Paolilli v. Piscitelli

121 A. 531, 45 R.I. 354, 1923 R.I. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 121 A. 531 (Paolilli v. Piscitelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paolilli v. Piscitelli, 121 A. 531, 45 R.I. 354, 1923 R.I. LEXIS 79 (R.I. 1923).

Opinion

'Stearns, J.

This is a bill in equity to enforce specific performance of a contract for the sale of land.

The cause was heard in the Superior Court on bill, answer and oral proof, and is now in this court on the appeal of the complainant from a final decree dismissing the bill of complaint. The reason of appeal is that the decision upon which said decree was based was erroneous and against the law.

July 15, 1920, complainant entered into a written contract with the respondent for the purchase and sale of a certain parcel of land and the building thereon. The parties are Italians. The contract, which is in the Italian language, was drawn and written by one Cipolla, a steamship agent. The translation of the material parts thereof is as follows: "Sale Contract between Nicola Piscitelli and Antonio Paolilli and wife Filomena. Mr. Nicola Piscitelli declares *355 that he has received the sum of Two hundred ($200.00) Dollars from Mr. Antonio Paolilli, as a binder of his house and lot at No. 296 Pocasset Avenue, corner of What Cheer Avenue, Providence, R. I., it being well understood that the sale must be effectuated within one year from today, and during this time Mr. Piscitelli to remain always in possession of the property.

“The price set for said property is $6,000.00 of which $200.00 is being paid at the moment that this contract is signed and. the balance to be paid when the complete deed shall be made.

“If Mr. Paolilli refuses to accept and fulfill said contract at the end of one year he shall lose the sum he has paid as deposit, that is $200.00. On the other hand if Mr. Piscitelli refuses to effectuate said sale he must double the binder, that is deliver to Mr. Paolilli the sum of $400.00.”

There is a question raised in regard to one part of the translation, respondent claiming that the phrase “the sale must be effectuated” when correctly translated is “the sale should be effectuated.”

Complainant for ten years had kept a music store on a side street, near the store of respondent which was on the corner of this side street and Pocasset avenue. This section of the city is the center of a large Italian population and Pocasset avenue is the main business street therein. Respondent kept a hardware store on the ground floor of his building and with his family lived in the upper part of the building. Complainant, who wanted to get a better location for his store, was approached by a real estate agent, who was acting for respondent, in regard to the purchase of respondent’s building. As a result, complainant and respondent met and entered into the agreement above mentioned. The period of one year for the performance of the contract, was agreed upon at the suggestion of respondent in order that respondent might have time to dispose of the stock of hardware in his store and to buy or build another store for himself and move elsewhere. Respondent did *356 buy another building which he altered into a store and house.

There is controversy in regard to the person who first suggested the clause in regard to the deposit of $200. Complainant testified that after the parties had reached an agreement in regard to the sale he suggested there should be a penalty for nonperformance. Respondent asserts that he was to have a year in which to decide whether he would sell complainant the property or give him the money ($400); that he talked about damages, but that neither he nor any one of the other persons present made any attempt to calculate or fix the possible damages to either party for the failure of the other party to carry out the contract.

Cipolla testified that respondent asked how much complainant was going to pay as a deposit, and it was agreed that $200 should be paid and then the next question was if there was to be any fine or penalty paid if one of the parties refused to buy or sell; that the talk then was "if Paolilli fail to buy — he lose $200. — and then on the other side Piscitelli says 'In case I refuse to sell I have to double up the deposit given me to $400.’ ”, that there was no talk about damages at all nor was any attempt made to figure out what possible damages there might be; that the only talk was about the $200 penalty. In cross-examination the witness said there was no talk of penalty or damage or fine, that he does not remember the exact words that were used by the parties but the agreement between them was just as it was written in the contract.

The trial justice, on issues of fact framed, found there was no specific agreement that the contract should be drafted in the alternative so that either party might pay $200 to the other instead of carrying out the contract; that the damages of either party in case of default by the other were not easily ascertainable; and that the primary object of the parties to the contract was the sale by the respondent and the purchase by the complainant of the property in question.

*357 From all of the testimony the reasonable conclusion seems to be that neither party, at the time the contract was made, considered the clause about the loss by one party or the other of the sum of $200 of any particular importance. It was the result of an afterthought and was added to the agreement with the idea apparently that such a clause was customary in contracts between Italians and that it would give greater binding effect to the agreement. The primary object of the agreement was the purchase and sale of this particular property and at that time each party desired and expected to carry out the transaction. Complainant was not looking for a possible profit from a deal in real estate. He wanted this particular location for the conduct of his business. It was not until some months thereafter that respondent changed his mind and refused'to make a conveyance.

The trial justice in construing the agreement decided correctly, that this was not an alternative contract, that is a contract whereby either party could elect either to perform the contract or to pay a stipulated amount of money. There is no rescript but from the transcript of testimony it appears that the trial justice thought the provision in question was in reality intended to be a penalty, but in view of the fact that the original $200 was a deposit, he considered he was bound as a matter of law, on the authority of Cavanaugh v. Conway, 36 R. I. 571, to hold the provision to be one for liquidated damages and not for a penalty. This was error. In the Cavanaugh case the question of the right to specific performance was not the main question before the court, but was incidental thereto. It was an action at law in assumpsit brought to recover a commission by a broker authorized to sell certain real estate for a fixed amount; the broker procured a customer who agreed to buy at the stipulated price; a deposit of $100 was made by the customer, to be applied as a part of the stipulated price if the agreement was carried out, but said sum was "to be forfeited as and for liquidated damages” on the failure or refusal of the customer to perform the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 A. 531, 45 R.I. 354, 1923 R.I. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paolilli-v-piscitelli-ri-1923.