Love v. Pratt

833 N.E.2d 674, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 454, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 843
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 2005
DocketNo. 04-P-1421
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 833 N.E.2d 674 (Love v. Pratt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. Pratt, 833 N.E.2d 674, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 454, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 843 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinions

Lenk, J.

The question before us is whether summary judgment correctly entered for the plaintiff on both her action to recover a total deposit of $37,125, paid in connection with a purchase and sale agreement, and on the defendant’s counterclaim for damages. There was no error.1

[455]*455The pertinent undisputed facts are these. The defendant, Richard A. Pratt, a builder, was building a new home for himself in Millis. On December 13, 2002, Pratt (the seller) entered into a standard form purchase and sale agreement whereby he agreed to sell to the plaintiff, Anne Love (the buyer), his existing home in Natick (the premises) on March 14, 2003, with time expressly being of the essence, for the sum of $742,500. Because the buyer had agreed to sell her own home on the same date, the March 14, 2003, closing date for the premises was important to her, as the seller well knew.2 The seller lived in the premises with his girlfriend and another friend.3 In addition to the “time is of the essence” clause and a clause requiring the seller to deliver possession of the premises at closing “free of all tenants and occupants,” the purchase and sale agreement also contained a standard provision (§ 10) giving the seller the option to extend the closing for thirty days, upon written notice to the buyer, in the event that he was “unable to give title or to make conveyance, or to deliver possession of the premises” free of tenants and occupants.

As it turned out, the seller underestimated how long it would take him to build his new house. By letter dated March 6, 2003, eight days before the scheduled closing, the seller informed the buyer that he would be “unable to deliver possession of the premises on March 14, 2003” and, relying on the so-called “escape clause” in § 10, informed her that he was unilaterally extending the closing date for thirty days. The notice did not explain why he was unable to deliver possession and made no [456]*456reference to any inability to remove tenants or occupants. Since she would be without housing as of March 14, the buyer responded that she would not agree to this extension unless the seller agreed to pay her storage costs and hotel expenses until the closing could take place. She estimated these expenses to be approximately $6,932.00. By letter dated March 12, the seller informed the buyer that he would not pay her requested costs and, in view of her position, which he construed as her intention not to purchase the property, told her that he had as of that day ceased his efforts to find himself substitute housing and storage for his property.

Nevertheless, on March 13, 2003, the seller informed the buyer by letter that he had located suitable short-term housing after all, that he intended to vacate the premises and move into such housing on April 1, 2003, and that he intended to close on that date. On March 27, 2003, the buyer told the seller that she would not reschedule the closing and that the agreement had terminated when the seller “refused to perform on the closing date of March 14, 2003, for the insufficient reason that it was not convenient for him to move.” She demanded return of her $37,125 deposit. Rather than return the deposit, the seller appeared at the Middlesex County registry of deeds on what he claimed was the new closing date; the buyer did not appear and the seller thereafter took the position that he was entitled to keep the deposit as liquidated damages pursuant to the agreement. The buyer brought suit to recover her deposit and the seller counterclaimed for damages. A Superior Court judge allowed the buyer’s motion for summary judgment.

Analysis. On appeal, the seller continues to seek refuge in the escape clause contained in § 10, claiming that he was unable to deliver possession free of tenants and occupants on March 14, 2003, and therefore was entitled unilaterally to extend the closing for thirty days. He maintains that his actions demonstrate a good faith attempt to deliver the premises as required. Along these lines, he states that, once he realized that he could not complete construction of his new home by March 14, 2003, he gave the buyer timely notice, invoked what he viewed as his right under the agreement automatically to extend the closing for thirty days, and tried to find himself other housing, [457]*457ultimately making himself available to close on April 1, 2003. When the buyer did not show up at the rescheduled closing, it was she, says the seller, who breached the agreement, thereby entitling the seller to keep the deposit. That is the seller’s view of the matter and he relies upon Stabile v. McCarthy, 336 Mass. 399, 404 (1957); Durkin v. Ferreira, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 771, 775 (1986), and several trial court decisions to buttress the position he takes.

The case law, however, avails him little, and even when the facts are viewed in an indulgent light favoring the seller, they reveal a position that is quite indefensible. The seller invoked his rights under § 10 because of a claimed “inability” on March 14, 2003, to deliver possession free of tenants and occupants. To use the word “inability” as the seller does, however, is both to distort it beyond recognition and to employ it in a manner that our cases have not done. The seller was obliged by the agreement to deliver possession at closing free of tenants and occupants. That contractual provision implied that the seller must make, prior to closing, reasonable efforts, see Stabile v. McCarthy, 336 Mass. at 402-403, to empty the premises of tenants and occupants, the latter term, of course, encompassing the seller himself. The seller, however, made no showing as to reasonable efforts he undertook in the months before March 14 to render the premises free of occupants. The seller, on the facts shown, did have the ability to deliver possession conformably with the agreement; all he had to do was move himself and his guests into other quarters — a hotel, if all else failed — and the contents of the premises into storage. He apparently chose not to do so because of the inconvenience or expense.

The seller’s reliance upon Stabile v. McCarthy, supra, is presumably to rebut this suggestion by dint of the fact that he was not required to take actions or make expenditures disproportionate to the circumstances. The seller has placed nothing in the record as to the lodging and storage costs he would have incurred if he had vacated the premises in order to honor the March 14 closing date. The only expenses in the record are the buyer’s estimate of roughly $7,000 in estimated hotel and storage costs for the thirty-day delay initially imposed by the seller. In the context of a $742,500 sale, these costs border far more on the de minimis than on the disproportionate.

[458]*458Then there is the matter of the seller’s asserted good faith, a prerequisite for one wishing to avail himself of the protection afforded by the escape clause of § 10. “The clause is no protection to an owner who is not acting in good faith and does not intend to carry out the agreement.” Lafond v. Frame, 327 Mass. 364, 367 (1951). Durkin v. Ferreira, 21 Mass. App. Ct. at 775. The agreement was plain that time was of the essence and there is no question but that the seller knew why this was so. The seller, with the two other occupants of the premises, knew for several months prior to closing that they would have to vacate the premises on or before March 14, 2003.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stephens v. Global NAPs
876 N.E.2d 452 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2007)
Weston Forest & Trail Ass'n v. Fishman
849 N.E.2d 916 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2006)
Haser v. Wright
840 N.E.2d 63 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
833 N.E.2d 674, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 454, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-pratt-massappct-2005.