Whalen v. Stuart

123 A.D. 446, 108 N.Y.S. 355, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 84
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 17, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 123 A.D. 446 (Whalen v. Stuart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whalen v. Stuart, 123 A.D. 446, 108 N.Y.S. 355, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 84 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Scott, J.:

The defendants appeal from a judgment decreeing that they specifically perform a contract for the sale ef real estate. The record presents apparently two decisions both signed by the trial justice, but on closer examination it will be found that there is really only one. ■ Both parties submitted proposed decisions embracing findings of fact and conclusions of law. The justice, evidently with considerable care, allowed some of the findings and conclusions as presented by each party, modified others and allowed them in the modified form, and disallowed others,' marking in the margin his disposition of each request. A fair copy was then made embracing all the conclusions and findings allowed by the justice, and this-he signed evidently intending this to be his decision, and this we accept and treat as the decision upon which the judgment rests. It is true that the justice, doubtless inadvertently, appended his name to the proposed findings and conclusions submitted by the plaintiff, but there is no reason to suppose that he intended this paper to stand as his formal decision.

The plaintiff sues as assignee of one Nellie Duke who, on March 25, 1903, entered into a contract for the purchase from the defendants, executors of William F. Buckley, deceased, of a certain plot of land on Amsterdam avenue in the city of New York. It is this [448]*448contract which is involved in the present action."' On the same day Nellie Duke made another contract with the heirs and devisees of Mr. Buckley for the purchase of two lots, One on the. Boulevard and one on West One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street. Title was taken to the lots On One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street some. time in 1903, and they do not enter into- the history of this litigation, which concerns ’ only the- Amsterdam. avenue properties. By the terms of the contract the .deed, was to be delivered on July-1, 1903, but a number of adjournments were had by consent and somewhere about October 3, 1903, an indefinite adjournment was taken Owing to the pendency of an action which had been begun attacking Mr. Buckley’s- title to the property. ' William F. Buckley had acquired title to. the property through a quitclaim deed executed by one Saráh Harris, and confirmed by her will. In May, 1903, William Williams, claiming to' be a nephew - of Sarah Harris, but who had not'keen cited upon thé probate of her will; commenced an action for -partition involving the Amsterdam aventie property. He seiwed a summons on defendants, but did not serve a complaint. He .filed a Us pendens, however, and a verified complaint from which, it appeared that he claimed that the -deed from.Sarah, Harris to William F. Buckley, and her will in his favor had been induced by fraud and undue influence and were void. - In the opinion of the title company, who were examining the title for the purchaser, the pendency of this Suit constituted such a cloud upon defendants’title that they could -not convey a marketable title. ■ This view seems to have been acquiesced in at tlie timé bj the "defendants’ attorneys, or at least not seriously combated. It is now insisted, however, that this objection to the title was, even . at that time, untenable. There can be no doubt, as' we consider, ¿hat the pendency of the Williams action rendered the title unmarketable "and justified the purchaser in refusing to complete the purchase until the cloud had been removed: . The lis pendens alone would not have -been sufficient, but the Ms pendens and the complaint oh file indicating the nature of -the action did constitute a cloud, and the purchaser was neither bound -to accept- the title at her peril, or to seek out the evidence as to the validity Or invalidity of the title. (Simon v. Vanderveer, 155 N. Y. 377.) The defend- ■ ants appeared in the Williams action and . demanded'service of a [449]*449copy of the complaint, but their demand was not complied with, and on their motion an order was made by Mr. Justice Davis on August 25, 1903, directing that the complaint should be dismissed unless within five days a proper complaint should be served. Williams did not serve a complaint within the time allowed, but on August 31, 1903, obtained from Mr. Justice Amend an ex fane order extending by ten days his time to serve his complaint. On September 8, 1903, Williams undertook to serve a complaint upon defendants’ attorneys which they refused to receive arid returned with their objection. Williams thereupon moved that defendants’ attorneys be compelled to receive the complaint. This motion came on to be heard before Mr. Justice Bischoff, who expressed the opinion that while the ex f arte order of Mr. Justice Amend was irregular, it was not void, and until vacated justified Williams in claiming that he was not in • default. He, therefore, granted the motion to compel the defendants to accept the complaint unless within two days they moved to vacate Mr. Justice Amend’s order. The defendants accordingly moved to vacate that order and for a dismissal of the complaint. This motion came on to be heard before Mr. Justice Barrett, and on October seventh his decision was published in the New York Law Journal granting the motion. The order upon this decision was not entered until October 12, 1903, the judgment of dismissal being entered on October seventeenth. As soon as the notice of Mr. Justice Barrett’s decision was published and on October 7, 1903, an engagement was made between the attorneys representing the purchaser and the defendants-for a meeting on the following day. It is found as a matter of fact, (at defendants’ request) that the appointment to close the contract of sale of the property the subject of this action was to determine the relations of the parties and make tenders to fix their respective, decisions, claims and demands,” and this seems to accord with the evidence. because it is' apparent that it was not anticipated that the title would actually pass on that day. On October seventh the attorney representing the purchaser had distinctly notified the defendants’ attorneys that the purchaser would not be prepared to accept a deed on the following day. The reason given was that the purchaser claimed that the two contracts executed on the same day constituted in fact and intent one transaction, the sale [450]*450being “ all or none ” although embodied in two contracts; that the title to the Boulevard property still remained unmarketable and, therefore, the entire contract could not be carried out.. The purchaser demanded the rescission of the entire transaction,-a return of the amounts paid on the contracts and upon the transfer of the twelve lots that had already been conveyed, the purchaser reconveying them. The ground of objection to the title to the Boulevard lots seems to be that they also came through the deed and will of Sarah Harris, and although not included in the lis pendens and complaint filed by Williams, yet that lis pendens and complaint conveyed notice that thé deed and will were claimed to be void. The defendants’ attorneys promptly denied that the two contracts were interdependent and announced that they would, he prepared to renew the tender of a deed for the Amsterdam avenue property on the following day. On October 8, 1903,' the parties met. The defendants tendered a deed of the Amsterdam avenue property which the purchaser declined to accept, and renewed the demand . conveyed in their letter of the preceding day that all the contracts be rescinded, the money paid he returned and both parties put where they originally stood.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mutchnick v. Davis
130 A.D. 417 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1909)
Murphy v. Fox
128 A.D. 534 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 A.D. 446, 108 N.Y.S. 355, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whalen-v-stuart-nyappdiv-1908.