J L J Associates, Inc. v. Persiani

550 A.2d 650, 41 Conn. Super. Ct. 79, 41 Conn. Supp. 79, 1988 Conn. Super. LEXIS 6
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1988
DocketFile D.N. CV87 0089730 S
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 550 A.2d 650 (J L J Associates, Inc. v. Persiani) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J L J Associates, Inc. v. Persiani, 550 A.2d 650, 41 Conn. Super. Ct. 79, 41 Conn. Supp. 79, 1988 Conn. Super. LEXIS 6 (Colo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Emmett, J.

Before the court for decision is the defendants’ motion to strike. The defendants claim that the plaintiff’s action to enforce an option to purchase real property is barred by the rule against perpetuities. 1

The defendants’ motion challenges the legal sufficiency, on the face of the complaint, of the claims made. Practice Book § 152 (1); King v. Board of Education, 195 Conn. 90, 93, 486 A.2d 111 (1985). The court must construe the facts most favorably to the pleader, and “all well-pleaded facts and those facts necessarily implied from the allegations are taken as admitted.” Amodio v. Cunningham, 182 Conn. 80, 82-83, 438 A.2d 6 (1980). The motion’s purpose is to permit the court to avoid, where appropriate, a “useless trial.” Montanaro v. Pandolfini, 148 Conn. 153, 156, 168 A.2d 550 (1961).

The plaintiff alleges that it holds a “right of first refusal” option to purchase property adjacent to its own, which option was created in 1978 when the plaintiff’s predecessor in title bought its parcel from the defendants. The option reads: “It is expressly understood and agreed that the seller is the owner of a certain adjacent premises designated as Parcel ‘B’ 6,937 square feet as shown on record map #10035 in the Stamford Town Clerk’s Office. As a further consideration for this contract and the buyer’s acquisition of the property to be acquired pursuant hereto, it is expressly convenanted and agreed that the buyer shall *81 have a right of first refusal over said adjoining Parcel ‘B’ as follows: If the seller should at any time receive a bona fide offer for the purchase of said Parcel ‘B,’ [seller] shall so advise the buyer, in writing, setting forth the specific terms and conditions of said offer. The buyer shall have thirty (30) days from the date of said notice in which to exercise the right of first refusal and shall be entitled to acquire said Parcel ‘B’ on the same terms and conditions as are set forth in the above designated notice to the buyer from the seller setting forth said bona fide offer. If the buyer does not exercise said right within thirty (30) days, then this right shall terminate and the seller may convey said premises to such bona fide offeror. It is further agreed that this paragraph shall not be applicable to a conveyance between the sellers.”

The defendants are correct in maintaining that the option poses a rule against perpetuities problems because the interest created “might not vest until some uncertain date in the future.” Neustadt v. Pearce, 145 Conn. 403, 405, 143 A.2d 437 (1958). The legal consequences of this perpetuities problem, however, are unclear because both the present status of the rule and, in particular, the applicability of the rule to the facts in this case present questions in areas where the law is unsettled.

In 1955, the Connecticut legislature substituted a “second look” statute, General Statutes § 45-95, for the common law rule against perpetuities as the basis for evaluating the validity of future interests created in wills and inter vivos instruments. While the statute does not apply directly to the option at issue in this case, it does indicate a movement in this state’s law toward analyzing “perpetuities” problems by review of the reasonableness of the restraint imposed at the time the interest vests rather than by invalidating such interests, as the rule against perpetuities provides, because *82 the possibility exists that the interest will not vest within a reasonable time. See Connecticut Bank & Trust Co. v. Brody, 174 Conn. 616, 628, 392 A.2d 445 (1978).

With respect to the specific question presented here — i.e., the effect of the rule against perpetuities on an option contract — the one Connecticut Supreme Court case that has analyzed the problem; Lewis Oyster Co. v. West, 93 Conn. 518, 533, 107 A.2d 138 (1919); hedged in its holding by finding both that the option, without regard to the facts surrounding its exercise, violated the rule and also that the option was, when exercised, “a very practical restraint on alienation.” Specifically, the court in Lewis Oyster Co. v. West, supra, held: “This covenant attempts to create a contingent interest in property which may not vest within a life or lives in being and the lives of their immediate issue or descendants. It is also certain that the covenant amounts to a very practical restraint on alienation. It appears from this record that the property would have been worth $25,000 to the devisee West, if it could be sold freely. But because of this covenant she has been awarded only $2,500 plus improvements valued at $4,600. It is not consistent with the public policy of Connecticut as expressed in the rule against perpetuities and in the former statute against perpetuities, that the dead hand of West should rest on this property and control its price and its assignability for an unlimited future.”

The ambiguity in the Lewis Oyster Co. decision — i.e., whether an open-ended option ought to be analyzed with reference to the circumstances existing when the option is exercised under the law governing unreasonable restraints or whether such an option ought to be judged solely “on its face” and without regard to the actual impact it has under the rule against perpetuities — has not been satisfactorily clarified since Lewis Oyster Co. was decided in 1919. In fact, in only *83 one case; Neustadt v. Pearce, supra; since Lewis Oyster Co. was decided has the Supreme Court applied the rule to an option contract 2 and, in so doing, the court assumed that the Lewis Oyster Co. court’s consideration of the actual effect of the option was mere surplusage and concluded, without discussing the ambiguity in Lewis Oyster Co., that an unlimited option must be automatically invalidated under the rule and not judged against the reasonableness of the restraint. In Neustadt, however, the court ignored several important principles of interpretation that apply to the evaluation of a rule against perpetuities problems — most notably that the court must, if possible and reasonable to do so, avoid using the rule to invalidate the parties’ intentions. Second National Bank v. Townsend, 130 Conn. 631, 639, 36 A.2d 744 (1944).

In Cohen v. Meola, 37 Conn. Sup. 27, 32-33, 492 A.2d 152 (1980), adopted by the Supreme Court in Cohen v. Meola, 184 Conn. 218, 221, 439 A.2d 966

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550 A.2d 650, 41 Conn. Super. Ct. 79, 41 Conn. Supp. 79, 1988 Conn. Super. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-l-j-associates-inc-v-persiani-connsuperct-1988.