Sun Assets Corp. v. English Evangelical Lutheran Church

19 Misc. 2d 187, 185 N.Y.S.2d 695, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4167
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 Misc. 2d 187 (Sun Assets Corp. v. English Evangelical Lutheran Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Assets Corp. v. English Evangelical Lutheran Church, 19 Misc. 2d 187, 185 N.Y.S.2d 695, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4167 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

M. Henry Martuscello, J.

In an action to compel the defendant Church to specifically perform the terms of a contract for the sale of its property and to declare that the individual defendants herein are estopped to assert any rights in such premises, the defendants join in motions for summary judgment and for other relief.

This controversy arises by reason of the fact that the defendant Church contracted to sell the same property to two different unrelated parties. On September 26, 1958 the Church agreed to sell its property to the defendants Segal and Kurz for $40,230, receiving at the signing of the contract $4,000. A petition for the sale of said property to these defendants was approved by order of this court which provided that out of the proceeds of the sale $16,092 was to be paid to Concetta Dell’Osso, the mother [189]*189of the pastor of the church to whom an interest in that amount was heretofore conveyed by the Church, and $16,206.75 was to be used for the completion of a new church under construction in Lake Success, Nassau County, New York.

On November 13, 1958 the Church’s attorney wrote to the attorney for defendants Segal and Kurz as follows: “ Since your clients had had approximately two months in which to secure a title report pertaining to this purchase, the excuse given by the purchasers that a title report * * * cannot be had until the end of December is not made in good faith, as a title company report could have been secured * * * within, at most, two or three weeks from September 26, 1958, the date when the contract between the above parties was signed. Your clients’ failure to close in accordance with the contract will cause irreparable injury and damage to my clients, who will be required to pay cash for the new church property in Nassau County.”

On November 20,1958, the date set for closing of title, defendants Segal and Kurz requested an adjournment asserting they had not as yet received the title report. The defendants Segal and Kurz allege that the request was made in addition to the foregoing by reason of the fact that on said date the Church could not convey the premises free of tenancies as was provided for in the contract of sale. The Church, in need of money for the purpose of closing title on the following day for the new parsonage property at Lake Success, refused to grant the adjournment unless Segal and Kurz paid the additional sum of $15,000 on the contract. Upon their refusal to pay this additional sum, the deed was tendered to Segal and Kurz and their failure to close title was noted.

On November 24, 1958 counsel for the Church wrote to Segal and Kurz’ attorney as follows: “ It is clearly evident that your client did not enter into the contract of sale in good faith as they did not then nor do they at present have the necessary funds to close title as provided by contract. This unconscionable attitude on the part of your clients has caused irreparable damage to the church which I represent as attorney and I have been instructed by my client to hold Messrs. Segal and Kurz responsible for all damages suffered by English Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Ascension of Borough Park, Brooklyn.”

On November 26, 1958 Segal and Kurz filed a lis pendens against the property. In the meanwhile the closing of title to the afore-mentioned Nassau County property was adjourned to December 16, 1958.

The plaintiff alleges that its president was approached on December 1, 1958 by a real estate broker on behalf of the [190]*190Church with an offer to sell to plaintiff the premises in question for $35,000; that the pastor and counsel for the Church told plaintiff’s president that although a lis pendens was filed against the property the Church was not served with any summons and complaint by the defendants Segal and Kurz and that they have been declared to be in default; that on December 16, 1958 a formal tender of the deed to the Nassau County parsonage was made to the Church and the latter was declared in default; that on the following day the pastor called the plaintiff and its attorney urging them to buy the property for $35,000 and to close a contract, and accordingly an appointment was made for the signing of the contract at the office of the Church’s attorney for December 18, 1958; that on said date the parties entered into contract for the sale of the premises for $35,000; that prior to entering into the contract the Church’s attorney stated that he had been in touch with the attorney for defendants Segal and Kurz and that he was informed that an assignment of the contract between the Church and Segal and Kurz and an assignment of a contract between Segal and Kurz and the owner of the adjoining property to the Church and a consent for the withdrawal of the lis pendens filed were being delivered to the Church’s attorney. It is further alleged that it was agreed between plaintiff and the Church in a separate instrument other than the contract of sale of the property that the Church would deliver to plaintiff an assignment of defendants Segal and Kurz’ contracts with the Church and the owner of the adjoining property and upon delivery of the assignments and consent for the cancellation of the lis pendens plaintiff would pay the Church’s attorney $500. In addition, it is alleged that Mrs. Dell’Osso, the mother of the pastor, signed an instrument agreeing to make up the difference in sales price between the first and second contracts out of her share of the money to be received so that the Church would not be hurt in any manner. Plaintiff further alleges that during the preparation of the contract the attorney for defendants Segal and Kurz telephoned the Church’s attorney and informed him that he would be there shortly with the necessary documents which he had; that relying on these representations plaintiff entered into the contract, paying to the Church on the signing thereof $10,000 in certified checks; that the pastor immediately left with the money to make payment on the Nassau County parsonage, taking title to it eventually on December 23, 1958; that the attorney for defendants Segal and Kurz failed to arrive and the afore-mentioned necessary papers were never delivered; that on December 23, 1958 the plaintiffs were informed that defendants Segal and Kurz had advised the [191]*191Church that they intended to take title to the property and the adjoining property; that to protect its rights plaintiff filed its contract and Us pendens against the property; that on December 30, 1958 the Church’s attorney handed to plaintiff’s president his personal uncertified check for $10,000 paid on contract but that plaintiff returned the same to the attorney.

The Church alleges that no negotiations had been held with defendants Segal and Kurz concerning the assignment of their contracts with the Church and the adjoining property but that all negotiations were made with their attorney; that it now appears that said counsel had no authority from Segal and Kurz to enter such negotiations since they intended to take title and in fact notified the Church on December 23, 1958 that they intended to take title both of the Church and the adjoining property on December 30, 1958; that Segal and Kurz took title on December 30, 1958 of the adjoining property; that they tendered the monetary consideration required to be paid on the contract between them and the Church and that the Church tendered the deed to them but could not close title by reason of the Us pendens on file.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Misc. 2d 187, 185 N.Y.S.2d 695, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-assets-corp-v-english-evangelical-lutheran-church-nysupct-1959.