Hahn v. Earth City Corp.

625 S.W.2d 640, 1981 Mo. App. LEXIS 3216
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 17, 1981
Docket41888
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 625 S.W.2d 640 (Hahn v. Earth City Corp.) 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
Hahn v. Earth City Corp., 625 S.W.2d 640, 1981 Mo. App. LEXIS 3216 (Mo. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

SATZ, Presiding Judge.

In this cause, plaintiffs appeal from the trial court’s finding that defendant had no duty to purchase plaintiffs’ land. We affirm.

The sons of Dora Hahn and their spouses are plaintiffs in this action. In 1971, Dora Hahn owned land in St. Louis County, and, at that time, plaintiffs and Earth City Corporation (Earth City) executed a document (Hahn document) concerning that land. By this document, plaintiffs “agree[d] to sell to Earth City Corporation all of the property described . .. for the sum of Nine Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($9,750.00) per . . . acre .... The sale to be made from any of the sons of Dora Hahn and their respective wives and children as may be living at the time of the transfer to Earth City which shall be five (5) years from the date hereof shall be on the following basis: Earth City shall pay to the Sellers, as their interest may appear, Twenty Nine Percent (29%) of the adjusted purchase price in cash at closing. ...” 1 The document further provided that Earth City would lease the land until its actual sale. Earth City did occupy the land as lessee, paying the agreed to rent.

Subsequently, Earth City and defendant engaged in a transaction involving the Hahn document, plaintiffs’ land, other tracts of land and many contracts concerning a complex real estate development project. This transaction was reduced to writing in a “Purchase Agreement” and an “Assignment.” The “Purchase Agreement" provided that Earth City “shall sell, transfer, assign and convey ... [a]ll right, title, interest and privilege of [Earth City] in and to [certain] parcels of land,” which included the land in question. The “Assignment” was a general assignment, stating that Earth City “sells, transfers, conveys and *642 assigns [to defendant] all of its right, title, interest and privilege in and to the [Hahn document]” and “in and to” plaintiffs’ land.

In 1976, seeking to enforce the Hahn document, plaintiffs made a demand upon Earth City to purchase the land in question. Earth City refused. Plaintiffs then sought performance from defendant on the theory that, as Earth City’s assignee, defendant had assumed the obligation to perform the contractual duties Earth City owed to plaintiffs. This demand was also rejected. Plaintiffs then turned to the courts and, in separate counts, sued Earth City and defendant for specific performance and damages. During trial, plaintiffs settled with Earth City. After trial, the court found the Hahn document to be “in the nature of an option” contract, imposing no duty on Earth City to purchase plaintiffs’ land, and, thus, the court found that even though Earth City has “assigned its rights, privileges and obligations” under the Hahn document to defendant, the assignment could impose no obligation upon defendant to purchase plaintiffs’ land.

On appeal, plaintiffs contend they are creditor beneficiaries of the assignment between Earth City and defendant, and, thus, are entitled to specific performance or damages from defendant. This contention rests on two interrelated arguments. First, plaintiffs argue that the Hahn document was a bilateral contract for the sale of their land not an option contract; and plaintiffs also argue that, by its assignment to defendant, Earth City not only assigned its rights but delegated its duties under the Hahn document to defendant and defendant not only accepted those rights but agreed to perform those duties. We agree that the Hahn document is not an option contract, but even if it were a bilateral contract for the sale of land, we would not conclude that plaintiffs should prevail because defendant, as Earth City’s assignee, did not assume the obligation to perform any contractual duties Earth City owed to plaintiffs.

We first dispose of the issue of the Hahn document as an option contract.

As with any contract, an option contract may be either unilateral or bilateral. 1A Corbin, Contracts § 260 (1963). In a unilateral option contract, the optionee pays the optionor to keep an offer open for a stated period of time. The optionee makes no promise of any kind. The consideration is the performance by the optionee; i.e., the optionee’s payment of money. The op-tionee is privileged to accept the offer or not. The optionor’s promise is binding, however, because he has been paid to keep his offer open. 1A Corbin, Contracts § 260 (1963). In a bilateral option contract, the optionee pays for his option not by performance but with a promise. See Ragan v. Schreffler, 306 S.W.2d 494, 498 (Mo.1957). Again, the optionee is privileged to accept the optionor’s promise or not, but, in this instance, he has made a binding promise as consideration to have the offer kept open. The option contract is, thus, bilateral because each party has made a binding promise. Ragan v. Schreffler, supra at 498. In the present case, the parties do not consider the Hahn document to be a unilateral option contract nor do they discuss the relative merits of this document as a bilateral option contract. This posture of the parties is understandable because the Hahn document neither expressly or impliedly acknowledges a payment or a promise from Earth City in exchange for a separate promise from plaintiffs to keep open an offer to sell their land. 2

Although the parties properly ignore the issue of the Hahn document as an option contract, they do address the issue of the document as a bilateral contract for sale of land. Plaintiffs contend the language of *643 the document clearly creates a bilateral contract between them and Earth City. Defendant contends the language is ambiguous and, at best, merely indicates an intention to enter into a contract at a later time. For our purposes here, we do not resolve this issue for even if we assume that plaintiffs and Earth City entered into a bilateral contract for sale of land, the subsequent “Assignment” and “Purchase Agreement” between Earth City and defendant did not impose an obligation on defendant to perform the contractual duties Earth City owed to plaintiffs.

By assignment of an executory bilateral contract, an assignor may transfer his rights, intending to perform his duties himself, or he may transfer his rights and delegate the duties. If the assignor expressly delegates his duties and the assignee expressly promises to perform those duties, the assignee becomes liable to the original contracting party on a creditor beneficiary theory. 4 Corbin, Contracts § 906 (1951). At times, the assignment does not differentiate between rights and duties in express terms and the assignor purports to assign “the contract” or “all of his rights under the contract.” In these instances, the Restatement provides that presumptively the assignor intends to delegate his duties as well as transfer his rights and the assignee intends to assume those duties as well as accept those rights. Restatement (Second) of Contracts, § 328 (1979). As noted, in the “Assignment” in the present case, Earth City assigned “all of its right, title, interest and privilege in and to” the Hahn document to defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
625 S.W.2d 640, 1981 Mo. App. LEXIS 3216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahn-v-earth-city-corp-moctapp-1981.