Lee v. Lloyd

14 Misc. 405
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Misc. 405 (Lee v. Lloyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Lloyd, 14 Misc. 405 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

Tompkins, J.

This is an action for the specific performance of an alleged contract for the sale of real property by the defendant to the plaintiff.

The writing or memorandum alleged by the plaintiff to be a contract, and upon which he relies in this action, reads as follows:

‘ ‘ Nyack, N. Y., August 14th, 1919.

‘ ‘ Mr. Harry C. Lee :

Received from the above named Harry C. Lee the sum of thirty-five hundred ($3500) dollars representing a ten (10%) deposit on thirty-five thousand ($35,000) dollars which is the purchase price of the Rev. J. E. Lloyd property on the river front on the East side of Piermont Avenue in South Nyack, N. Y., it being the same premises now owned and occupied by the said Mr. Lloyd and his wife and bounded on the north by property now or formerly of Osborn, on the south by properties on Voorhis Point, on the east by the Hudson River and on the west by Piermont Ave.

“ Title to be closed on November first, 1919.

“ (Signed) H. J. McGinley, Agent

“ for Rev. J. E. Lloyd.”

Two questions of law are presented, namely:

First. Had H. J. McGinley, who signed the contract H. J. McGinley, Agent for J. E. Lloyd,” authority to bind the plaintiff to the defendant by a contract to sell and convey the defendant’s real estate?

Second. If McGrinley had such authority, is the memorandum or writing which was signed by him [407]*407and above ^quoted a valid and enforcible contract for' the sale of the defendant’s real estate? There is also a vital question of fact involved, and that is whether on the 13th day of August, 1919, it was agreed and understood between the parties that further negotiatibns between the plaintiff and the defendant for the sale and purchase of the premises should be suspended until their return from Europe, which would be in the fall of that year.

The greater weight of proof including the circumstances and the probabilities shows that on August thirteenth when the plaintiff and the defendant were both about to sail for Europe, after there had been considerable negotiation between the parties, including Mrs. Lee and Mr. McGrinley, but before the selling price and details of the transaction had been agreed to, it was agreed that nothing more would be done until after the return of the plaintiff and the defendant from their European trips. The defendant and his wife so testified and the testimony of the plaintiff and Mrs. Lee tends to corroborate the defendant’s claim in that respect.

On August thirteenth, Mrs. Lee saw the defendant and had several conversations with him during the day and evening before Mr. Lee arrived, and upon his arrival she informed him that the matter was going to be put over until the defendant came back from Europe. Mr. McGrinley, the agent, testified that when he saw Mr. Lee that evening, he asked him what he had decided to do about the property and that Mr. Lee replied, “ Well I don’t know. As I understand it, Mrs. Lee said the matter was going to be put over until I come back from Europe,” and Mr. McGrinley further testified in substance that when he left Mr. and Mrs. Lee he understood that the agreement with the defendant was that the whole [408]*408matter was to be suspended until the parties returned from Europe. Mrs. Lee testified that when she left the defendant that evening she told him she wanted the place very badly and asked if it would be just the same when Mr. Lee came back, and that Dr. Lloyd replied in the affirmative. She also testified in substance that the defendant said he thought it would be better if the matter could be suspended until his return from Europe and that “the whole matter would stand over until he got back.” It is conceded that the defendant refused to take a payment on account on August thirteenth. The plaintiff also testified in effect that he understood from the defendant that it had been arranged to let the matter rest for the time being and until he returned from Europe, and that he had talked it over with Mr. McGrinley, the agent, and with Mrs. Lee, and that they were all going to let the matter stand over until he and Lloyd returned from abroad.

The defendant testified that he said to Mrs. Lee before the plaintiff’s arrival, “Now this matter will have to stand just as it is until I get back from Europe,” and that this was said in the presence of Mr. McGrinley and Mrs. Lee and was mandatory to McGrinley, whereupon the agent, McGrinley, said: “ Then if that is the case, you ought to pay some money down,” to which the defendant replied: “ There is no occasion for any money because the price has not been met, but you need not worry, for if we sell at all, we will sell to you.” The defendant also testified that after he had had this conversation with Mrs. Lee and Mr. McGrinley and upon the arrival of Mr. Lee that Mr. Lee said “'Couldn’t this thing stand over until we get back,” to which the defendant replied, “ Nothing else can be done as it was all settled in the presence of Mr. McGrinley and Mrs. Lee,” [409]*409by which he had reference to the conversation already had that day with Mrs. Lee in the presence of Mr. McGrinley.

Mrs. Lloyd, the defendant’s wife, testified that she heard Mrs. Lee say to the defendant that she had come up from Mr. Lee to ask if Mr. Lloyd would not be willing to defer the transaction until they both returned from Europe, whereupon Mr. Lloyd replied: “ Well my dear woman, nothing else can be done. The time is too short,” and this conversation Mrs. Lloyd says was in the presence of Mr. McGrinley.

The circumstance that both parties were about to sail for Europe and that the plaintiff had not yet agreed to pay the defendant’s price of $35,000, and that there were details to be settled respecting the making of the contract and the date of possession and the time and manner of payment, together with the correspondence between the parties, all tend to corroborate the defendant’s claim that when the defendant saw Mr. and Mrs. Lee for the last time on August thirteenth there had not only been no meeting of the minds upon all the essential elements of a contract of sale and purchase, but, on the contrary, a distinct understanding that the whole matter was to be deferred until the parties should return a - few months later from.Europe. It appeared without dispute that after Mr. and Mrs. Lee had both left the defendant’s home on the night of August thirteenth, and without again seeing Mm, the agent, Mr. McGrinley, importuned the plaintiff to.accede to the defendant’s terms and urged him to purchase the property for the sum of $35,000, and the next day Mr. McGrinley, without again seeing the defendant, went to New York and saw the plaintiff, at which time the plaintiff agreed to the terms and paid to McGrinley the sum of $3,500, being ten per cent of the purchase price; [410]*410whereupon McGinley wrote, signed and delivered to the plaintiff the memorandum or agreement dated August 14, 1919, and above quoted. In these circumstances it must be held that there was no agreement to sell on the part of the defendant and no authority given by him to McGinley to sell to the plaintiff on the fourteenth day of August.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Misc. 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-lloyd-nysupct-1920.