Wilburn v. Mangano

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 10, 2020
Docket191443
StatusPublished

This text of Wilburn v. Mangano (Wilburn v. Mangano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilburn v. Mangano, (Va. 2020).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

ANN M. WILBURN, ET AL. OPINION BY v. Record No. 191443 JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN December 10, 2020 ANTHONY JOHN MANGANO

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE COUNTY OF NORTHUMBERLAND Roy M. McKenney, Judge In this appeal, we consider the issue of whether “fair market value” on a specified date,

without more specificity, is a sufficiently certain price term to allow a court to compel specific

performance of a contract regarding the purchase of real estate.

BACKGROUND

On March 19, 2002, Jeanne S. Mangano (Jeanne) executed a will wherein she devised

her residence (the Property) to her three daughters, Ann M. Wilburn, Mary M. Snell, and Carol

Russel Mangano (collectively, the Sisters). In the same will, Jeanne granted her son, Anthony

John Mangano (Anthony), an option to purchase the Property from his Sisters (the Option).

According to the will, Anthony could exercise the Option within one year from the probate of

Jeanne’s will, and at a purchase price equal to the Property’s real estate tax assessment in the

year of Jeanne’s death.

On October 12, 2005, Jeanne executed a codicil to her will revising the purchase price for

the Option to “an amount equal to the fair market value at the time of my death.” On November

16, 2005, Jeanne passed away.

Shortly after Jeanne’s death, Anthony sent his Sisters a letter “to serve as legal notice of

[his] intent to exercise [the] option to purchase.” The notice expressed Anthony’s intent to

purchase the Property under the terms of the will or the terms of the codicil, “whichever the

[c]ourt/[j]udge upholds.” Anthony thereafter filed suit (Anthony’s Suit) in the Northumberland County Circuit

Court seeking to set aside Jeanne’s codicil. After a trial on Anthony’s Suit, the jury found that

the codicil was valid, and the circuit court entered an order accordingly.

The Sisters also filed suit (the Complaint) against Anthony in the Northumberland

County Circuit Court, requesting that Anthony be compelled to purchase the Property in

accordance with his exercise of the Option. The Sisters alleged that they had obtained two

appraisals of the fair market value of the Property as of Jeanne’s death, with one appraisal

valuing the Property at $311,000 and the other valuing it at $270,000. The Sisters stated that, “in

an effort to be fair,” they were willing to settle on the Property at the mean value of the two

appraisals, $290,500. The Sisters subsequently filed an amended complaint with allegations

similar to those in the Complaint, and on October 17, 2018, the Sisters amended their complaint

again, with leave of court.

In their second amended complaint, the Sisters added the outcome of Anthony’s Suit to

their allegations and noted the substantial expenses incurred in maintaining the Property since

Anthony’s exercise of the Option. They asserted that the Property’s appraised fair market value,

on the date of Jeanne’s death, was $311,000, and requested that Anthony be compelled to

specifically perform, regarding the purchase of the Property, pursuant to the terms of the Option

he had exercised.

Anthony filed a demurrer to the Sisters’ suit. He contended, among other things, that

there is no enforceable contract concerning his purchase of the Property because “fair market

value at the date of [Jeanne’s] death” is not a sufficiently specific term to establish mutual assent

to the Property’s purchase price.

After hearing oral argument, the circuit court issued a letter opinion sustaining the

demurrer filed by Anthony. In its letter opinion, the circuit court held that the codicil’s valuation

2 of the Property was “too vague to find a meeting of the minds” as to purchase price because the

method to compute fair market value was not provided. The circuit court observed that the

definition for fair market value, i.e., “what a willing buyer will pay to a willing seller,” suggested

that Jeanne foresaw further negotiations between Anthony and his Sisters to actually determine a

price, after Anthony’s notice of his desire to exercise the Option.

The circuit court subsequently entered a final order dismissing the case with prejudice. It

held that there was no enforceable contract because “the will, codicil, and notice of acceptance

did not determine the purchase price and did not provide a method of determining the purchase

price.”

The Sisters appeal. We granted one assignment of error:

The trial court erroneously sustained a demurrer to an action for specific performance of a land contract on the basis that there was no meeting of the minds as to price where the contract expressly stated that the purchaser would pay “the fair market value at the time of [vendor’s] death.” *

ANALYSIS

In their complaint, the Sisters seek specific performance of a contract for the purchase of

real estate. The Sisters argue that the circuit court erred in sustaining the demurrer because the

codicil contained all the essential elements of an option contract, and Anthony’s notice of his

desire to exercise the Option converted such option contract into a contract of purchase. The

Sisters admit that the codicil did not provide “a specific dollar figure” for the price term, but they

contend that the Option contained a term that could readily establish price “pursuant to a specific

method.” We disagree.

* The brackets and bracketed language have been copied verbatim from the petition for appeal.

3 “We examine the circuit court’s decision to sustain [a] demurrer under a de novo standard

of review because it is a pure question of law.” Mark Five Constr., Inc. v. Castle Contractors,

274 Va. 283, 287 (2007). “A demurrer will be sustained when the pleading it challenges lacks

sufficient definiteness to enable the court to find the existence of a legal basis for its judgment.”

Id. at 287–88 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).

An option contract is a continuing offer to sell, which may become a contract of sale once

the option holder gives notification of a desire to exercise the option. Parker v. Murphy, 152 Va.

173, 187–88 (1929); see Hart v. Hart, 35 Va. App. 221, 235–36 (2001). A contract of sale is

complete if it embraces all the essential terms of a contract. Parker, 152 Va. at 183; Smith v.

Farrell, 199 Va. 121, 128 (1957) (“An incomplete contract, therefore, is one from which one or

more material terms have been entirely omitted.”).

It is a well-established rule that a contract relating to the sale of land which is incomplete,

uncertain, or indefinite in its material terms will not be specifically enforced by a court of equity.

Parker, 152 Va. at 183; Duke v. Tobin, 198 Va. 758, 759 (1957) (“[A] court of equity will not

specifically enforce a contract unless . . . [a]ll the essential terms of the contract [are] finally and

definitely settled. None must be left to be determined by future negotiations.”). A contract is

uncertain if one of its material terms is expressed in so inexact, indefinite, or obscure language

that the intent of the parties cannot be sufficiently ascertained to enable the court to carry it into

effect. Smith, 199 Va. at 128; Parker, 152 Va. at 183.

In all contracts of sale, mutuality of assent, which is the meeting of the minds of the

parties or “a distinct intention common to both [parties],” is an essential element. Moorman v.

Blackstock, Inc., 276 Va. 64, 75 (2008) (quoting Phillips v. Mazyck, 273 Va. 630, 636

(2007)).

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