Mayer v. West Side Development Co.

79 A. 620, 78 N.J. Eq. 415, 1911 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 52
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 30, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 A. 620 (Mayer v. West Side Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. West Side Development Co., 79 A. 620, 78 N.J. Eq. 415, 1911 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 52 (N.J. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Garrison, V. C.

This is a bill filed by Edward E. Mayer against the West Side Development Company to procure the specific performance of a contract between the parties which bears date the 29th day of May, 1906. The facts, briefly stated, are as follows:

The West Side Develojnnent Company was the owner of lots in Jersey City. Mayer desired to procure a home. He was acquainted with Weber, the president of this company. He talked over this matter with Weber, and between them they finally agreed that he should purchase from the company lot No. 25 in block 852, and that the conrpanj'- should erect a house satisfactory to him upon this lot. The plans for the house were drawn by the architect of the company, and various estimates were procured from the different materialmen and laborers, and it was estimated that the house would cost about $5,400. The lot was agreed to be valued at $800. The understanding between Mayer [417]*417and Weber was that if the house should cost more than the $5,-400 estimated, the extra cost should be borne by Mayer, and if less than the $5,400 estimated, then Mayer should get the benefit of this. All of the witnesses who testify to hearing conversations to which Mayer was a party agree that this was the understanding. Mayer disputes it. He insists that while this was always said to him he never assented to it, and suggests that he always thought the development company intended to make a profit out of the erection of the house. He, however, admits that he was to pay, in addition to the contract price, for anything which he should order as an extra, and for anything which he should change in the plans ánd for which more money should be paid for doing the work than as originally planned.

I am convinced from the testimony that up until the time of the visit to the office of the lawyer of the company, which I shall next speak of, the parties had a thorough understanding as above stated. At this visit to the lawyer’s office, some time about a week before the 29th of May, 1906, there were present Mr. Weber, the president; Mr. Boehler, the vice-president; Mr. Ludeke, the secretary; Mr. Blohm, the attorney of the company, and Mr. Mayer, the purchaser. At this meeting, Mr. Weber, acting for the company, instructed the lawyer to draw a contract for the sale of this lot to Mr. Mayer, and explained the terms of payment, and explained that the company was to erect a house on the lot at cost; that it was estimated that the cost of the lot was to be $800, and of the house $5,400, and that if the cost of the house exceeded $5,400, Mayer was to pay for it, and if it was less than $5,400, Mayer was to get the benefit of it. Blohm objected to putting these terms in the contract because he said they must have a fixed sum to go into the contract, and he therefore added the two items together and put the sum of $6,200 in it.

I do not believe that, in the minds of any of the parties present there was any understanding that the fixing of this sum was the final determination of the matter. I think it perfectly clear that they all understood that the contract as agreed upon was to be carried out, and that Mayer was to pay for any excess, and was to be credited with any gain under the contract price.

[418]*418The contract, it was agreed, should be put in writing, and should be signed on the 29th of May, 1906. A contract was written, and on the 29th of May, 1906, Blohm and the officers of the company say that it was signed on behalf of the company. Mr. Mayer was ill at the time and did not attend, but he sent the check for $650 for the first payment, and the company immediately began the erection of the house, and had the same completed by the 1st of October, and Mayer moved in, and has been there ever since. During the course of the erection of the house, and up to December of 1906, Mayer seems to have had every opportunity to have learned the exact cost in every detail. The testimony is practically uncontradicted that he was a constant visitor to the office of the company and there had access to the bills and receipts and other matters which would have fully informed him, if he had desired to know, the cost of the work. However this may be, in December of 1906 he was shown a statement in a book which purported to show the exact cost to the company of the erection of the house. This statement showed that the house cost something in excess of $6,100. He asked concerning several of the items, but does not appear to have suggested for a moment that they had no right to charge hinr more than $5,400. Thereafter he actually himself signed the contract dated the 29th of May, 1906, which theretofore had never been signed by him. In view of all the facts of this case, I think that this is an immaterial detail. That contract does not even purport-to deal with the sub-' jeet-matter that the parties had agreed upon. At the time that that contract was drawn and when it is testified that it was signed on behalf of the company there was nothing on this lot. It was a vacant lot. It was not anybody’s understanding that Mr. Mayer was to pay $6,200 for a vacant lot. It was everybody’s understanding that the company was to erect a house on this lot, but that the exact expense to the company should be repaid to it by Mayer. The $6,200 is shown to have been a so-to-speak arbitrary figure put in there, and the understanding of each was that this house which was to be erected under a contract between the parties, although not alluded to in this written paper, was to be erected as before stated and paid for as before stated, and the company was to be reimbursed as before stated.

[419]*419What I have just said was so obviously the mutual understanding that there would be no difficulty whatever were it not for the fact that Mayer did not sign the contract until the 22d day of December, 1906. At that time, as will be recalled from the previous statements, the building had been completed and the exact expense thereof to the company was known, and it is the complainant’s contention that the contract then signed by him, in which the total cost was fixed at $6,200, was expressive of the true understanding between the parties and must be held to control. He points out that the contract speaks of a $4,500 mortgage “now upon the property,” and argues that since there was no such mortgage upon the property upon the 29th day of May, 1906, and not until on and after September, 1906, it is clear that the contract was not drawn and signed on the 29th day of May, 1906.

Undoubtedly there is confusion of memory and lack of clear explanation of the time of reducing the contract to writing, and undoubtedly it is the law that if Mr. Mayer is correct in his contention that this contract was drawn and signed on the 22d day of December, 1906, after the cost of the building was known to the company, its terms must control, and I agree with him that no parol testimony should be permitted to contradict the terms of this written instrument.

I think it entirely clear, however, from the proofs that Mr. Mayer is mistaken in his contention (which, by the way, is put forth feebly even by himself) that the contract was made in December of 1906. I am inclined to think that the only event which took place in December was his signing the contract.

As previously recited, it is uncontradicted that the initial agreement between the parties was that Mayer was to buy the lot at $800 and the company was to erect a.

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Bluebook (online)
79 A. 620, 78 N.J. Eq. 415, 1911 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-west-side-development-co-njch-1911.