Ludington v. LaFreniere

1998 ME 17, 704 A.2d 875, 1998 Me. LEXIS 13, 1998 WL 21971
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 22, 1998
DocketAnd-96-798
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1998 ME 17 (Ludington v. LaFreniere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ludington v. LaFreniere, 1998 ME 17, 704 A.2d 875, 1998 Me. LEXIS 13, 1998 WL 21971 (Me. 1998).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Justice.

[¶ 1] Stephen M. LaFreniere and Craig Dostie appeal from a judgment entered following a non-jury trial in the Superior Court (Androscoggin County, Perkins, J.) finding them jointly and severally liable to specifically perform their contract with plaintiff Howard J. Ludington, III. On appeal, they contend that the Superior Court erred by: (1) finding Dostie personally liable on the contract, (2) ordering specific performance when an adequate remedy existed at law, (3) improperly awarding interest at the contractual rate of 12% per annum rather than at the statutory rate, and (4) not recognizing the plaintiff’s failure to mitigate his damages. Finding no merit in appellants’ contentions, we affirm the judgment.

[¶ 2] Several years prior to the transaction that is the subject of this litigation, LaFreni-ere sold the same real estate in Passadumke-ag to Ludington. Ludington brought an action against LaFreniere alleging a fraudulent *877 sale. A judgment was entered in favor of Ludington and against LaFreniere for $200,-000, based on LaFreniere’s failure to disclose that endangered species habitat, flood plain problems, and title defects made the property undevelopable. LaFreniere later proposed that he re-purchase the property from Ludington for $50,000, with the idea of developing it and using the proceeds to satisfy the judgment. 1 A contract to that effect was signed by Ludington as the seller, but was not signed by LaFreniere. Ostensibly because LaFreniere did not want to complicate matters with his pending divorce or attract the attention of the Department of Environmental Protection, Dostie, who is LaFreni-ere’s cousin, signed the contract as the buyer to make it appear that LaFreniere was not involved in the transaction.

[¶ 3] Dostie signed the contract on December 4,1992. 2 In 1994, after several mutually acceptable postponements of a closing date, LaFreniere announced that he was not going to complete the transaction contemplated by the contract. Ludington sued both Dostie and LaFreniere for specific performance and the actions were consolidated. After a non-jury trial the court found that Dostie and LaFreniere were jointly and severally liable on the contract, and ordered specific performance. The court also awarded Ludington interest on the $50,000 contract amount, at the rate set out in the contract, twelve percent per annum, from April 1, 1993 until all amounts are paid in full. This appeal followed.

I.

[¶ 4] Dostie argues that he signed the contract as the agent of LaFreniere and, accordingly, should not be bound personally. 3 The court concluded that both defendants were hable, finding that:

Dostie signed both individually and as an agent for ... LaFreniere. Dostie intended to and did personally bind himself to the Agreement; Dostie intended to and did bind Lafreniere [sic] to the Agreement. Lafreniere has admitted that he is bound by the Agreement and that he and Dostie have a separate agreement between them providing that Lafreniere will indemnify Dostie with respect to his financial obh-gations under the Agreement.

[¶ 5] The intent of the parties in entering a contract is a question of fact. See Seashore Performing Arts Center, Inc. v. Town of Old Orchard Beach, 676 A.2d 482, 484 (Me.1996). We review the Superior Court’s finding that Dostie was hable for clear error, Harmon v. Emerson, 425 A.2d 978, 982 (Me.1981). Although Dostie argues that he signed the contract only in his capacity as an agent and that he is not personally hable as a signatory on the contract, at one point in his testimony he stated that he intended to be personally bound. 4 Moreover, Ludington’s former attorney testified that he understood that LaFreniere and Dostie would both be responsible for the obhgations in the contract. LaFreniere also testified that he had agreed to reimburse Dostie if Dostie should have to perform the contract obhgations or satisfy a judgment for the purchase price. Dostie signed the contract in his own name. His testimony that he intended to be bound and LaFreniere’s *878 agreement to indemnify him support the court’s conclusion that the parties intended the contract to bind Dostie as well as LaFre-niere.

II.

[¶6] LaFreniere and Dostie contend that the court improperly granted specific performance to Ludington as the seller of the real estate. The contract provided that upon breach of the Buyer, the “Seller may, at his election, pursue any other remedies available to him, including an action for specific performance of this agreement.” The Superior Court found that Ludington was entitled to specific performance by the express terms of the contract, and because the improbability of re-selling the property to anyone other than Dostie and LaFreniere made money damages an inadequate remedy. It also concluded that specific performance would “place Ludington and LaFreniere in the positions they were in before Lafreniere ever sold this defective property to Ludington in 1988.”

[¶ 7] Specific performance is a substitute for the legal remedy of compensation whenever, in the discretion of the court, “the legal remedy is inadequate or impracticable.” McIntyre v. Plummer, 375 A.2d 1083, 1084 (Me.1977); see also Brown & Sons v. Boston & Maine R.R. Co., 106 Me. 248, 255, 76 A. 692 (Me.1909) (grant of specific performance “is uniformly deemed a matter of sound judicial discretion”). In appropriate circumstances, sellers may be entitled to specific performance. See Progressive Iron Works Realty Corp. v. Eastern Milling Co., 155 Me. 16, 21, 150 A.2d 760 (1959) (upholding decree of specific performance for seller where buyer was without right to rescind an escrow agreement for purchase of real property).

[¶8] The Superior Court heard evidence that the property would be very difficult to sell, and that LaFreniere, as someone experienced in land development, was better suited than Ludington to develop the land. The court’s finding that Ludington lacked an adequate remedy at law was supported in the record, and the court acted within its discretion in ordering specific performance of the contract.

III.

[¶ 9] LaFreniere and Dostie also contend that the contract provision requiring the buyer to pay interest at 12% until the closing 5 means that once the contract was breached, the statutory rate pursuant to 14 M.R.S.A. § 1602 should then apply. The court did not err by disregarding section 1602. That section provides a statutory rate of prejudgment interest for “all civil actions, except those actions involving a contract or note which contains a provision relating to interest....”

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Bluebook (online)
1998 ME 17, 704 A.2d 875, 1998 Me. LEXIS 13, 1998 WL 21971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ludington-v-lafreniere-me-1998.