Rowe v. Shehyn

192 F. Supp. 428, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3115
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMarch 27, 1961
DocketCiv. A. No. 3102-57
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 192 F. Supp. 428 (Rowe v. Shehyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowe v. Shehyn, 192 F. Supp. 428, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3115 (D.D.C. 1961).

Opinion

McLAUGHLIN, District Judge.

This is an action for debt due and owing. The Plaintiffs are Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Rowe, suing in their own right, and the executor of Mrs. Dorothy G. Rowe. The Rowes were the owners of a parcel of real estate known as 1610 New Hampshire Avenue, in Washington, D. C. In 1957 they decided to sell the premises and on May 6, 1957, they entered into an option agreement with the Defendant. The option, which by a series of renewals was made to run until October 20, 1957, provided that the Defendant might purchase the property for a consideration of $60,000. The option then went on to state further:

“After notice in writing to sellers of his intention to exercise this option, and the payment of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) by the purchaser as deposit (which said deposit shall become part of the purchase price) and the execution by the parties of the attached form of sales contract, the purchaser agrees within thirty (30) days, or as soon thereafter as a report on the title can be secured, to make full settlement in accordance with the terms hereof.”

On October 19, 1957, before the above-described option was to expire, the Rowes and the Defendant filled out and signed the form of sales contract provided for in the option agreement. (A photostatic copy of the executed sales contract was introduced at the trial as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2.) The contract recited the receipt by Plaintiffs from the Defendant of the sum of $5,000, and provided that the price of the property was to be $60,000, of which $36,000 was to be in cash and $24,000 in the form of a first trust.

The contract provided for the possibility of breach in these terms:

[430]*430“Within thirty (30) days from the date of acceptance hereof by the owners * * * the seller and purchaser are required and agree to make full settlement in accordance with the terms hereof. If the purchaser shall fail to do so, the deposit herein provided for may be forfeited at the option of the seller, or without forfeiting the said deposit the seller may avail himself of any legal or equitable rights which he may have under this contract.”

Lastly, the contract provides that it is an integrated instrument:

“This contract * * * when ratified by the seller contains the final and entire agreement between the parties hereto and they shall not be bound by any terms, conditions, statements or representations, oral or written, not herein contained.”

After executing this document Mr. Rowe and Mr. Shehyn placed all of the executed copies in an envelope and deposited it in the mail, addressed to one of the executives of a title insurance company. Although the contract recited the receipt by the sellers of $5,000 as a down payment neither at this time nor at any time thereafter did the Defendant transfer to the Plaintiffs any such sum.

Sometime subsequent to October 19, 1957, the Defendant broke off negotiations concerning the property and final settlement was never had between the parties. Ultimately the Plaintiffs sold the property to another purchaser for a sum in excess of $60,000. It is for the $5,000, mentioned in the sales contract as a down payment but never in fact paid that they sue in this action.

Plaintiffs base their action on the sales contract, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 2, contending that it constitutes a legally enforceable promise to pay the $5,000 deposit, which deposit should be forfeited after Defendant’s failure to complete the contemplated agreement. Defendant denied that there was any debt created by the signing of Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 2, or that it was in fact an enforceable, executed contract at all. He argues that the portion of the option agreement quoted above creates three conditions precedent to the exercise of the option, namely, notice in writing by the purchaser of his intent to exercise the option, the execution of the form of sales contract specified and the payment of $5,000 as a down payment. He concedes that his action in signing the form of sales contract in effect constituted notice of intent to exercise the option and was in strict and literal compliance with the second of the conditions above. But, he asserts, the third condition remained unfulfilled. It is his contention that the parties in signing the sales contract contemplated that it be the last renewal of the option on the property and that if Defendant did not pay the $5,000 within a specified time the option was to lapse and the parties be returned to their original position; that in any event the payment of the $5,000, a necessary condition to the creation of a valid contract, was never accomplished and that as a result of this there was never any executed contract of sale on which to base liability. He testified that no money was ever transferred from him to Plaintiffs, and denied that he ever led Plaintiffs to believe that within a few days he would have on deposit at the title company sufficient funds to cover such a deposit.

Defendant seeks to avail himself of the well recognized rule of law providing that where parties have created conditions precedent to a contract’s coming into being, the law requires that these conditions be strictly and literally complied with before a contract comes into existence. Here, he argues, there was never any compliance with one of the essential conditions precedent set out in the option agreement for its exercise, and therefore there is no enforceable, executed contract of sale on which Plaintiffs can base their suit. Further, Defendant asserts that even though Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 2 recites that it is a contract of sale he is not bound by its terms, since it is a contract predicated on a condition precedent and parol, evidence is admis[431]*431sible to show that such a condition has not been complied with.

It is true that ordinarily conditions precedent to a contract must be strictly and literally fulfilled and that one of the exceptions to the Parol Evidence Rule permits the introduction of outside evidence to show the existence of an unfulfilled condition precedent to liability. See 32 C.J.S. Evidence § 935 and cases therein cited. But there is an important exception to this general statement. Where the written instrument contains a recitation that it embodies the entire agreement between the parties and that they shall not be bound by any representations, agreements or conditions not therein contained, then parol evidence is inadmissible to show the existence of an unfulfilled condition precedent not set forth in the instrument. Edward T. Kelly Co. v. Von Zakobiel, 168 Wis. 579, 171 N.W. 75; Automobile Battery Co. v. Geraghty & Co., 30 Ga.App. 446, 118 S.E. 412; Fadex Foreign Trading Corp. v. Crown Steel Corp., 272 App.Div. 273, 70 N.Y.S.2d 892, affirmed 297 N.Y. 903, 79 N.E.2d 739. The logic of the distinction is that to show a condition precedent not inconsistent with the writing is not to vary or contradict the terms of the writing, but to show such a condition where the instrument recites that there are none is a contradiction. Edward T. Kelly Co. v. Von Zakobiel, supra. In the case at bar the contract of sale specifically provides, in the language set out above, that it embodies the final agreement between the parties, and that they are not bound by any conditions not herein contained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 F. Supp. 428, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowe-v-shehyn-dcd-1961.