Reyelt v. Danzell

533 F.3d 28, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 14885, 2008 WL 2719890
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 14, 2008
Docket07-2603
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 533 F.3d 28 (Reyelt v. Danzell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reyelt v. Danzell, 533 F.3d 28, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 14885, 2008 WL 2719890 (1st Cir. 2008).

Opinion

BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.

In early September 2003, James Reyelt and William and Louise Danzell (hereinafter “Danzells”) completed a contract for the sale of Reyelt’s waterfront property in Barrington, Rhode Island to the Danzells. The property had two houses on a single lot, meaning that the local zoning board had to approve any changes to the buildings; and the Danzells, anxious to enlarge the present livable space, were willing to pay more if they could obtain a variance from the board permitting such renovations.

Accordingly, the parties’ contract (set forth in an addendum to this decision) specified that the Danzells would pay $1,225,000 at the closing, with the price increasing later depending on the outcome of their variance application. The Dan-zells agreed to apply for a variance within three months of closing and, if the variance were issued within one year after application, to pay $200,000 more to Reyelt. Alternatively,

[i]n the event that the Variance is not granted within one year after application and the Buyers have been diligent and used good faith in their processing of said application for a Variance, or if the Variance has been denied and any appeal period has expired, then the Buyers shall pay over to the Seller $100,000....

The contract further provided that the Danzells would deliver, at the closing, a one-year promissory note for $200,000 bearing interest at five percent. If the variance were granted within one year of the application, the note was to be paid immediately with interest to the point of payment; if instead the application were not approved within one year, the $100,000 became payable as the sole addition to the price of the house and supplanted the principal of the note (but the full original interest promised in the note remained due).

The closing occurred on .October 30, 2003, so the application for the variance should have been filed by late January 2004. But despite some prodding from Reyelt’s attorney, the Danzells did not submit an application until August 18, 2004 — apparently due in part to some confusion about whether their closing attorney would prepare the application. The final application, prepared by a new attorney in concert with a local architect, Jay Litman, proposed to double the size of one of the two houses on the property.

*31 The zoning board held a hearing on October 21, 2004 — about a week short of one year after the closing. Testimony came from Litman, the Danzells’ attorney and local residents who opposed the project. After discussion, the board unanimously rejected the application, noting that the expansion would “heighten [the property’s] non-conformi[ng use]” and approach a shared property line; two members added that the application lacked detail showing what the completed structure would look like.

The Danzells then offered to pay Reyelt $100,000 plus interest. Reyelt refused the offer and brought suit to recover the full $200,000. After a bench trial, the district court awarded Reyelt only $100,000 (plus an interest payment that is not disputed on the appeal). The court ruled that the Dan-zells’ failure to file for a variance within three months did not warrant a larger award and their efforts to secure the variance were adequate. This appeal followed.

Our review of the district court’s legal conclusions is de novo; the court’s factual findings are reviewed only for clear error, Rational Software Corp. v. Sterling Corp., 393 F.3d 276, 276-77 (1st Cir.2005), but anyway Reyelt does not dispute them. The parties agree that Rhode Island law controls. Reyelt’s first claim is that the delay in filing the application entitled him to the $200,000; his second, that the Dan-zells’ application was not an adequate effort.

The district judge wrote a typically thorough and lucid decision and the result is intuitively obvious in light of the court’s detailed fact-findings, abbreviated above. We write, albeit only briefly, because two of the district court’s legal rulings touch on recurring problems and our own imprimatur may be useful. One of those problems — the significance of the three-month application period' — is especially interesting and we begin with it.

The usual contract contains mutual commitments and this one, as part of the transaction, explicitly required the Dan-zells to file the zoning application within three months of the closing. Without any adequate excuse, the filing was over six months after that deadline. And the three-month deadline obviously mattered in the sense that it served a useful purpose for Reyelt: it increased the likelihood of his getting $200,000 rather than $100,000 and also of getting it promptly.

Of course, when the filing was delayed until August, Reyelt did not try to undo the sale, nor did he immediately assert a breach of contract claim; rather, he waited to see the outcome. The district court might have viewed this as a waiver by Reyelt but, under the circumstances, the waiver argument would not be straightforward. Both sides apparently wanted the contract to succeed, so why should the law put Reyelt to the choice of forfeiting his objection or torpedoing the contract earlier?

Absent a waiver, the question remains, why Reyelt cannot now recover based on the Danzells’ breach of an express term in the contract? One part of the answer, emphasized by the district judge, is that the three-month period should not be read as a mechanical requirement but as a benchmark for measuring diligence. Courts are often (although not always) more forgiving of failures to meet time provisions in contracts than, say, of failures to pay the price agreed. 2 Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts § 8.18 (3d ed.2004).

Rhode Island courts share this view. “Ordinarily contract provisions relating to time do not by their mere presence in an agreement make time of the *32 essence thereof so that a breach of the time element will excuse nonperformance.” Lajayi v. Fafiyebi, 860 A.2d 680, 688 (R.I.2004) (quoting Jakober v. E.M. Loew’s Capitol Theatre, Inc., 107 R.I. 104, 265 A.2d 429, 435 (R.I.1970)). Context matters: In a contract for the sale of land, a modest delay might be tolerable, e.g., Thompson v. McCann, 762 A.2d 432, 438 (R.I.2000); for deliveries of “just in time” inventory to a manufacturing plant, a more rigid adherence might be expected.

Still, when the contract was made, Rey-elt might well not have agreed that nine months fell within the target area. Although the contract allowed a year for approval after filing, the promissory note was to mature one year after the closing; this itself indicates that the parties were counting on the zoning proceeding to be wrapped up by the end of that year. A filing in three months — easily feasible, it appears — would make that outcome more likely than a filing in nine.

But although the filing was delayed for six months beyond the original deadline, the zoning board did render its decision within one year of the closing.

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533 F.3d 28, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 14885, 2008 WL 2719890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reyelt-v-danzell-ca1-2008.