Dorothy F. Hewitt and Abram S. Hewitt v. Charles G. Hutter and Luigi Gentile

574 F.2d 182, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 12858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 1978
Docket77-1902, 77-1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 574 F.2d 182 (Dorothy F. Hewitt and Abram S. Hewitt v. Charles G. Hutter and Luigi Gentile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorothy F. Hewitt and Abram S. Hewitt v. Charles G. Hutter and Luigi Gentile, 574 F.2d 182, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 12858 (4th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

ALBERT V. BRYAN, Senior Circuit Judge:

Specific performance of a contract for the sale and purchase of a farm, with its improvements and accessories, located in Virginia, was decreed by the District Court at the suit of the record owner, Dorothy Hewitt, with her husband, Abram S. Hewitt, against Charles G. Hutter and Luigi Gentile, who now appeal. 1 Particularly, they contend that no such agreement was made by them, that on their part there was nothing more than an offer by the owner to sell to them, and that even as alleged, the contract was oral and so unenforceable under the statute of frauds, Va.Code, 1950, as amended, § 11-2. 2

The points of difference between the parties are the inferences to be drawn from the facts, and the legal effect to be given them as they were found by the District Judge and now follow. Before the inception of the instant controversy one Charles Tijerina was the defendants’ (doctors’) advisor on investments. On this subject they informed him of their interest in Virginia land. In furtherance they provided him with a December 1973 letter addressed “TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN”, conferring upon Ti-jerina absolute discretion to act for them. He took it with him to Clarke County, Virginia, with the acquisition of real estate in mind. After talking with brokers Thomas & Talbot in nearby Middleburg early in January, he learned that “Long Branch” farm was for sale. Inquiring about it, he met plaintiff Dorothy Hewitt on January 5 and disclosed and expressed his wish to purchase it.

After conversing with her again, he left for California and there outlined to the doctors the availability of the farm. Following this discussion they signed and gave Tijerina a letter dated January 25,1974. It empowered him to offer $775,000.00 for Long Branch and to go to $850,000.00, if necessary. Included also was this injunction: “Enter into contract, and advise us as soon as you reach an agreement”. Another letter from the doctors, January 28, 1974, directed him to select a lawyer. Further, before departing California, Tijerina also was entrusted with general and special powers of attorney, dated January 31,1974, investing him with unbounded power and discretion in executing their mission.

Arriving in Virginia February 8, he advised the same brokers, whom he had initially met, of his preparedness to make an offer to buy Long Branch. They relayed it to Hewitt in a personal interview. On that occasion she was shown the evidences of his authority, particularly, to pay $850,000.00 for the farm. She declined it, insisting upon $950,000.00.

On report of this result to his principals, they directed Tijerina by telephone to offer $950,000.00, confirming it by letter of February 15, 1974.

Through the brokers, a meeting was scheduled for Hewitt and Tijerina at the Red Fox Inn in Middleburg. They met there on February 20, and Tijerina submitted to her again his powers of attorney, *185 the letter directing him to “Enter into contract”, as well as the letter of February 15 raising their proposition to $950,000.00. The meeting occupied some two hours, a portion of which was devoted to consideration of the farm equipment in use at Long Branch.

At that meeting Hewitt and Tijerina agreed upon the sale to the doctors of Long Branch and specified personal property for $950,000.00. Immediately Hewitt went to her brokers, Thomas & Talbot, and acquainted them with the consummation of the sale of the farm and personalty. Tijeri-na also then apprised the brokers of his earlier arrangement for the preparation of a contract by Thomas G. Underwood, a lawyer, to whom he had narrated the negotiations with Hewitt and their conclusion. Likewise, Hewitt retained legal counsel. Desiring to know more about the farming of Long Branch and the accompanying utensils, he procured this data by telephone the next day.

In consultations, the lawyers produced a final document and upon submission of it to Hewitt and her husband by their attorney, they signed it on March 1,1974. Thereupon one of her brokers obtained the document at the lawyer’s office.

This same day, March 1, 1974, Tijerina himself wrote out a letter addressed to the brokers stating as follows:

“After so many tries to put the contract in a form that is mutually agreeable to all, we have finally accomplished today, a contract, that has all the requisites that I required. I am happy that this is all over with.
“I realize that having them [the sellers] sign first is unusual, but it is my desire that my principles [sic] sign for themselves as a courtesy to them and I hope that the sellers would consent to this further request. .
“Since I approve the contract as to form, terms and conditions, on behalf of my principles, [sic] by virtue of the authority vested in me, it is acceptable to me and I am sure all concerned are pleased and you may inform Mr. and Mrs. Hewitt that we have a deal, and that the loan commitment has verbally been approved. . . . ”

Tijerina had this letter typed in the brokers’ office, signed it and left it with them. Af-terwards he carried the contract instruments to his principals in California.

Pending their endeavors to acquire Long Branch the doctors on January 25, 1974 had executed an application to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company for a loan of $500,-000.00. A Company letter of March 1,1974 approved the loan. On March 11, a truth-in-lending statement was sent in by the doctors. Metropolitan wrote Tijerina’s attorney, Thomas G. Underwood, in Virginia on April 18,1974, with a copy of its letter of approval and listing the title requirements on Long Branch on which the loan was to be secured. With no answer from the attorney, Metropolitan wrote the doctors on May 24 that the loan commitment had expired on May 15 and would not be extended at the originally quoted rate of interest. The doctors did not respond.

The first word of the doctors’ refusal to comply with the agreement came to Hewitt by a letter of April 29,1974, signed by them and delivered by defendant Hutter to the brokers about that day. He gave as reasons for the declination “(1) that Tijerina wasn’t authorized to go $950,000.00 and (2) that he felt it wasn’t a working farm”.

I

While we view this recital of facts to be findings of the District Judge and we accept them because we cannot say they are “clearly erroneous”, F.R.Civ.P. 52(a), appellants insist that they do not have, and are not to be accorded, this stature. They reason that as defendants they moved for summary judgment; that it was denied, Hewitt et al. v. Hutter et al., 406 F.Supp. 976 (November 17, 1975); that in the course of the opinion the trial judge found the facts as just recounted; that virtually this was the equivalent of a summary judgment for the plaintiffs by the Court; especially do *186 they point out that in a subsequent pretrial order, July 27, 1976, the District Judge observed, “By opinion and order of November 17, 1975 [denying defendants’ motion for summary judgment] this Court, sua sponte

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Bluebook (online)
574 F.2d 182, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 12858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorothy-f-hewitt-and-abram-s-hewitt-v-charles-g-hutter-and-luigi-ca4-1978.