Thommen v. Smith

103 A. 25, 88 N.J. Eq. 476, 3 Stock. 476, 1918 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 2, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 103 A. 25 (Thommen v. Smith) 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
Thommen v. Smith, 103 A. 25, 88 N.J. Eq. 476, 3 Stock. 476, 1918 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84 (N.J. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Leaming, V. C.

This is a suit to enforce specific performance of an option of purchase of real estate.

A lease of the property was made by defendant to complainant’s testator April 23d, 1914, for a term, of three years, with the stipulated rent for the term payable in equal monthly payments in advance.

The lease contains the following clause:

“The party of the first part [owner] agrees that at any time during the term for which said premises are let and rented, the said party of the second part [tenant] shall have an option to 'buy the said premises for the sum of seven thousand dollars.”

April 10th, 1917, complainant, who is the executrix of the lessee and devisee of his entire estate, exercised the option of purchase contained in the lease by tendering to defendant the full purchase price in cash and demanding the execution of a deed of conveyance.

The defence is based upon a claim that the option of purchase contained in the lease was rendered void or unenforceable by reason of certain transactions which occurred between defendant and the lessee in December preceding' the-expiration of the term.

In that month an agreement of sale was entered into between defendant and the lessee wherein the lessee agreed to purchase and defendant agreed to sell the leased premises for $7,000, payable as follows: One hundred dollars was to be paid at the time the agreement was signed; a mortgage of $4,000, then on the premises, was to remain; defendant was to take a second mortgage for $1,000; the balance of $1,900 was to be paid in cash at a settlement to be made January 8th, 1917. The agreement also provided that the $100 cash paid down should be forfeited by non-fulfillment by the lessee at the time named for [478]*478settlement, and should be returned to the lessee in case defendant failed at that time to deliver a marketable title. The $100 was paid at the execution of the agreement, but before the time for settlement the lessee requested to be relieved from the agreement and defendant consented thereto. By mutual assent the $100 which had been paid was disposed of by defendant crediting the lessee with one month’s rent, then about due, and applying the balance to the payment of expenses which had been incurred by defendant.

Shortly after the abrogation of the agreement of sale the lessee died, and complainant, who is his executor and sole devisee, continued in possession as tenant and each month paid to defendant the monthly rental reserved by the lease.

Defendant now urges that the agreement of sale amounted to air exercise of the option contained in the lease and that its execution and subsequent abrogation amounted to such an exercise and abandonment of the option that it could not thereafter be exercised and enforced.

There is no material conflict in the testimony. Admittedly, the transactions between the parties were substantially as above stated. There is no- evidence indicating that in agreeing to abrogate the agreement of sale either of the parties at that time had any specific purpose, intent or thought as to wha,t effect the transaction had of might have upon the right of the lessee to thereafter exercise his option pursuant to the terms of the lease. The whole transaction may be embodied in the statement that the agreement of sale was made because complainant’s testator at that time wanted to buy on the terms stated in the agreement of sale, and defendant was at that time willing to sell on those terms; the agreement of sale was canceled because complainant’s testator thereafter determined that he did not want to buy at that time on those terms, and defendant was willing that the contract be abrogated and accordingly so agreed.

The sole question for determination is what effect the execution of the agreement of sale and its subsequent abrogation by mutual assent before the date specified for its performance had upon the option contained in the' lease. The diligence of counsel has discovered no adjudicated case based upon similar facts.

[479]*479I understand it to be conceded by defendant that at the death of the lessee all rights which the lessee had under the lease, including the option of purchase, passed to complainant as executrix. This is expressly determined in McCormick v. Stephany, 57 N. J. Eq. 257, and in the cases there cited (at p. 263). But as complainant herein is both executrix and sole devisee of ail the estate of her testator her right to enforce the option to the same extent that her testator could if alive is beyond question.

The right of a lessee to enforce specific performance of an option of purchase contained in his lease is also well recognized. Such contracts, being in form unilateral, are specifically enforced in equity because a consideration for the option is presumed to exist. In Hawralty v. Warren, 18 N. J. Eq. 124., this is stated as follows:

“In taking a lease, a tenant may be willing to pay a high rent for a number of years, provided the landlord will give him an optional right to purchase at a fixed price. And it is to be presumed that the landlord would not agree to such a. boon, unless he had a consideration in the lease. Any sufficient consideration would make such unilateral contract binding in equity.” See, also, Ten Eyck v. Manning, 52 N. J. Eq. 47, 50. These principles appear to obtain independently of the consideration imported by the sealed instrument.

Eeturning now to the inquiry whether the agreement of sale and its subsequent cancellation by mutual assent were operative to destroy the binding force of the option contained in the lease, it should be noted that the agreement of sale did not conform to the terms of the option contract. The amount of the purchase price alone was the same. The option agreement could have been enforced only by the payment of that amount in cash. The agreement of sale was a matter of new negotiation as to the method of payment; only $3,000 in cash was required of the lessee under that agreement. It should be noted also that the agreement of sale stipulated a result to flow from a failure of the lessee to consummate the agreement on the day named for settlement. That result was the forfeiture of the $100 paid down at the execution of the agreement; no suggestion is contained in the agreement that a further result of the breach shall be a for[480]*480feiture of the lessee’s term under his lease or of the optional right contained in the lease. It should be noted also that the agreement of sale further provided the result to flow from the inability of defendant to convey a marketable title on the day named for settlement; in such case the $100 cash payment was to be returned to the lessee immediately. The clear import of these two clauses is to the effect that in the event of failure to consummate the agreement-of sale on the day named, by reason of either of the circumstances stated, the agreement should be at an end; the lessee’s failure to result in a forfeiture of the $100; defendant’s failure to result in a return of the $100.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A. 25, 88 N.J. Eq. 476, 3 Stock. 476, 1918 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thommen-v-smith-njch-1918.