Valley Builders, Inc. v. Stein

193 A.2d 793
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 11, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 193 A.2d 793 (Valley Builders, Inc. v. Stein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valley Builders, Inc. v. Stein, 193 A.2d 793 (Del. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

193 A.2d 793 (1963)

VALLEY BUILDERS, INC., a corporation of the State of Delaware, Plaintiff,
v.
Norris A. STEIN and E. Rita Stein, his wife, Defendants.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

July 11, 1963.

*794 Jacob Balick, Wilmington, for plaintiff.

Howard M. Berg, Wilmington, for defendants.

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.

On December 31, 1960, plaintiff and defendants entered into a written contract under the terms of which it was agreed that plaintiff would build a house for defendants on a lot owned by the builder in a development known as North Hills in Brandywine Hundred. The agreement further provided that upon completion of the house title would be conveyed to defendants. Construction of the house began on March 10, 1961 and continued into the summer. On August 14, however, the defendant Mrs. Stein informed plaintiff's president, Harrison E. Chapman, that she and her husband were dissatisfied with the house as constructed to date and no longer wanted to take title.

Thereafter, by letter dated September 22, 1961, their attorney asked that plaintiff relieve Mr. and Mrs. Stein of their contractual obligation and that it return their deposit. The reasons given for such demand were that the house was not being constructed in a good, workmanlike fashion; that it did not conform to the contractual plans and specifications, and that it did not meet the requirements of the New Castle County Building Code. The letter further stated that objections raised by defendants during the course of construction of the house to plaintiff's workmanship had been ignored and that it was no longer possible for the obvious defects in the house to be made good. Finally, it was stated that if plaintiff did not accede to their attorney's demands, Mr. and Mrs. Stein would bring an action for formal rescission of the contract and for the recovery of their deposit.

In response to such letter plaintiff brought this action for specific performance and for incidental damages, and this is the decision of the Court after final hearing.

The complaint incorporates the contract by reference and alleges that by September 21, 1961, construction of the house had reached a point at which plaintiff could no longer proceed without defendants' approval of certain materials and the like and that though requested to, defendants had allegedly refused to make the necessary choices. Plaintiff claims that at all times during its performance of the contract it has been and is now ready and able to perform its contractual obligations. It therefore prays, inter alia, that defendants be ordered to make selections and decisions as to materials and the like so that the building of the house may be completed. Plaintiff also asks that defendants be further directed to pay the stipulated purchase price upon completion of the house and tender of a deed by plaintiff. The complaint also seeks damages allegedly caused by defendants' inaction.

Defendants' answer admits execution of the contract in question but points out that plaintiff was notified in August that the house was unsatisfactory and that they caused their attorney to send the September 22 letter referred to above. They go on to contend by way of counterclaim and affirmative defense that in the course of negotiations preceding the making of the contract in question plaintiff's employees made certain fraudulent misrepresentations concerning the kind and quality of the materials plaintiff proposed to use and that although they were informed that the house would be erected in a good, workmanlike manner out of materials of excellent quality, such was not done. Defendants also aver that plaintiff failed in the various respects set out in the letter of September 22 to perform *795 its obligations under the contract and ask that they be reimbursed for the amount of their deposit and for expenses incurred in reliance on plaintiff's promises. Finally, they ask that a lien be declared to attach to the premises in controversy for the purpose of securing the payment of the sums allegedly due them.

Defendants contend after trial that plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law and should therefore seek its claimed damages in such a court. They do not, of course, question the power of a court of equity to grant specific performance to either a vendor or a purchaser in the ordinary case of a contract for the purchase and sale of land. Defendants rather take the position that what is involved here is not an ordinary contract for the purchase of land but one calling for the construction of a building which remains unfinished. They urge that it is well recognized that it is virtually impossible properly to control specific performance in such a situation because of the difficulties inherent in judicial supervision of a building contract. They submit accordingly that jurisdiction should be declined. I am satisfied, however, that such principle does not apply to the facts adduced in the case at bar because the building of the house in question was well on the way to completion[1] when defendants sought to wash their hands of their contractual obligations. And if, as plaintiff contends, it is ready, willing and able to take whatever steps are necessary to bring the house to a stage of full completion and is permitted to do so, a judicial determination as to whether or not plaintiff has entirely fulfilled its contractual obligations can presumably be made. Thus, plaintiff takes the position that it in effect stands in much the same position as the ordinary vendor of real estate. Assuming that plaintiff has not only in large part built the house but is capable of completing it substantially as called for in the contract, I am satisfied that this Court has jurisdiction to grant plaintiff the basic relief for which it prays.

Defendants contend, however, that they were justified in repudiating their contractual obligations in September 1961, because plaintiff at that time had committed major breaches of the contract in issue and was thereafter unable to deliver a house that could meet the terms of the parties' agreement.

First of all, having considered defendants' contentions relating to plaintiff's alleged fraudulent misrepresentations as to materials, I find such unsupported by the facts. I am also satisfied that an exercise of reasonable diligence on defendants' part would have led to the avoidance of many alleged grievances claimed by them, such as disappointment over the size of the lot which they proposed to buy and the color of roofing materials. Defendants go on to claim that in any event the evidence establishes the fact that plaintiff has committed the following breaches of the contract, namely that (a) the house was built in a shoddy, poor, and unworkmanlike manner; (b) the materials used therein were inferior to those normally used in a house of like type, cost, and size, and (c) the construction of the house does not comply with the provisions of the Building Code of New Castle County.

Apart from their differences as to jurisdiction the parties do not disagree on the basic principles of law here applicable. Thus, defendants insist that there is an implied condition contained in a contract such as the one in issue that the builder will do a workmanlike job, and plaintiff agrees. The latter contends, however, that it in fact performed the job according to the terms of the contract up to the point at which defendants insisted on a halt in construction. While defendants for their part concede that they would not have been entitled to *796

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Related

Northern Delaware Industrial Development Corp. v. E. W. Bliss Co.
245 A.2d 431 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
193 A.2d 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valley-builders-inc-v-stein-delch-1963.