Northrup v. Scott

85 Misc. 515, 148 N.Y.S. 846
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 85 Misc. 515 (Northrup v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northrup v. Scott, 85 Misc. 515, 148 N.Y.S. 846 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.

This is a suit in equity in the right of the vendor for the specific performance of a con[516]*516tract in writing for the sale and conveyance of a tract of land consisting of about fifty acres, in the town of Concord, county of Erie, N". Y.

The contract bears date and was executed on the 9th day of September, 1901, by Mary Wheeler, since deceased, as vendor, and Jay Northrup, since deceased, as vendee. By the contract the vendor agreed with the vendee, “ his heirs and assigns,” that in consideration of one dollar, the receipt of which was acknowledged, and of the further sum of $2,500 to be paid, which the vendee, “ for himself, his heirs and assigns,” agreed with the vendor, ‘ her executors and administrators,” to pay or cause to be paid to the vendor, “her executors or administrators,” at “the time of executing ’ ’ the conveyance, she would ‘ ‘ on the payment of the aforesaid sum,” by deed “ grant, sell, convey and assign ’ ’ the premises in question to the vendee “ and his heirs.”

Each party, by express provisions of the contract, became bound to the other for performance “ in the penal sum of Two thousand five hundred dollars.” These are the only provisions of the contract aside from the description of the premises. It will be seen that no time for performance or with respect to the date from which the conveyance was to take effect or to be deemed to have been made is in any manner fixed or even referred to in the contract, nor is there any provision with respect to the payment of interest on the purchase price, nor is there any reference to any other agreement, transaction - or event from which these matters might be determined.

The consideration specified in the contract was the fair market value of the premises at the time the contract was made, and there was no material change in their value for years thereafter. No tender of performance was ever made by or in the right of the [517]*517vendee until the 5th day of June, 1913, when the value of the premises had increased to about $4,000. Where the time for the performance of a contract is not specified therein, but the contract is valid and complete in all other respects, it is presumed that the parties intended it should be performed within a reasonable time, considering the circumstances under which it was executed, and .the law, by implication, reads such intention into the contract as if it had originally been expressed therein. In such case it would be incumbent upon either party desirous of preserving any legal remedy or availing himself of a defense at law for a breach of the contract, to put the other party in default by tendering performance on his part and demanding performance by the other party within a reasonable time specified. Taylor v. Goelet, 208 N. Y. 253 ; Schmidt v. Reed, 132 id. 108.

Courts of equity, however, are not governed by the rigid rules of law, and even though the vendee may be within his strict legal rights under the contract, it is a well established and settled rule of equity jurisprudence that the remedy by specific performance is not a matter of right, but rests in the sound discretion of a court of equity and should not be decreed if it would be inequitable to do so; and that in such case the plaintiff should be left to pursue such remedy, if any, as the law affords. Winne v. Winne, 166 N. Y. 263-273 ; Stokes v. Stokes, 155 id. 581-590 ; Stitt v. Ward, 142 App. Div. 626 ; Byrne v. Fremont Realty Co., 120 id. 692. See, also, McClure v. Leaycraft, 183 N. Y. 36-41, and Batchelor v. Hinkle, 210 id. 243.

The vendee died on the 2d of March, 1908, leaving a widow and two children, the defendants Raymond Northrop, an infant nineteen years of age, and Maud-Northrop Scott, and a last will and testament leaving - a life use of his residuary estate to his widow, with [518]*518the remainder over to his children, in equal shares, and appointing his wife his executrix.

The question with respect to the time of performance first arose, so far as the evidence shows, between counsel for the vendor and the executrix of the vendee, on the 26th day of May, 1911. At that time the vendor, through her counsel, insisted that if either party desired performance by the other he was required to demand it within a reasonable time, and the executrix of the vendee claimed that the contract was not to be performed until the death of the vendor. Prior to that interview, and on February 8, 1911, counsel for the vendor wrote to Messrs. Ticknor, Pierce and Pomeroy, who represented the executrix of the vendee in two litigations pending between them, one of which had been decided by the Court of Appeals adversely to the vendor on the 15th of March, 1910, and the other had been decided adversely to her by the same court the day before the date of the letter, suggesting in connection with the adjustment of the costs in those actions and other pending litigation of the same nature, that the executrix of the vendee exercise her option ” to purchase the premises, as his client was in need of funds. The counsel for the vendor does not fix the interview at the time fixed by the executrix of the vendee, but in the course of the interview he informed her, in effect, that his client had authorized him to call upon her and take title if she so desired, and he gave her thirty days within which to do so, informing her that if she did not pay the purchase price within that time his client would not convey the premises to her; and he further testified that on May 10, 1912, and on another occasion two or three months thereafter, he, by like authority of his client, gave the executrix of the vendee like opportunity and thirty [519]*519days’ notice, and that she failed to take action thereunder.

On these facts it requires no argument to demonstrate that if the decision of the issues depends upon the construction of the provisions of the contract in the light of these facts, the plaintiff: cannot recover.

Simultaneously with the execution of this contract, the vendor executed and delivered to the vendee a lease of the premises in question and a tract of seventy-five acres adjoining them, and a deed of the seventy-five acres, and the vendee executed a lease of the seventy-five acres to the vendor. The learned counsel for the plaintiffs contends that the intention of the parties with respect to the time of performance is to be found in said deed and leases and in the circumstances attending the execution thereof, and he claims that it was the intention of the parties that the contract in question was not to be performed until the death of the vendor, which occurred on or about the 26th day of February, 1913.

The lease of the two tracts was, so far as it is necessary to consider its provisions, to have them worked on equal shares, and they are described as the vendor’s dairy farm of 125 acres, and she also thereby leased to the vendee the use of her fifteen cows then on the farm. The term was for the life of the vendor who reserved the house, in which she then lived, and one-half an acre of ground, and horse-barn, on the premises now in question, together with ‘ the right to get fuel from the farm.”

The vendor then resided on the fifty acres and continued to reside there, and the vendee, and the executrix, after his death, continued to work both tracts under the lease.

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Bluebook (online)
85 Misc. 515, 148 N.Y.S. 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northrup-v-scott-nysupct-1914.