Elbom v. Pavsner

196 N.W. 442, 225 Mich. 213, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 559
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1923
DocketDocket No. 88.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 196 N.W. 442 (Elbom v. Pavsner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elbom v. Pavsner, 196 N.W. 442, 225 Mich. 213, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 559 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Defendants owned, under a land contract muniment, a 10-family apartment building and grounds located on Hendrie avenue in the city of Detroit, and resided in two of the apartments. They listed this property for sale with an agent named Barnett who, on Sunday, July 27, 1919, took plaintiffs there as prospective purchasers. During the interview which followed between the parties a sale and purchase were agreed upon. A memorandum of this agreement was then drawn up by a neighboring druggist named Small who was a notary public, and signed by the parties which, omitting introductory matters containing a description of the property and acknowledgment of a deposit, is as follows:

*216 “The parties of the second part are to give to the parties of the first part (besides the two hundred dollars deposit) five thousand eight hundred dollars within ten days from the date the abstract is brought up to date. The full purchase price being thirty-five thousand ($85,000.00) dollars. The balance of twenty-nine thousand dollars are to be paid in instalment payments of seven hundred dollars every three months. The seven hundred dollars payments include the interest.
“The parties of the first part are to have received their equity in said building within five years and three months from the date the sale is made.
“The parties of the first part are at privilege to stay at the premises they are at present occupying for a period of six months from the date the deal is closed at a rental price charged to the rest of the tenants in the same building for rooms equal to theirs.”

This first memorandum of agreement prepared by Small was dated July 26, 1919, but it is undisputed that it was in fact signed by the parties on Sunday, July 27, 1919, and the $200 deposited was then paid defendants. It soon came to the attention of plaintiffs that this agreement made and signed on Sunday might be invalid, and on Monday an interview with defendants resulted in another agreement being prepared by Mr. Small on the following Tuesday, July 29,1919, containing the same terms as the first, which the contracting parties then signed, defendants retaining the $200 already paid.

It is also claimed by plaintiffs that in connection with their discussion of the matter of rent and privilege of defendants to retain possession of the apartments they then occupied for six months after closing the deal, as stated in the written agreement, it was expressly understood and agreed that plaintiffs were to have possession of the property and collect the rents after payment of the $5,800 specified in the contract, *217 which the conveyancer failed to as clearly express in the written agreement as he should have done.

On August 31, 1919, defendants delivered to plaintiffs an abstract of title which the latter submitted to their attorney and received from him a favorable opinion thereon within a week or ten days. The testimony shows that plaintiffs had available resources, were able and willing to make the next payment of $5,800 in time and manner provided by their agreement, if required, plaintiff Schwartzberg then having $3,000 in bank with which to pay his half of that amount. He also had further money coming to him from sale of some property, its payment only awaiting settlement pending preparation of an abstract, but he had arranged to bring his family over from the old country and, as a precaution, communicated those facts to defendant Pavsner, requesting him to grant two or three months’ extension of time in which to pay $900 of his share of the $5,800, to which, as Schwartzberg testified, Pavsner replied that the deal was not then ready to be closed and “we will see about it later.”

Plaintiffs’ testimony further shows that while matters were in that condition their attorney endeavored to communicate with defendants by telephone without success, and on September 18th wrote them by registered mail that plaintiffs were ready and had been ready to close said deal and were prepared to pay them the $5,800 as provided, suggesting Monday, September 22d, at 2 o’clock, at his office, as a convenient time and place, with the request that, if not convenient, they communicate with him or his clients and an appointment mutually satisfactory could be arranged. This letter was received by defendants on September 19th.

On September 20th plaintiffs received a letter, dated September 18th, from defendants’ attorney written at defendants’ request notifying them that the agree *218 ment of purchase dated July 26, 1919, had been declared forfeited “because of failure to perform the same according to the terms thereof,” and giving notice that defendants would retain the deposit of $200 to apply on account of damages, and would proceed to sell the property for the best available price, holding plaintiffs responsible for all damages which they might sustain. On receipt of this letter plaintiffs and Barnett visited defendants, on September 21st, and it was finally arranged that defendants would grant Schwartzberg three months’ additional time in which to make the payment of $900 in consideration of his paying them a bonus of $50. An appointment was then made between the parties to meet in the office of defendants’ attorney at 2 o’clock in the afternoon of Monday, September 22d, and close the deal.

Plaintiffs and Barnett went to defendants’ attorney’s office at the appointed time, prepared to close the deal according to arrangement made the evening before. They waited there until 5 o’clock and none of the defendants having appeared they went to Pavsner’s store and inquired why defendants had not kept their appointment, to which he replied they wanted all the money and would not agree to any extension of time of payment of the $900, to which plaintiffs replied that they would have the full amount ready for them the next day, September 23d, at defendants’ attorney’s office at 2 o’clock in the afternoon, and an agreement was then made for the parties to meet at that time and place to close the deal. Plaintiffs and Barnett met this appointment ready and able to close the deal, having with them sufficient certified checks and other bank paper for that purpose. These were shown to defendants’ counsel, and they waited in his office until 5 o’clock, but defendants did not appear. They then went to Pavsner’s store and told him they had met their appointment ready to fulfill, showed him the bank paper they had *219 with them for that purpose and asked why defendants had failed to keep the appointment. His reply was that defendants had changed their minds entirely in regard to the deal, refused to close, it, and said they were offered more money for the property, but did not claim or say they were too late.

These matters are denied by Pavsner, who was defendants’ spokesman in the negotiations and principal witness. He testified that shortly after September 10th he told Elbom they were ready to close the deal, to which the latter replied that the abstract was all right and they would close it in a day or two.

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.W. 442, 225 Mich. 213, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elbom-v-pavsner-mich-1923.