Estate of Schler v. Benson

947 S.W.2d 495, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 1061, 1997 WL 327742
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1997
DocketNo. WD 53367
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 947 S.W.2d 495 (Estate of Schler v. Benson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Schler v. Benson, 947 S.W.2d 495, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 1061, 1997 WL 327742 (Mo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

LAURA DENVER STITH, Presiding Judge.

In her will, decedent Wilma C. Schler bequeathed to her son, Larry Joe Schler, an option to purchase the family farm at a favorable price. The terms of the option required him to exercise the option within seven months of the first publication of Notice of Letters, said that the purchase price must be paid within thirty days of such notice, and provided that the option would be void and of no effect if not “so” exercised within “said” time.

[497]*497Larry gave notice of his intent to exercise the option to his sister and co-personal representative, Sandra Lee Benson. Believing she had refused to agree to sell the property to him in accordance with the will, however, he did not actually tender the purchase price to her within thirty days of the notice. When he later tried to do so, his sister expressly refused to accept the tender because she claimed that time was of the essence in exercise of an option and that her brother’s failure to close within thirty days of giving notice of intent to exercise the option voided the option. The probate court later found the option had been validly exercised and ordered sale of the property to Larry pursuant to the option. Sandra appeals.

We affirm. We find that Larry’s notice was effective even though given before the issuance of letters and appointment of a personal representative, and that, once he gave notice, then the option was transformed into a bilateral contract for the sale of land. Time is not of the essence in such contracts unless expressly made so in the contract. While the will made time of the essence in exercising the option, it did not make time of the essence in payment of the purchase price. Here, tender of payment occurred within a reasonable time after exercise of the option, and accordingly the probate court properly directed sale of the farm to Larry pursuant to the option.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Wilma C. Schler died testate on March 15, 1996, survived by her two children, Respondent Larry Joe Schler and Appellant Sandra Lee Benson. In her Last Will and Testament, the decedent made her two children co-personal representatives of her estate and gave the residue of her estate to both children equally. She also, however, gave to her son, Larry, an option to purchase the family farm in Howard County, Missouri, at a favorable price. The will set forth very specific terms for exercise of the option, as follows:

I give to Larry Joe Schler the option and privilege to purchase the bottom farm on which I reside of approximately 150 acres in Howard County, Missouri, for the sum of $400.00 per acre. Said option shall he exercised by written notice of intent to do so delivered to my personal representav tives within seven (7) months after the first publication of Notice of Letters granted upon my estate. In such event the purchase price shall be paid and the transaction closed within thirty (SO) days after said notice is given. If any option is not so exercised within said time, that option shall be void and of no effect.

(emphasis added).

On March 26,1996, Larry and Sandra filed an application with the circuit court of Howard County for letters testamentary. Because Larry would need his sister’s approval — as co-personal representative — for the sale of the farm to him, on that same day Larry also prepared a letter to Sandra which stated:

As stated in the Last Will and Testament of Wilma C. Schler, of Howard County, Missouri, dated June 7, 1988; I have the option and privilege to purchase the bottom farm which is approximately 150 acres in Howard County, Missouri for the sum of $400.00 per acre. I would like to exercise this option as soon as possible. The total amount paid for this land will be $60,000.00 to the estate of Wilma C. Schler.
I would appreciate a reply to this request as soon as possible.

Larry’s letter, dated March 26, 1996, was postmarked March 27, 1996, the same day that the decedent’s will was admitted to probate and the probate court appointed the two siblings as personal representatives of the estate. First publication of Notice of Letters was made on April 6,1996.

Sandra did not respond to her brother Larry’s notice of intent to exercise the option. He therefore contacted her in “the first part of April” and requested that she and her husband meet him at the McDonald’s in Warrensburg, Missouri. Larry testified that he communicated to Sandra and her husband at that meeting that he wanted to exercise his option and purchase the farm. He also testified that he brought the money to purchase the farm to this meeting, but did not complete the sale because his sister [498]*498would not agree to do so unless he gave her a similar option to purchase the farm upon his death or if he should desire to sell the farm at an earlier time. More specifically, Larry said that from the tenor of the conversation he thought his sister was refusing to agree to the sale of the farm to him as provided for in the will unless he agreed to put a similar option to let her purchase the farm in his will. Since he was not willing to give her such an option at his death, he thought that meant that she would not agree to sale of the farm to him in her capacity as personal representative. He therefore did not tender the purchase money to his sister at that time because he thought tender would be futile.

Sandra testified to a different understanding of what occurred at the McDonald’s meeting. She said that she understood that her brother wanted to purchase the farm, and admitted that she had requested an option similar to the one he had been granted in the will. She claimed, however, and her brother confirmed, that she never explicitly refused to complete the sale, nor was she ever directly asked whether she would agree to complete the sale even if her brother would not give her the option she requested. She said that her brother never asked her to sign the papers necessary for him to complete the purchase.

On April 26, 1996, one month after he had sent the first notice of intent to exercise the option, Larry sent his sister a second, identical notice of intent to exercise the option. His sister had by this point obtained an attorney. Her attorney sent Larry’s attorney a letter stating that Sandra believed that the option had expired by its own terms because Larry had failed to close the sale within thirty days of giving notice on March 26,1996.

In response, Larry’s attorney sent another notice to Sandra stating that Larry had exercised the option as set forth in his April 26, 1996, notice and that he requested that the closing be conducted at 2:00 p.m. on May 22, 1996, at the offices of the estate’s attorney in Boonville, Missouri. The parties agree that Sandra did not appear at the closing on that date, according to Sandra because she believed the option had already expired since the sale was not closed within thirty days of exercise of the option.

Because the siblings could not agree as to the option, the estate’s attorney requested the court to appoint a new personal representative. On June 28, 1996, the court appointed Glynda Naylor as successor personal representative, and she filed a petition to sell the farm to Larry' in accordance with the option.

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Bluebook (online)
947 S.W.2d 495, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 1061, 1997 WL 327742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-schler-v-benson-moctapp-1997.