Drinkwater v. Patten Realty Corp.

563 A.2d 772, 1989 Me. LEXIS 222
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 11, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 563 A.2d 772 (Drinkwater v. Patten Realty Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drinkwater v. Patten Realty Corp., 563 A.2d 772, 1989 Me. LEXIS 222 (Me. 1989).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

This is a complex dispute arising from a contract to sell a house lot entered into by defendant Patten Realty Corporation with plaintiffs Roger and Beverly Drinkwater. Patten, having subsequently conveyed the lot to Joseph R. O’Brien, the other defendant, contends that the Drinkwaters agreed to rescind the sales contract. The Drinkwaters seek to set aside the conveyance to O’Brien, who is an officer and director of Patten, and to obtain specific performance. . The Drinkwaters also contend that Patten made material misrepresentations and committed unfair trade practices in inducing them to enter into the sales contract. The Superior Court (Knox County, Perkins, J.) entered summary judgment for Patten and O’Brien on all counts. Because the record reveals a genuine issue of material fact on the Drinkwa-ters’ specific performance claim, we vacate that part of the summary judgment. We affirm the balance of the judgment, as well as the Superior Court’s denial of the Drink-waters’ motions to amend their pleadings and for a jury trial.

The Drinkwaters are Florida residents, but Roger Drinkwater, a former lighthouse keeper, originally came from Rockland and still has relatives in the area. In August of 1984 the Drinkwaters had some telephone conversations with Patten representatives about Penobscot Bay Mountain, a 61-lot Patten subdivision in Rockland. They flew to Maine on August 30 to tour the site and the next day signed with Patten a purchase and sale agreement for Lot No. 5, measuring some 6.1 acres and located at the main entrance to the development. There was some discussion of Patten’s plans to build an entrance gate that would encroach to some degree on the lot, but nothing was put in writing in that regard.

Later the parties scheduled a closing for October 31. When the Drinkwaters came to Maine to inspect the property on October 30, however, they saw a large area staked off in the corner of Lot No. 5, where they learned Patten was planning to build the gate and to place a sign. The Drinkwaters then for the first time retained counsel. At the scheduled meeting the next day Patten was willing to tender only a deed reserving an 875-square-foot gate easement, and the Drinkwaters refused to go through with the closing.

Negotiations over the next month between the parties’ lawyers concluded with two letters that crossed in the mail. Having received a draft deed from Patten’s lawyer along with a request for an “early reply,” the Drinkwaters’ lawyer wrote back on December 9 that

I have forwarded the papers to the Drinkwaters and I believe they will find *774 them in order. I recommended an early-closing. ...

But a December 7 letter from Patten’s lawyer, which crossed in the mail, announced:

As a result of your client’s failure to close his purchase of Lot No. 5, my client is terminating its purchase and sale agreement. The Treasurer of Patten Realty Corporation of Maine will be mailing directly to Roger and Beverly Drinkwa-ter their earnest money deposit....

The Drinkwaters received the refund check but did not cash it immediately. Instead, they retained new counsel and demanded performance of the contract. Their new lawyer wrote them on December 31 that “the land in question has subsequently been sold,” and the Drinkwaters then cashed the refund check on January 7, 1985. Only later did they learn that Patten had conveyed Lot No. 5 to one of its own employees, defendant O’Brien. Changing counsel once more, the Drinkwaters commenced this action in the Superior Court on April 26, 1985, by filing a four-count complaint.

The Drinkwaters’ claims fall into two factual and legal nuclei. Counts I and II are contractual in nature, alleging that Patten failed to perform its obligation on October 31, and in December repudiated the contract and engaged in “willful and fraudulent self-dealing” with its officer O’Brien. Count I seeks damages for breach of contract, and Count II (the only count implicating defendant O’Brien) seeks specific performance and incidental equitable and monetary relief. Counts III and IV sound in tort, alleging unlawful and deceptive conduct by Patten in negotiating the purchase and sale agreement. Count III seeks relief under the Maine Unfair Trade Practices Act (UTPA), 5 M.R.S.A. § 213 (1989), and Count IV seeks common law damages for deceit.

Analyzing these two sets of claims in turn, we first conclude that the Superior Court erred in granting summary judgment for defendants on the claims arising out of the events associated with Patten’s “termination” of the contract and conveyance to O’Brien on December 7, 1984. Summary judgment was appropriate, however, on the claims arising out of the events in August of 1984 leading to the formation of the contract. Finally, we reject the Drinkwa-ters’ further contention on appeal that the Superior Court erred in denying their motions to amend and their motion to restore their case to the jury list.

I.

Claims Arising out of the Breakdown of the Contract

The first factual nucleus here at issue, giving rise to Counts I and II of the Drink-waters’ action against Patten, comprises the breakdown of the October 31 closing, the subsequent negotiations culminating in Patten’s conveyance to O’Brien and its declaration that it was terminating the purchase and sale agreement, and the Drink-waters’ negotiation of the refund check. The Drinkwaters contend that Patten’s termination repudiated the contract and that they remain entitled to specific performance, while defendants contend both that the termination was an appropriate response to the Drinkwaters’ prior repudiation of the contract and that it was subsequently ratified by the Drinkwaters’ implied agreement to rescind the contract. We conclude that on this record the facts not reasonably in dispute are insufficient to compel a judgment either way as a matter of law.

It is undisputed that Patten executed a written agreement to convey Lot No. 5 to the Drinkwaters and that Patten has not done so. Furthermore, nothing in the summary judgment record controverts the conclusion from the fact of his employment by Patten that O’Brien was not a bona fide purchaser. 1 In these circumstances, any judgment for either defendant on the Drinkwaters’ specific performance claim must rest on some affirmative defense by Patten. As alternative bases for affirming *775 the judgment in its favor, Patten asserts three affirmative defenses: 1) that the Drinkwaters by accepting the refund agreed to rescind the contract; 2) that the Drinkwaters earlier had repudiated the contract by demanding modifications as a condition of performance; and 3) that the Drinkwaters violated the “time is of the essence” clause of the contract.

First, we conclude that the alleged rescission is on this record a question of fact rather than law. An agreement to rescind a contract is itself a contract and must be evaluated by principles of contract law. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 283 & comment a (1981). There appears on the record no express offer to rescind the contract and no express acceptance.

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