New Eastwick Corp. v. Philadelphia Builders Eastwick Corp.

241 A.2d 766, 430 Pa. 46, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 670
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1968
DocketAppeal, No. 308
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 241 A.2d 766 (New Eastwick Corp. v. Philadelphia Builders Eastwick Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Eastwick Corp. v. Philadelphia Builders Eastwick Corp., 241 A.2d 766, 430 Pa. 46, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 670 (Pa. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Opinion by Mr.

Justice O’Brien,

This is an appeal by New Eastwick Corporation [NEC], plaintiff in the court below, from a final decree of the Court of Common Pleas No. 2 of Philadelphia County, dismissing plaintiff’s complaint in equity. Plaintiff sought to restrain defendant, Philadelphia Builders Eastwick Corporation [PBEC], from interfering with NEC’s contractual rights under a Redevelop[48]*48ment Agreement dated July 12, 1961 with the Redevelopment Authority of the City of Philadelphia [Authority] .

By the terms of that agreement NEC agreed to purchase for the sum of $12,192,865 all of the residential land [Stages I, II, III and IV] in the Eastwick Urban Renewal Area of Philadelphia, subject to a thirty-months option in favor of PBEC to purchase Stage III and IV, amounting to approximately one-half of that land.1 The option expired on January 12, 1964, and it was not exercised at that, or any later, time. Ten months later, during the month of October, 1964, PBEC presented the- Authority with a “preliminary agreement” which would grant PBEC an entirely new option for the same stages covered by the original one. The date of expiration of this proposed option was three years later, however, i.e., on January 12, 1967. When plaintiff was finally told about this agreement and learned of the willingness of the Authority to execute it, it instituted this suit to restrain PBEC from interfering with its contractual rights to the land in question.

The case was heard by Judge Alessandroni, who died before writing an adjudication. It was then agreed by counsel that Judge Reimel be substituted for Judge Alessandroni and that he should decide the case on the record of the hearing before Judge Alessandroni. On July 18, 1966 Judge Reimel entered his adjudication and a decree nisi dismissing the complaint. Exceptions were filed by NEC and dismissed on January 5, 1967, by a court en banc consisting of [49]*49Judges Beimel, Doty and Reid. Plaintiff took this appeal from the court’s final decree.

The court below dismissed the complaint because it found that the plaintiff had waived strict compliance with the time limitation of the option. It also concluded that plaintiff had failed to make a showing of irreparable injury. On this appeal appellant urges that on the undisputed facts there is no support for PBEC’s claim that the time limitation was waived and that even if there were a waiver, that fact would not justify PBEC’s later interference with the contractual rights of NEC. It is also urged that the proposed deprivation of NEC’s right to redevelop the land in question constituted a clear instance of irreparable injury to the plaintiff.

The deadline for the exercise of the option was January 12, 1964. In the fall of 1963, PBEO indicated to the Authority that it would like to be given more time. Following some exploratory exchanges of views, representatives of NEC, PBEC and the Authority met together on December 3, 1963, not quite six weeks before the expiration of the option. Thomas, the local manager of NEC, thereupon made a proposal to extend the time in which PBEC would be required to enter into a redevelopment contract, provided that PBEC enter into a preliminary agreement and post a $150,000 bond immediately. He also stated as a condition to this offer that the Authority agree to certain additional matters respecting the industrial redevelopment of Eastwick. Thomas repeated his offer in writing in a letter to the Authority dated December 19, 1963. The Authority, which had been acting as go-between, failed to communicate Thomas’ written offer to PBEC, and the latter, on January 10, 1964, two days before the option expired, wrote to the Authority asking that the [50]*50expiration date be set off until tbe unresolved matters be cleared away.

Tbe court below based its decision mainly upon its conclusion that plaintiff bad waived strict performance of the option by defendant. As support for bis bolding, tbe chancellor said in bis adjudication: “Thomas nowhere in bis testimony states categorically that plaintiff was going to insist on performance by defendant, as required, on or before January 12, 1964.” Moreover, tbe chancellor emphasized Thomas’ admission that tbe letter of December 19 was sent because be felt that be bad not made bis position clear as to tbe expiration of tbe option clause. In our view, tbe chancellor was under a mistaken impression as to where the burden lies when time is of tbe essence. And here, despite appellee’s protestations to tbe contrary, time was indeed of tbe essence. Time is always of tbe essence in an option contract. Phillips v. Tetzner, 357 Pa. 43, 53 A. 2d 129 (1947); Rhodes v. Good, 271 Pa. 117, 114 A. 494 (1921). Although tbe word “option” is not used, it is clear that an option bad been created, and tbe chancellor so concluded.2

The chancellor seemed to feel that NEC bad tbe duty to inform PBEC that it (NEC) intended to insist on strict performance of tbe option. On tbe contrary, performance in accordance with tbe contract [51]*51terms (i.e., by January 12, 1964) is assumed, and a deviation is permissible only if NEC affirmatively assents to it. Inaction by NEC during negotiations to modify the contract can in no way be said to give PBEC permission to ignore the then existing terms of that contract. The case of Cohn v. Weiss, 356 Pa. 78, 51 A. 2d 740 (1947), relied upon by appellee and the court below, is distinguishable. In that case, a real estate settlement was set for December 26th, with time of the essence. As the date approached, complications developed in the nature of judgments against a person bearing the same name as the vendor, Weiss, and the illness of Weiss’ son. Although the facts are in dispute as to when the vendee, Cohn, first informed Weiss that settlement had been set for December 29th and was told that Weiss would let him know, by Weiss’ own testimony, he was told on December 26th about 4 P.M. that settlement would be on December 29th, and replied that he would let Cohn know in the morning. The next morning Weiss said that he would not go through with the settlement. In Cohn’s suit for specific performance, this court quite properly ruled that there was an estoppel or implied waiver in view of the way that plaintiff was trapped. Weiss’ statement on December 26th that he would let Cohn know in the morning clearly showed that he, Weiss, was not going to insist on the day originally set for settlement.

The same cannot be said for the actions of NEC in the instant case. In fact, the chancellor found not that NEC indicated that it was not going to insist on the January 12th date (as Weiss had done), but that NEC did not indicate that it was going to insist on January 12th. NEC was under no duty to act; so its failure to do so cannot be held against it.3 In fact, even the [52]*52defendant realized that at one time. On January 10, 1964, the President of PBEC, one Joseph A. Singer, wrote to the Authority. In that letter appears the phrase “I would respectfully request that the date be set-off until the unresolved matters be cleared away.” Had strict performance been waived by NEC, there would have been no need to ask the Authority (the wrong party to ask) to set back the date.

We should also like to point out that it would not even avail PBEC to prove a waiver of strict performance by NEC. For that would merely give PBEC a reasonable time in which to perform.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 A.2d 766, 430 Pa. 46, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-eastwick-corp-v-philadelphia-builders-eastwick-corp-pasuperct-1968.