Lucenti v. Cayuga Apartments, Inc.

90 Misc. 2d 154, 393 N.Y.S.2d 227, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2010
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 Misc. 2d 154 (Lucenti v. Cayuga Apartments, Inc.) 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
Lucenti v. Cayuga Apartments, Inc., 90 Misc. 2d 154, 393 N.Y.S.2d 227, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2010 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

Frederick B. Bryant, J.

In this action for specific performance, the plaintiff also seeks a determination as to the amount by which the consideration expressed in the contract of sale should be reduced by reason of the destruction of the buildings on the property by fire. The defendant contends that the contract of purchase and sale was terminated and canceled by mutual agreement.

[155]*155The defendant is the owner of premises located at 102-106 West State Street and 108-114 North Cayuga Street in the City of Ithaca. On June 21, 1975 it entered into an agreement with the plaintiff whereby it agreed to sell the said premises for the total purchase price of $108,000. One thousand dollars was paid at the time the contract was executed; $19,000 was to be paid at the time of closing and the balance was to be financed by a mortgage of $88,000 given to the defendant. The contract provides that the closing of title should take place "on or before August 1, 1975.”

On June 20, 1975 the building on the described premises at 108-114 North Cayuga Street was substantially damaged by fire. The damage was so extensive that it is most probable that the building cannot be restored but will have to be razed. The plaintiff has demanded performance of the contract of sale with an abatement in the price. The building on the property at 102-106 West State Street was not damaged by the fire.

The defendant’s principal witness was Dorothy Saperstone, an officer of the defendant and manager of its real property since 1974. She testified that after the fire she advised the plaintiff as to the insurance coverage and that he later informed her that due to other commitments he was no longer interested in purchasing the property. Relying on this assurance she showed the building to prospective purchasers during the summer and fall of 1975. The plaintiff did not contradict this testimony but did testify that in various conversations with both Mrs. Saperstone and her husband he had expressed interest in purchasing the property with an abatement of price. He never gave the defendant’s officers any figures by which he felt the price should be reduced. The present action was commenced on November 15, 1975 — approximately four and one-half months after the fire occurred. The defendant contends that the conduct of the plaintiff constitutes an abandonment and cancellation of the contract.

In his complaint the plaintiff alleges that the fire "resulted in substantial destruction of said property”, and reasserts in his brief that the building at 108-114 North Cayuga Street "was substantially destroyed by fire after the signing of the contract, but before the time set for the closing”. In its brief the defendant states that the building at 108-114 North Cayuga Street "was substantially damaged by fire” on June 28, 1975. At the trial plaintiff testified that the cost of recon[156]*156structing the damaged building was $154,720. Defendant’s expert testified on the trial that the fire made it uneconomic to rehabilitate the damaged building and the best interim use after the fire would be to raze the building and use the land for parking.

The court finds that the building at 108-114 North Cayuga Street was substantially damaged by fire without fault of the plaintiff after the execution of the contract, before the time scheduled for closing and that neither the legal title nor possession had been transferred to the plaintiff and that said substantial damage constituted a destruction of a material part thereof within the meaning of section 5-1311 of the General Obligations Law. As the contract for the purchase and sale of the property contained no provision for risk of loss pending closing, the rights of the parties are governed by section 5-1311 of the General Obligations Law. Plaintiff claims that under this section he is entitled to specific performance of the contract with an abatement equal to the value of the property destroyed by the fire, which he claims is $154,720, allowable only up to the amount of the total contract price of $108,000. He therefore claims he is entitled to a conveyance of the present remaining property without the payment of any purchase price. Defendant claims that under the circumstances, section 5-1311 of the General Obligations Law does not give the plaintiff a right to specific performance with an abatement, but only a right to treat the contract as terminated and to recover the portion of the purchase price he has paid. He further asserts that the evidence at the trial demonstrates that the plaintiff abandoned and effectively terminated the contract after the fire, and that plaintiff is entitled only to a return of the $1,000 down payment on the purchase price which defendant through its attorneys previously sent to plaintiff, but which he returned.

Section 5-1311 of the General Obligations Law was originally enacted as section 240-a of the Real Property Law upon the recommendation of the State of New York Law Revision Commission. The Law Revision Commission recommended this remedial legislation to modify the harsh treatment of a purchaser under the decisional law as succinctly set forth, in the commission’s recommendations and study as follows: "If the premises covered by the contract are damaged or destroyed by fire at any time after the making of the contract, unless the contract provides otherwise the purchaser is bound to pay the [157]*157full purchase price. Under well-recognized principles of insurance law, he is denied recourse to existing fire insurance carried by the vendor. If the vendor recovers the full purchase price from the purchaser, as the law provides he may, the vendor’s insurance carrier is released from liability, since the vendor has suffered no loss by the fire. If the insurance carrier pays the amount of the loss to the vendor before payment of the purchase price by the purchaser, the carrier may be subrogated, to the extent of its payment, to the vendor’s claim against the purchaser. The purchaser in such a situation, before transfer of title or of possession, is unlikely to have insurance of his own on the premises. The net result in effect, where the purchaser is solvent, is that the property is uninsured from the making of the contract of sale to the taking out of insurance by the purchaser, although the vendor’s insurer collects the usual premium. Such a trap for the unwary purchaser should be eliminated from the law.” (1936 Report of NY Law Rev Comm, p 763.)

To eliminate this trap for the unwary purchaser, the Legislature enacted section 240-a of the Real Property Law, known as "the Uniform Vendor and Purchaser Risk Act”, which is now embodied without change in section 5-1331 of the General Obligations Law, which provides in part as follows:

"1. Any contract for the purchase and sale or exchange of realty shall be interpreted, unless the contract expressly provides otherwise, as including an agreement that the parties shall have the following rights and duties:

"a.

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

Related

Lucenti v. Cayuga Apartments, Inc.
399 N.E.2d 918 (New York Court of Appeals, 1979)
Lucenti v. Cayuga Apartments, Inc.
66 A.D.2d 928 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Misc. 2d 154, 393 N.Y.S.2d 227, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucenti-v-cayuga-apartments-inc-nysupct-1977.