Henry v. Ecker
This text of 415 So. 2d 137 (Henry v. Ecker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Bruce HENRY and Eleanor Henry, His Wife, Appellants,
v.
Charles T. ECKER and Anna Ecker, His Wife, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*139 Louis Ossinsky, Jr., of Ossinsky, Krol & Hess, Daytona Beach, and Clark & Mussoline, Palatka, for appellants.
William L. Townsend, Jr. and Albert W. Whitaker of Walton & Townsend, Palatka, for appellees.
COWART, Judge.
This case involves specific performance of a contract for the sale and purchase of real property.
Appellees, as sellers, and appellants, as buyers, entered into a written contract for the sale and purchase of a parcel of land for $70,000, payable $2,000 as a deposit, $28,000 at closing and the balance of $40,000 to be secured by a purchase money mortgage. The contract provided that the transaction would be closed by July 2, 1980, but no provision made time of the essence. The contract made no provision for the buyers taking possession prior to closing, but the buyers took possession under the contract with permission of, or at least without protest from, the sellers. One lawyer undertook to represent both parties, but because he had been notified of a potential claim against the sellers for a real estate commission, the lawyer declined to accept and hold in escrow the buyers' $28,000 and directed the buyers to deposit those funds with another law firm. On July 2, 1980, the parties disputed, with the buyers claiming that the sellers had wrongfully removed an ornamental fireplace mantle contrary to the written agreement, which provided that the sellers had the right to retrieve the mantle, the title to which they retained, only after the buyers remodeled the fireplace. There was also some dispute as to whether one or two lawnmowers were included in the deal. The buyers wanted $2,000 of the purchase money held in escrow pending resolution of these matters, but the sellers would not agree and no closing occurred. Later, the sellers executed a deed and left it in escrow with the attorney and authorized him to close with a $2,000 reduction in the sale price. Nevertheless, when the buyers and the attorney later met (probably July 18, 1980) and attempted to close, the buyers felt that it was the sellers' fault that the transaction had not closed on July 2, 1980, and therefore that interest on the deferred portion of the purchase price should commence from the date of the delayed closing and, further, that the sellers should pay $100 in attorney's fees that the other law firm had charged as a fee relating to the escrow of the buyers' down payment money. Again, no closing occurred. Thereafter, the sellers demanded possession and filed an action for unlawful entry and unlawful detention (detainer). The buyers counterclaimed for specific performance. The trial court denied specific performance on the grounds that the buyers did not have clean hands because the transaction had not closed on July 2 as a result of the buyers' objections and questions about the fireplace mantle and the lawnmowers and the transaction had not closed on the second attempt because of the buyers' position with reference to the commencement date of mortgage payments, interest on the deferred portion of the purchase price and the $100 of attorney's fees.
While the contract was poorly drawn on a poor form, all parties consider it adequate, legal and binding. Both parties, while contentious, basically acted in good faith to close their transaction, but they needed help that they did not have. Performance of the contract by execution of the necessary documents at a closing should have occurred and it still can. The buyers have now been in possession of the property for over a year and a half and there is no way for this controversy to be concluded fairly to both *140 parties except for a court of equity to direct specific performance of the contract with the necessary equitable adjustments.
First, the fact that the two efforts to close this transaction failed does not necessarily mean that either party breached the agreement or was guilty of unclean hands. Failure to close at any one time does not amount to unclean hands; that equitable doctrine was not intended as a penalty to deprive a party of the benefits of a contract merely because they are not agreeable at a closing. Closings of real estate transactions are fraught with potential for disagreements as to details and personality conflicts and emotionally induced positions are common. Equity, like a good real estate closing attorney, should assume that a basically fair and equitable agreement should be performed by the parties and should steadfastly press forward, patiently resolving differences and parrying all personality and other petty matters that threaten attainment of the goal of full good faith performance by all parties.
Time is not of the essence in contracts for the sale and purchase of real estate unless the contract so provides. See Chabot v. Winter Park Co., 34 Fla. 258, 15 So. 756 (1894); Southern Life Ins. and Trust Co. v. Cole, 4 Fla. 359 (1852); Fretwell v. Crisafulli, 185 So.2d 504 (Fla. 4th DCA 1966). When a contract for the sale and purchase of land does not make time of the essence as it relates to closing, a party can breach that contract only by refusing to perform after demand that a closing take place at a reasonable time and place. In this case, the buyers did not refuse to perform after a demand for performance by refusing to close at a given reasonable time and place. In Florida, ejectment proceedings will not lie against even a defaulting vendee who enters the property under an executory contract for purchase until such time as the vendor gives notice of rescission because of the default and allows the vendee a reasonable time to perform obligations under the contract. Wismer v. Alyea, 103 Fla. 1102, 138 So. 763 (1932); South Florida Farm Co. v. Hall, 84 Fla. 233, 93 So. 687 (1922).
A contract of purchase and sale, being preliminary to the sale and not the sale itself and also subject to rescission by agreement between the parties, is an executory contract, the two promises of which are mutually dependent and conditional requiring concurrent performance. Since all land is considered unique, money damages to a contract purchaser of lands is an inadequate remedy at law. Therefore, specific performance of contracts for the sale and purchase of real property is generally granted as a matter of right where their terms are fair, certain and definite and they have been entered into without misunderstanding or misrepresentation.
The "clean hands" maxim and the equitable principle for which it stands signify that a litigant may be denied affirmative equitable relief by a court of equity on the ground that his conduct has been inequitable, unfair, dishonest, fraudulent or deceitful as to the controversy in issue. This maxim refers to the acceptability, cleanliness and decency of the claim put forth and describes equity's practice of refusing an equitable remedy to enforce a claim that is itself inequitable, unconscionable or tainted by fraud or misrepresentation. Disputes between parties at real estate closings such as in this case do not constitute the kinds of acts or conduct within the basic rationale and purpose of this equitable maxim and the maxim should not be invoked to deny an equitable remedy to one who seeks the enforcement of the legal right to compel a party to a contract to do that which was in the contemplation of the parties as expressed in their contract. Equity ought to require doing that which should have been done.
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415 So. 2d 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-v-ecker-fladistctapp-1982.