Kentucky Consumers Oil Co. v. General Bonded Warehousing Corp.

184 S.W.2d 972, 299 Ky. 161, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 16, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 972 (Kentucky Consumers Oil Co. v. General Bonded Warehousing Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Consumers Oil Co. v. General Bonded Warehousing Corp., 184 S.W.2d 972, 299 Ky. 161, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 394 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Yan Sant, Commissioner

—Affirming.

The suit is for damages allegedly sustained by appellee, G-eneral Bonded Warehousing Corporation, by reason of the breach by appellants of an option agreement dated November 17, 1942, whereby appellants agreed to convey to appellees certain real estate and personal property described in the option agreement, should appellees exercise the option and pay the purchase price agreed upon. At the conclusion of the evidence, both plaintiffs and defendants filed motions for directed verdicts; defendants’ motion was overruled, that of the plaintiffs sustained, to which defendants excepted. The jury returned a verdict in the sum of Four Thousand Four Hundred Sixty Dollars ($4,460), on which judgment was entered. By the agreement of No *163 vember 17,1942, in consideration of the sum of One Hundred Fifty Dollars ($150), appellants granted to Walter L. Borgerding, bis heirs and assigns, the exclusive right and option to purchase the property therein described at any time within fifteen (15) days from the date of the agreement, for the sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000), and to execute therefor a deed conveying the property free of encumbrance. Mr. Borgerding immediately organized a corporation, to which he assigned the option. The option agreement was entered into with knowledge on the part of appellants that Mr. Borgerding had arranged with the Defense Supplies Corporation (a subsidiary of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation), to lease- to it the property described in the option agreement, contingent upon securing clear title thereto. The terms of the proposed lease provided for the payment by the Defense Supplies Corporation to Mr. Borgerding’s assigns a fixed rental of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000) per month, plus one-fourth of one cent per gallon for receiving, and one-fourth of one cent per gallon for shipping, alcohol to be stored in tanks on the property. The lease was to continue for six months after the cessation of hostilities in the present war. An abstract disclosed the fact that the property was mortgaged to a third party in the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000) and further burdened by á recorded lease to R. J. Brown, of St. Louis, Missouri. On the twenty-fourth day of November, 1942; and again on the first day of December, 1942, Borgerding advised appellants that his Corporation had authorized him to exercise the privilege of purchasing the property granted in the option; but notified appellants of the mortgage and lease, and suggested that they arrange to free the property of these encumbrances. He did not tender the purchase price of the property, or demand the immediate delivery of a general warranty deed. It is contended by appellants that the privilege of the option was not exercised, by reason of the failure of appellees to tender the purchase-price and demand delivery of a deed on or before December 1, 1942.

By the terms of the option, the purchase price was not to be paid until appellants delivered a deed to the-property, with covenant of general warranty. Neither on November 24, nor on December 1, did appellants place themselves in position to deliver a general warranty deed; although it is conclusively shown by the evidence *164 they could have obtained a cancellation of the Brown lease, and could have paid off the mortgage debt as early as December 29, 1942. In 66 C. J., Sec. 22, p. 499, it is said:

“An acceptance according to the terms of the option is not rendered conditional by mere suggestions for some future modification, nor by demands as to performance which do not qualify the acceptance, nor by being conditioned upon the performance by the optioner of what he was obligated to do by the terms of the • contract. ’ ’

In Johnson v. Benjamin, 219 Ky. 169, 292 S. W. 801, 802, the Court said:

“* * * when the stipulations of the contract (option) are concurrent, as where the deed is to be delivered on the payment of the price, an actual tender and demand by one party is necessary to put the other in default. 27 R. C. L. 457. However, the law does not require an idle ceremony, and no tender of a deed on the part of the vendor is necessary to put the purchaser in default where he has already announced that,he will not carry out the contract, or has otherwise waived the necessity for a tender. ’ ’

The converse of this proposition is true; that is, in general, a tender on the part of the vendee is necessary to put the vendor in default, but it is not necessary for the vendee to tender the purchase price, where the vendor has waived the necessity for a tender. Both parties knew on November 24 and on December 1, that, because of existing encumbrances appellants could not deliver a,, general warranty deed; but the proof shows conclusively that appellants knew,-and appellees did not know, that a cancellation of the Brown lease could have been obtained before December 1,1942. That being true, their failure to rid the property of the encumbrances amounted to an announcement that they would not carry out the contract. Under the circumstances, the tender of the purchase money would have been “idle ceremony,” for which reason such action on the part of appellees was not prerequisite to accepting the privileges granted by the option. Appellees showed their ability to pay the purchase price, the President of the Corporation having secured and placed in the Bank to the credit of the Corporation the Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) required to consummate the purchase. It is apparent- that appellees performed all acts necessary to consummate the *165 privilege granted them .under the option agreement; and appellants rendered themselves liable to them by failing to perform the obligation they assumed under the agreement. That being true, the Court properly overruled appellants ’ motion for a peremptory instruction, and properly sustained appellees’ motion therefor.

Complaint is made of the instruction on the measure of damages, which was given as follows:

“1. You will find for the plaintiff and will award it such sum in damages as you may believe from the evidence fairly represents the damage to which it was put by the failure of the defendant to carry out the option agreement, the award not to exceed $16,000.00, less such sum as you may believe from the evidence would have been the necessary and fair expenses of-the plaintiff in the operation of the plant; such sum not to be less than $4460; the whole award to the plaintiff not to exceed $12,537.”

At the time of the trial, ten months had transpired since the date appellants agreed to deliver the property under the option agreement, and, of course, the war was still in progress. Under the agreement of lease, appellee, at the time of the trial, would have been entitled to have received at least Sixteen Thousand Dollars ($16,-000) in gross rent, since the lease agreement was to continue in effect for six months after the termination of the war. The complaint of the instruction is that it is ambiguous, and from it the jury could have mistakenly concluded that their finding must not be less than Forty-Four Hundred Sixty Dollars ($4460). It is contended that the alleged ambiguity was prejudicial to appellants’ substantial rights, because the verdict rendered was in the exact sum of Forty-Four Hundred Sixty Dollars ($4460).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 972, 299 Ky. 161, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-consumers-oil-co-v-general-bonded-warehousing-corp-kyctapphigh-1945.