Meurer v. Tribby (In re Tribby)

241 B.R. 380, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18125
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 24, 1999
DocketNo. 98-12359-SSM; Civ.A. No. 99-1328-A
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 241 B.R. 380 (Meurer v. Tribby (In re Tribby)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meurer v. Tribby (In re Tribby), 241 B.R. 380, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18125 (E.D. Va. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ELLIS, District Judge.

This bankruptcy appeal presents an unsettled question of Virginia law, namely, whether the doctrine of merger by deed extinguishes a purchaser’s right to sue on a contractual clause requiring settlement by a certain date, when the purchaser accepts tardy delivery of the deed without specifically reserving the right to seek damages for delay.

I

This bankruptcy appeal is an outgrowth of appellee Diane Tribby’s divorce from her husband, Troy Tribby. As a consequence of the couple’s divorce proceedings, certain real property jointly owned1 by the divorcing couple was to be sold as part of the property settlement. But when appellants in this case, Robert and Patricia Meurer, offered to buy the land, appellee balked, refusing to sign the contract for sale. This prompted her ex-husband, in March 1998, to obtain a Loudon County Circuit Court decree ordering appellee to sign the contract and to consummate the sale. Appellee initially complied with the decree and signed the contract. Yet, later that same month, she filed a Chapter 11 petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, which served to stay the Loudon County court proceeding, including the decree requirement to tender the deed. In the final analysis, appellee’s tactic failed; the bankruptcy filing only delayed the inevitable, as the Bankruptcy Court eventually granted Troy Tribby relief from the automatic stay, so that he could seek enforcement of the Loudon County court decree.

Meanwhile, in July 1998, appellants filed a proof of claim against appellee’s estate, seeking both specific performance of the contract for the sale of the real estate, as well as damages arising from delay in consummating the transaction. Appellee, while appealing the Bankruptcy Court’s grant of relief, filed a plan that declared the contract an avoidable executory contract. The district court denied appellee’s appeal of the grant of relief, and also denied a further stay pending appeal to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. The parties then proceeded to closing, which occurred on December 2, 1998, when ap-pellee and her husband tendered a deed conveying the property to appellants.

Appellants, having received the deed to the property, now seek damages arising from appellee’s eight month delay in deliv[382]*382ering the deed, as the contract of sale required that settlement occur on or before March 28, 1998. Significantly, the contract also (i) preserved the parties’ rights to all legal and equitable remedies in the event that full settlement according to the terms of the contract did not occur, and (ii) stated that the terms of the execu-tory contract would not be merged into the deed (the “survival” clause).2 Moreover, the contract required appellee to cooperate with appellants’ effort to purchase the property in execution of a tax-free exchange with two parcels of investment property they had sold earlier.3 In that regard, the tax code provided appellants only a limited time period in which to purchase the replacement property to take advantage of the tax-free exchange, and by July 1998 that time period had expired. Thus, appellants were forced to recognize the gain on the sale of the two parcels, and incurred taxes of $7,292 in the 1997 and 1998 tax years.

On these facts, the Bankruptcy Judge found that appellee breached the term of the contract requiring settlement by March 28, 1998, and that if such a breach established liability to appellants, appellee would be liable for the tax bill, as well as additional expenses of $850. The Bankruptcy Judge ruled, however, that the doctrine of merger by deed extinguished ap-pellee’s liability under the contract’s time of performance clause. In a thoughtful opinion delivered from the bench, the Bankruptcy Judge concluded that the date fixed for the sale of property “went to the very heart of the transaction,” was not collateral to the passage of title, and was therefore extinguished by appellants’ acceptance of the deed. In his view, because the deed was silent as to the earlier deadline, appellants could not seek damages for delay. On a motion to reconsider, the Bankruptcy Judge rejected appellants’ argument based on the contract’s survival clause, and reaffirmed that the time of performance clause was fundamentally inconsistent with delivery of the deed at a later date.

On appeal, appellants claim the Bankruptcy Judge misconstrued and misapplied Virginia’s doctrine of merger, and improperly ignored the contract’s survival clause. The question presented is thus whether Virginia’s doctrine of merger dictates that a deed conveying property extinguishes a right to seek damages for delay pursuant to a term in the sale contract. Because the Bankruptcy Court’s holding involves the application of the law, appellate review is de novo. In re Stanley, 66 F.3d 664, 667 (4th Cir.1995).

II

The doctrine of merger in the sale of real property is a rule of contract construction by which certain aspects of the initial executory contract are subsequently extinguished by the deed, an “instrument of higher dignity.”4 The doctrine recognizes that parties to an ex-ecutory contract for the sale of land may, in the course of further negotiations before delivery of the deed, alter certain elements of the transaction, and that those alterations may be reflected in the deed.5 The deed, therefore, me[383]*383morializes the final agreement of the parties, “and all prior agreements, oral or written, are merged into the deed of conveyance,” Empire Management, 255 Va. at 52, 496 S.E.2d at 442.6 Yet, the doctrine “is not absolute.” Id. at 54, 496 5.E.2d at 443.7 Certainly, the deed is final “as to every subject which it undertakes to deal with.” Woodson v. Smith, 128 Va. 652, 656, 104 S.E. 794, 795 (1920). Typically, however, a deed represents only that aspect of the contract dealing with the transfer of title, and while a deed may cover other aspects of the transaction, it rarely purports to cover all elements of the original contract for sale.8 Thus, while the deed is proof of the “fact of conveyance,” other documents, including the executory contract, may be considered to determine obligations collateral to the fact of conveyance.9 Accordingly, the doctrine of merger only applies to (i) subject matter specifically covered by the deed,10 and (ii) subject matter that is not “collateral to the passage of title.” Empire Management, 255 Va. at 54, 496 S.E.2d at 443.11

[384]*384Analysis of the instant appeal thus requires two inquiries, namely, whether the time of performance clause at issue here is in conflict with the terms of the deed, and whether such a clause is collateral to the passage of title. As to the first question, an examination of the deed and the contract for sale reveals no inconsistency between them as to the time of performance clause. The deed merely reflects the day that settlement occurred, whereas the contract indicates the bargained-for settlement date. Put differently, the deed and the contract time of performance clause do not conflict merely because they show different dates; the time of performance provision is a contractual obligation, which, if breached, may establish liability, whereas the deed date reflects only

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 B.R. 380, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meurer-v-tribby-in-re-tribby-vaed-1999.