Sawyer v. Firestone

513 A.2d 36, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 1, 1986
Docket85-310-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 513 A.2d 36 (Sawyer v. Firestone) 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
Sawyer v. Firestone, 513 A.2d 36, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 536 (R.I. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

KELLEHER, Justice.

This civil action involves a right of first refusal to purchase ocean-front property in Newport, Rhode Island.

The plaintiff, David W. Sawyer (Sawyer), entered into a purchase-and-sale agreement on June 1, 1982, with the defendant, Elizabeth P. Firestone (Firestone). The agreement provided, among other things, that Sawyer would purchase from Firestone all the improved real estate known as “The Orchards” located on Narragansett Avenue in Newport, together with the adjacent parcels bounding on Annadale Road, designated as lots Nos. 47, 46, and 172 of the Newport Tax Assessor’s Plat No. 34. The provision in the agreement now in dispute stated that

“the seller shall grant to the Purchaser a right of first refusal for her other real estate located to the east and designated as Lot No. 48 on said Plat No. 34 in the event she desires to sell the same.”

Sawyer paid a “nonrefundable deposit” in the amount of $25,000 pursuant to the agreement and upon its execution.

By letter dated September 8, 1982, Firestone through her new counsel informed Sawyer that she did not understand that such a right of first refusal was contained in the agreement and asked if Sawyer would “agree to have the right of first refusal provision deleted from the Agreement and omitted from the conveyance.” In response to the letter, Sawyer wrote Firestone that he would “not agree to a deletion of the right of first refusal concerning Lot No. 48 from the agreement or omit it from the conveyance.” 1 On October 29, 1982, Sawyer’s attorney reminded Firestone’s counsel that Sawyer was “particularly interested in the description to be contained in the deed and the language concerning Sawyer’s right of first refusal on Firestone’s abutting lot No. 48.” A draft deed was prepared by Firestone’s counsel on November 4, 1982, which altered the language concerning the right of first refusal:

“As further consideration for this conveyance the Grantor [Firestone] for herself and her heirs and devisees, covenants and agrees that in the event she or they decide at any time to sell and convey premises of this Grantor, presently designated as Lot 48 on said Newport Tax Assessor’s Plat 34 os a separate parcel at private sale, that she or they shall give to the Grantee the first opportunity to purchase the same at the price for which the Grantor, her heirs or devi- *38 sees are willing to sell the same * * (Emphasis added.)

The same language, modifying the right of first refusal, was included in the revised deed sent to Sawyer with a letter dated December 23, 1982. 2 The controversy concerning the right of refusal was never resolved.

On December 81, 1982, Sawyer sent a letter to Firestone informing her that he was terminating negotiations to resolve their differences and that the agreement had been rescinded on the ground of “an apparent mutual mistake” of the parties and requested the return of the $50,000 deposit. Firestone refused to return the deposit, and this action ensued. 3

Testimony was presented in this jury-waived trial for two days, and the trial justice found that the agreement gave plaintiff an unconditional right of first refusal, dismissing Firestone’s contention that she did not comprehend the right granted. He determined that Sawyer specifically rejected Firestone’s request to agree to the deletion of the right and that Firestone “well knew, as a result of that letter of September 29, 1982, that plaintiff would stand on his rights.” The trial justice stated that both the proposed deeds restricted the right of first refusal granted in the agreement and “[t]he facts as found establish [Firestone] breached the contract. She was unwilling to give that which she was bound to give — unconditional right of refusal on lot 48, which fronts on the Atlantic Ocean. The importance of that right to [Sawyer] can be seen by examination of [the maps depicting the area].” The trial justice concluded that Firestone’s breach was material and supported Sawyer’s right to rescind, which he exercised by letter dated December 31, 1982. He found that the right to rescind was grounded on alternate theories — either “abandonment,” citing Jakober v. E.M. Loew’s Capitol Theatre, 107 R.I. 104, 112, 265 A.2d 429, 434 (1970) (language from Graves v. White), or “repudiation” by Firestone under Maytag Co. v. Alward, 253 Iowa 455, 112 N.W.2d 654 (1962). Thus, judgment was entered for Sawyer on February 14, 1985, and Firestone was ordered to return the $50,000 with interest thereon from December 31, 1982.

Firestone’s appeal is based on her contention that the addition of the words in the proposed deeds limiting the right of first refusal to a sale of lot No. 48 “as a separate parcel” did not alter the legal effect of the right of first refusal granted in the original agreement. She asserts that pursuant to the purchase-and-sale agreement, as well as to the language contained in the proposed deeds, she had an unrestricted legal right to include lot No. 48 in a larger tract of land and sell it to a third party. Thus, it is her position that she did not breach the purchase-and-sale agreement by adding the words “as a separate parcel” in the deeds she tendered to Sawyer. Sawyer maintains that the words “as a separate parcel” contained in the proposed deeds unduly restricted his right granted in the purchase-and-sale agreement.

Recently, we distinguished a right of first refusal from an option contract. See Hood v. Hawkins, 478 A.2d 181, 185 (R.I.1984). A right of first refusal is “not an offer and creates no power of acceptance. It is a transaction by which one party acquires what can be variously described as the ‘Right of First Refusal,’ the ‘First Right to Buy,’ or the ‘Right of Preemption.’ 1A Corbin on Contracts § 261 at 468 (1963). A right of first refusal ‘does not give the

[possessor of it] the power to compel an unwilling owner to sell; it merely re *39 quires the owner, when and if he decides to sell, to offer the property first to the person entitled to the [right of first refusal] at the stipulated price.’ Mercer v. Lemmens, 230 CaL.App.2d 167, 170, 40 Cal.Rptr. 803, 805 (1964). This court has described a right of first refusal in a similar fashion. ‘[A] first refusal to purchase * * * does not become effective unless the respondents are willing to sell. If they are willing to sell they may not sell to anyone other than the complainants until an opportunity is afforded complainants to purchase at the price offered.’ Butler v. Richardson, 74 R.I. at 349, 60 A.2d at 721.”

The only issue meriting our attention is whether an unrestricted right of first refusal is rendered legally ineffective where the vendor includes the property subject to the right of first refusal in the sale of a larger tract of land.

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