Mathews v. Kingsley
This text of 100 So. 2d 445 (Mathews v. Kingsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
J. Stewart MATHEWS and Viola I. Mathews, Appellants,
v.
George H. KINGSLEY, Rosita Brizel, Grace J. Ross and Business Organizations, Inc., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*446 J. Leo Chapman, Paty, Downey & Daves, B.F. Paty, West Palm Beach, for appellants.
Neil E. MacMillan, Delray Beach, and Burns, Middleton, Rogers & Farrell, C. Robert Burns, West Palm Beach, for appellees.
ALLEN, Judge.
This is an appeal from the final decree based on a summary judgment, dated June 19, 1957, entered in an action by J. Stewart Mathews, hereinafter called plaintiff, against George H. Kingsley, hereinafter called defendant, to have an option agreement declared void and cancelled of record as a cloud on plaintiff's title to certain lands; and in which defendant Kingsley counterclaimed against plaintiff and plaintiff's wife, hereinafter called cross-defendant, to require them to specifically perform said option agreement. Both the plaintiff and the defendant moved for summary final decrees. The court granted the defendant's motion by ordering the plaintiff and the cross-defendant, to specifically perform the original option agreement and dismissing the plaintiff's amended complaint. The plaintiff and cross-defendant appeal.
The lower court, in its final decree, stated:
"There is no genuine issue as to any material fact herein, such finding being confirmed by admissions to that effect by counsel for both parties before the bar of this court, and by briefs filed with this court."
Since the lower court treated the affidavits by the plaintiff and the defendant as creating no issue of fact, and since no assignments of error have been made by either party raising the question of the proper exercise of summary judgment, this court will not raise such question, ex mero motu.
An option contract is different from a contract to purchase and gives the optionee no equitable interest in the land until he exercises his option to purchase. Wolfe v. Daugherty, 103 Fla. 432, 137 So. 717. In order properly to exercise the option to purchase under an option contract, thus imposing a duty on the vendor to convey the land in accordance with the terms and conditions provided therein, the vendee must strictly comply with the applicable provisions of the contract. Orlando Realty Board Bldg. Corp. v. Hilpert, 1927, 93 Fla. 954, 113 So. 100. It is necessary that the optionee accept the terms of the option unqualifiedly, and it is generally held, not only in law, but also in equity, that the time named in the option contract is to be regarded as of the essence of the option, whether expressly stated or not, and if not exercised within the time limit, the rights *447 of the optionee expire. See 55 Am.Jur., Vendor and Purchaser, Sections 39 and 40, pages 508, 509 and 510.
The optionor, of course, may waive the time for the performance of the option or he may, by his own conduct, be estopped from denying that the optionee complied with the terms of the option within the time set forth in the option contract. South Inv. Corp. v. Norton, Fla. 1952, 57 So.2d 1.
At this point, we are inclined to refer to the rule that the presumption of correctness which is always indulged to support the chancellor's ruling is not so strong where the witnesses, as here, did not personally appear before him. Harmon v. Harmon, Fla. 1949, 40 So.2d 209. With this rule in mind, we shall consider the affidavits upon which the chancellor based his decree and from which we glean the following facts, deemed pertinent to the decision in this case.
In February, 1955, defendant mailed to the plaintiff duplicate original copies of the option agreement which is shown as an exhibit to the amended complaint. Accompanying the option agreement was the defendant's check for $10, which was the consideration recited by the option agreement. The plaintiff and cross-defendant executed both copies of the agreement on February 17, 1955, and returned one copy to the defendant.
An examination of the option agreement shows that it involved four separate options, option No. 1 being as follows:
"The South 75 acres of the above described tract of land owned by Sellers.
"To be exercised on or before January 31, 1956, at and for the price of $500.00 per acre, making a total purchase price therefor in the sum of $37,500.00 payable by Buyer to Sellers at the time of closing."
Option No. 2.
"The South 75 acres of the North 225 acres of the above described tract of land owned by Sellers.
"To be exercised on or before July 31, 1956, at and for the price of $600.00 per acre, making a total purchase price therefor in the sum of $45,000.00 payable by Buyer to Sellers at the time of closing."
Then there follows two other options of similar nature but with increased price per acre of the property involved.
Subsequently, in October or early November of 1955, the defendant and his son visited the plaintiff in Cincinnati, where the defendant told plaintiff there had been an unexpected delay in securing approval by the County Commissioners of his plans for a subdivision of the land described in the option agreement. Defendant requested an extension of time for the exercise of option No. 1, and suggested that a modified or substitute agreement be executed by the parties. Defendant was advised by the plaintiff that a certain mortgage payment was due in December, and was requested to advance the amount due on the mortgage in view of the fact that defendant was going to take up the option in January. Defendant agreed to make the requested advance, but a short time later suggested that he be given a deed to a part of the land covered by option No. 1 equal in value to the amount of money advanced. As a result of this request, plaintiff and cross-defendant executed a deed to the defendant conveying an 18 acre tract at a price of $500 per acre, which was the stipulated price per acre of land in option No. 1. This deed was executed on December 30, 1955, and delivered to the defendant. He in turn paid $6,000 to the plaintiff and conveyed to plaintiff a lot for which defendant was credited $3,000, making a total of $9,000, the amount due for the 18 acres.
The son of the defendant came to Cincinnati on January 23, 1956 and submitted *448 a formal agreement to take the place of the original option agreement of February 17, 1955. The plaintiff, after consultation with his son, a lawyer in Cincinnati, found the agreement to be unsatisfactory and the son of the defendant was advised of this fact; the plaintiff's son stated he would revise the agreement submitted by the defendant's son and draft one which the plaintiff would be willing to substitute for the original option agreement. The defendant's son expressed concern over whether the new agreement could be re-drafted in time for execution by both parties by January 31, 1956, the deadline for exercise of the option to buy under the old contract; but the revision was completed immediately, executed by the plaintiff and his wife, and mailed to the son of the defendant on January 25, 1956. The plaintiff alleged that he did not hear from George H. Kingsley, the defendant, concerning the proposed substitute agreement until some time in March, 1956, when he suggested further changes in it, all of which suggested changes were unsatisfactory to and were not accepted by the plaintiff.
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