Patterson v. J. D. Loiseaux Lumber Co.

114 A. 336, 92 N.J. Eq. 569, 7 Stock. 569, 1921 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 58
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 25, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 A. 336 (Patterson v. J. D. Loiseaux Lumber 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
Patterson v. J. D. Loiseaux Lumber Co., 114 A. 336, 92 N.J. Eq. 569, 7 Stock. 569, 1921 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 58 (N.J. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Buchanan, V. C.

Complainant's suit is as vendee for specific enforcement of a contract of sale of a house and lot known as No. 228 Emerson street, situate in Plainfield, New Jersejb In addition to the vendor, J. D. Loiseaux Company, there are two other defendants —Joseph Nathanson, to whom vendor made a subsequent contract to sell the premises in question, and Plainfield Bealty Wall Paper Supply Company, a corporation in which Nathanson was interested, and to which, in consummation of the second contract of sale, conveyance of the property was made before bill filed.

The terms of the contract sued on are evidenced by a letter of February 4th, 1920, from vendor to vendee, which reads as follows:

“Plainfield, N. J., Feb. 4, 1920.
Mrs. David Patterson,
888 Emerson Ave.,
Plainfield, N. J.
Deaf. Madam :
We acknowledge having received $130 from you on February 3d, to' apply as follows: being the rent on the house for the month of February, and $100 being a payment on account of the principal of $3800 for the house and lot known as No. 228 Emerson Ave.
[571]*571Our understanding- is this—that you will pay $30 each month until we are able to give you a free and clear title, the result of the foreclosure which we are now proceeding with. So soon as we are able to do this, you agree to pay us $3700 in the manner following: $3000 by raising this amount by mortgage on the above mentioned property, and $700 in cash, which we understand you are to raise by second mortgage, and the above when carried out is satisfactory to us, but if for any reason you are unable to carry out the above provisions, you agree, upon being requested, to vacate the property, leaving it in first class condition, and all that you have paid in to be counted as liquidation of any damages we might sustain.
If any of the above you do not fully concur, please advise at once, so that there can be no misunderstanding.
Very respectfully yours,
J. D. Loiseaux Lumber Oo.,
(Signed) J. D. Loiseaux,
JDL/DC By Treasurer.”

By the terms of this contract, the date of consummation— that is to say, the date when the vendor should convey and when the vendee should pay—was to be as soon as vendor obtained and could convey a free and clear title, as the result of a foreclosure suit then being carried on by vendor. That date in itself was indefinite and uncertain. Being- within the control of the vendor, it was obligated to- proceed in its foreclosure suit with reasonable diligence and dispatch. In other words, the time for' performance by bath parties was fixed as a reasonable time after the contract. Time was, obviously, not of the essence as to this. The vendee had been put in possession (she desiring the place as a home), and vendor was receiving, and was to continue to receive, adequate and satisfactory rent at a rate fixed by itself, during whatever time should elapse before the clearing up of the title. Apparently, vendor had title, but there was an encumbrance thereon to be cleared away by the foreclosure. (See Exhibit D-2.) The exchange of deed and purchase price was postponed, upon terms equitable to both parties, until that should have taken place.

It may be noted here that it appears by the entire correspondence that the negotiations were begun November 13th, 1919, and, indeed, the arangement for the sale and purchase agreed to about December, 1919. The vendee inquired the price of the house and accepted the price fixed, without haggling. The vendor, [572]*572prior to fixing the price at $3,800, said (Exhibit D-2) it had been “practically” offered $3,800 for the house, and thought it should get $4,000. Obviously, therefore, the price of $3,800 was a fair price, and the element of friendships which, undoubtedly, existed in the case, did not—as, indeed, it could not properly in a corporation’s affairs—figure in a financial way to any appreciable extent. It further appears from the correspondence that the first idea of the vendor was that the vendee should pay down the $800, take possession, and pay the $3,000 balance (to be raised on mortgage loan) after the clearing up of title. The vendee’s letters show that she apparently was, or could have been, ready to pay the $800 about January 1st, 1920. The arrangement was later changed to a down payment of $100 on taking possession and the payment of $30 a month rent while waiting for the freeing of title. Why this change was made does not appear, but it certainly was more beneficial to vendor than the earlier plan, although perfectly equitable to the vendee.

The precise time that the vendor acquired its cleared title, and thereby fixed the time for performance, is a little uncertain. It could not have been until after May 24th (the date of the deed to vendor). From the testimony of Mr. J. D. Loiseaux and of complainant, and the letter D-13, I fix June 1st as the approximate date when notice was given to or acquired by complainant that the vendor was now able to convey. There had thus been a lapse of about six months from the time of the original oral agreement and of four months from the letter which was the written evidence of the modified agreement (prior to the writing of which the foreclosure had been commenced). Reference to the record and proceedings of that foreclosure suit on file in this court shows that the bill was filed December 26th, 1919, and that no unusual speed was exercised b}r vendor’s agent, the solicitor for complainant therein. For instance, there was a lapse of six weeks between the decree pro confesso and the filing of the master’s report.

June 1st, then, became, and was, the date for the consummation of the sale by conveyance and payment. But here, again, time was not made the essence of the contract by provision in the contract, 'nor by force of the circumstances. Hence, even if the [573]*573dale bad been fixed and certain in advance, and the vendor bad attended and made tender of deed, the vendee, in equit3r, if payment were made or tendered within a reasonable time thereafter, would have been entitled to conveyance. Saldutti v. Flynn, 72 N. J. Fq. 157. But the vendor did not make such tender, nor attempt to hold the vendee to a strict performance as to time. The correspondence and dealings which ensued between the parties are further evidence (though none is necessary) that time was not of the essence in the transaction. True it is that the vendor repeatedly sought to speed performance by the vendee, but the actuating reasons therefor appear from the evidence to have been simply the desire. of businessmen to complete an unfinished transaction, and the desire, or, at least, the hope, of getting rid of the Patterson contract so as to enable greater profit to be realized from a sale to other parties who were willing to pay more money.

The latter motive is, of course, one which in nowise appeals to a court of equity. In equity the vendor is considered a trustee of the property for the vendee from the time of the making of the contract. Saldutti v. Flynn, supra; King v. Ruckman, 21 N. J. Eq. 599; Haughwout v. Murphy, 22 N. J. Eq. 531.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 336, 92 N.J. Eq. 569, 7 Stock. 569, 1921 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-j-d-loiseaux-lumber-co-njch-1921.