision in Costello’s offer, the only substantial question presented here is the effect of Pet’s purported acceptance of this offer and the return of the completed agreement with the letter of “clarification.”
The inclusion of a cover letter containing terms at variance with a completed form agreement may in some circumstances convert an ostensible acceptance into a counter offer. See, e.g.,
Gateway Co., Inc.
v.
Charlotte Theatres, Inc.,
297 F.2d 483, 486 (1st Cir. 1961). How
ever, a request for a modification accompanying an acceptance does not prevent the formation of a contract where it is clear that the offeree intended to accept whether or not the modification was accepted.
Nelson
v.
Hamlin,
258 Mass. 331, 340 (1927). See generally 1 Corbin, Contracts § 84, at 363-365 (1963).
The trial judge expressly found that “in sending the letter, Pet desired to alter the terms of the Agreement, while at the same time not dissolving the contractual undertaking which the Agreement memorialized.” The judge further stated that “[c]olloquially speaking, the . . . letter sought to improve the deal (from Pet’s standpoint) without destroying it altogether.” Compare
David J. Tierney, Jr., Inc.
v. T.
Wellington Carpets, Inc.,
8 Mass. App. Ct. 237, 240 (1979). We are unable to say that this finding is “clearly erroneous” (see Mass.R.Civ.P. 52 [a], 365 Mass. 816 [1974]). Either on the basis of this finding, or perhaps as matter of law (it is unnecessary to decide which), a contract was formed which included the unambiguous nominee provision.
Pet’s insistence that Costello sign the indemnification agreement amounted to a repudiation of this contract, a breach which was later confirmed by the conveyance to West. See
Limpus
v.
Armstrong,
3 Mass. App. Ct. 19, 22 (1975).
Remedy.
Specific performance of real estate contracts is appropriate “in the absence of significant equitable reasons for refusing such relief.”
Raynor
v.
Russell,
353 Mass. 366, 367-368 (1967). There is no evidence in the case before us of fraud, overreaching, or inequitable conduct on the part of Costello sufficient to render the judge’s granting of specific performance an abuse of discretion.
See
Kaplan
v.
Bessette,
357 Mass. 233, 235 (1970);
Allen
v.
Rakes,
359 Mass. 1, 5-6
(1971). Mere increase in the value of the property, which did not result from action of the defendant after the breach, is not the type of change in circumstances over time which would make an order of specific performance inequitable. Contrast
Gevalt
v.
Diwoky,
319 Mass. 715, 716 (1946).
The only issue that remains is who should bear the burden of the tax and water charges that have accrued over the years. Pet and West argue that Costello will be unjustly enriched if he is allowed to reap the appreciation in the value of the premises without bearing this burden. See
Davis
v.
Parker,
14 Allen 94, 104 (1867) (purchaser held entitled to specific performance was required to reimburse vendor for taxes paid during pendency of litigation in circumstances where purchaser stood to gain substantial benefit due to timber growth on property). We find that argument unavailing. A prerequisite to raising an unjust enrichment argument is that there have been “reasonable conflicting viewpoints on the law and facts.”
Flynn
v.
Wallace,
359 Mass. 711, 720 (1971). Here, Pet’s breach was unequivocal, and Pet cannot now be heard to argue that Costello must bear the burden for the tax and water charges for the years he was wrongfully deprived of possession of the premises.
Id.
at 719-720, and cases cited therein. Costello is therefore entitled to payment for these charges, subject, of course, to an offset for those charges that he (or his nominee) would have assumed as his part of the original bargain.
Judgment affirmed.