English Speaking Union (New York) Inc. v. Payson

11 Misc. 2d 669, 174 N.Y.S.2d 775, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3157
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 Misc. 2d 669 (English Speaking Union (New York) Inc. v. Payson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
English Speaking Union (New York) Inc. v. Payson, 11 Misc. 2d 669, 174 N.Y.S.2d 775, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3157 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

Samuel H. Hoestadteb, J.

This is a consolidation of two actions, in the first of which English Speaking Union (New York) Inc. (Union), as plaintiff seeks specific performance by the defendant Payson of a written agreement by which he undertook to purchase a parcel of real estate in the city of New York, and in the second of which Betty Schwartz, as Payson’s assignee, sues to recover $25,000 paid by Payson on account of the purchase price of the parcel.

On December 3, 1956, the Union, a nonprofit membership corporation, agreed to sell to Payson, a real estate operator, the premises then occupied by it at 19-21 East 54th Street, in the borough of Manhattan for $440,000, of which half was to be paid in cash and the balance secured by a purchase-money mortgage. Because the Union was simultaneously entering into a contract to buy the property 16 East 69th Street for its occupancy after alterations and also needed an order of this court authorizing the sale to Payson, it was provided by rider that the Union should have the right to cancel its contract with Payson on or before December 27, 1956, should it be unable to obtain permission of the Supreme Court to sell 19-21 East 54th Street or should it because of zoning restrictions be unable to use 16 East 69th Street or should its plans for altering 16 East 69th Street not be approved. On the signing of the contract Payson deposited $10,000 in escrow which, with an additional $15,000 was to be paid on account of the purchase price, on the nonexercise by the Union of its right to cancel. The date set for closing was March 25,1957.

On December 21, 1956 the parties extended until January 11, 1957 the expiration date of the Union’s right to cancel and correspondingly postponed the closing date from March 25 to April 11, 1957. On January 11, 1957 the Union by á letter from its attorneys gave notice that it did not intend to cancel; this letter also said: “We hope you will now apply for title insurance and that you will notify us of any objections. * * * As you know, the English Speaking Union is quite anxious to close title on the date set forth in the contract, as amended.” The $25,000 payment towards the purchase price was thereupon made; this is the $25,000 which Payson’s assignee seeks to have repaid. Title insurance was evidently ordered soon thereafter, for the [672]*672survey discussed later is redated February 25,1957. By written stipulation the closing was adjourned successively to May 1, June 3, June 21 and finally August 1,1957. When the adjournment to June 21,1957 was agreed on the purchaser was informed that if the closing was adjourned beyond that date he would be required to pay interest from June 21, 1957 on the balance of $195,000 payable in cash; accordingly the stipulation for the adjournment to August 1, 1957 provided for such payment of interest from June 21, 1957. The letter of Payson’s attorney transmitting the signed stipulation for the adjournment to August 1, 1957, gave the assurance requested by the Union that any deposit received by Payson on a resale made in the interval to August 1, 1957 would be turned over to the Union, to be applied against the cash portion of the purchase price. The stipulation itself contains this vital term: “ The purchaser agrees that he will not ask any further adjournment.”

Despite this commitment, Payson’s attorney did on July 29, 1957, by telephone ask for one further adjournment and was told the Union would not accede to the request. In the interim the Union’s attorneys had been told informally that Payson was assigning the contract to Betty Schwartz and, in anticipation of such assignment, the purchase-money bond and mortgage had been redrawn to substitute her for Payson as the mortgagor. On August 1, 1957, the attorney for the assignee appeared at the office of the Union’s attorneys, exhibited the assignment from Payson to Betty Schwartz, dated July 22,1957 and requested an adjournment of the closing for 30 days. This attorney said he had no reason for making the request and that he had no objections to the title. The Union’s counsel refused to grant the adjournment, said he was ready to proceed with the closing and that he had the deed, bond and mortgage. The assignee’s attorney replied that there was no need to make a formal tender. Unquestionably a formal tender was expressly waived; moreover a tender would have been idle in the circumstances, for it was crystal clear that neither Payson nor the assignee was prepared or intended then to close the title. Soon thereafter the two actions now consolidated were begun.

The record establishes abundantly that Betty Schwartz, who is Payson’s secretary, was acting throughout as his nominee and on his behalf, and had no beneficial interest in the transaction. She was to take title in the first instance solely for the purpose of executing the purchase-money bond and mortgage and was immediately thereafter to convey the property to Payson. Pay-son has admitted that the request on August 1,1957 for another [673]*673adjournment was made at his instance and he testified that had the adjournment been granted he, not his assignee, would have taken title on the adjourned date. In view of the complete absence of interest on the part of the assignee, her presence in the situation should, for the purpose of decision, be regarded and the case treated as though Payson himself was the actor throughout, as in fact he was.

The two main grounds on which Payson resists the Union’s demand for specific performance of the contract are that he was entitled, as a matter of law, to a further adjournment of the title closing beyond August 1,1957 and that the title is unmarketable. He argues that the Appellate Division (5 A D 2d 814) upheld the right to an adjournment of the closing when it gave the assignee leave to serve an amended complaint. Her original complaint, which set out the various defects now asserted by Payson to render the title unmarketable and the refusal of the request for an adjournment, had been held insufficient at Special Term. The Union argued that the request for an adjournment so pleaded, negatived the plaintiff’s readiness and willingness to perform and was therefore fatal to a recovery of the down payment. The Appellate Division modified by permitting service of an amended complaint alleging that the plaintiff was able and willing to perform provided a reasonable adjournment of the closing had been granted and eliminating allegations with respect to objections to title not made on the law day. The amended complaint omits all reference to objections to title and thereby unequivocally admits that no objection to title was made on the law day. In my opinion the Appellate Division, in so granting leave to amend, did not determine that either Payson or Betty Schwartz was on August 1, 1957 entitled to a further adjournment of the closing; that is the question to be decided here.

While the stipulation adjourning the closing from June 21 to August 1, 1957 did not in terms state that time was then of the essence, it nevertheless plainly made it so. When the Union insisted that Payson agree in that stipulation not to ask for any further adjournment it gave him unmistakable notice that, despite the prior adjournments, the time had now come when he must perform and that no more indulgence was to be expected. The closing on August 1, 1957 then became of the essence and Payson by signing the stipulation manifested his assent thereto. The interval of almost six weeks until August 1, 1957 was long enough in the circumstances to constitute a reasonable time, under the doctrine of Taylor v. Goelet (208 N. Y. 253); Lojo Realty Co. v. Estate of Johnson (235 App.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Misc. 2d 669, 174 N.Y.S.2d 775, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/english-speaking-union-new-york-inc-v-payson-nysupct-1958.