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Portman & Felser, Barnard M. Portman, Paul H. Felser, David A. Webster, for appellants (case no. A01A0343).Ronald C. Berry, for appellant (case no. A01A0342).
In Case Nos. A01A0342 and A01A0343, appellants-defendants Randall S. Booker and William J. Bremer, as executor under the last will and testament of Mary J. Bremer, his mother, respectively, appeal from the superior court's decree in equity setting aside a deed by which Bremer sold certain oceanfront property to Booker in violation of an alleged prior right of first refusal in favor of appellee-plaintiff Stephen R. Hall. By its decree, the superior court further granted Hall specific performance of the right of first refusal as to the property in issue located on Tybee Island's Strand, which Hall exercised to obtain title to Lots 4 and 5. Defendants first filed the instant appeals in the Supreme Court of Georgia. On October 2, 2000, the Supreme Court transferred each appeal to this Court in that the grant of equitable relief was merely ancillary to underlying issues of law, i.e., whether the trial court properly construed a contract for the sale of land. See Lee v. Green Land Co.,
On March 23, 1994, Bremer acting as attorney-in-fact for his mother, Mary Bremer, entered into a land sales contract with Hall ("contract"). Under the contract, Bremer sold Lot 3 of Beach Lot 75 in the Strand to Hall. The purchase price was $135,000 and included the cottage on the property, known as the "Old Bremer House." Mary Bremer also owned Lots 4 and 5 of Beach Lot 75. These lots were located immediately to the east of Lot 3, separating the Old Bremer House from the Atlantic Ocean. As part of the sales transaction, Hall sought [1] and Bremer gave a contractual future purchase right in Lots 4 and 5 or, in the event of inability to exercise such right of purchase, a share in profits over $225,000 upon a sale of the lots to a third party or parties. Pertinently, the operable language was as follows:
SPECIAL STIPULATIONS: The following special stipulations and any addenda, if in conflict with any printed matter in this Agreement, shall control and take precedence over such printed matter. The following provisions will survive the closing on Lot 3/Old Bremer House and remain in effect as option to purchase Lots 1 and 2 [2] as follows:
[a. Hall's stipulations.]
1. Purchaser(s) shall have the first right of refusal on the purchase of both Lots [4] and [5] (hereinafter referred to as "front lots"); 2. If a contract for sale containing an offer on the front lots is offered to seller prior to two years after the closing on Lot 3, then the purchaser(s) shall at that time have the option to purchase said lot or lots for some price equal or exceeding the offer received by the seller at that time. The payments for said lot or lots, however, shall be extended over a period of two years following the closing between purchaser and seller on the front lots. If at that time the purchaser(s) is unable to match or exceed the offer received by the seller on either or both front lots and the seller sells both lots for a sum greater than $225,000.00, then seller will split the excess over and above $225,000.00 with the purchaser. If the seller sells both Lots [4] and [5] on separate occasions, then the seller will still pay the purchaser(s) the sum received for both lots in excess of $225,000.00, this amount being due on the sale of the last lot sold; 3. Purchaser(s) shall have an option to purchase both Lots [4] and [5] at some later time for a reasonable sum. Purchaser(s) will pay $500.00 to retain said option at the time of the closing of Lot 3, 12th Terrace[;]
[b. Bremer's Stipulations.]
4. Furniture does not convey with the house[;] 5. Seller will have first right of refusal when purchaser sells house[; and] 6. Purchaser has right to maintain and have access [through] Lots [4] and [5].
On March 2, 1998, Bremer, now acting on behalf of his mother's estate as executor, conveyed Lots 4 and 5 to Booker without first giving Hall the opportunity to purchase the lots at the same price offered by Booker. Hall filed the instant lawsuit nine days after conveyance of title. Booker had already begun clearing Lots 4 and 5 for building. The superior court denied the motions for summary judgment of the parties, those of Bremer and Booker predicated on claims that Special Stipulation 1 ("right of first refusal") of the contract was unenforceable for violation of the Statute of Frauds, indefiniteness as to the essential term in contract of price, and expiration of the right of first refusal which must be read as limited to two years. Subsequently, the superior court impaneled an advisory jury in equity, projecting a trifurcated trial. In the first round of the trial, the jury heard parol evidence and was asked to determine if "Hall had proven, by a preponderance of the evidence, (1) the essential elements of a contract, and (2) that the right of first refusal in Stipulation 1 is not restricted to two years." The jury returned its special verdict answering, "Yes." After conducting a second round of trial without a jury, the superior court issued its decree, finding that the right of first refusal was not unenforceable as subject to a two-year time limitation or for its failure to set out the essential term of price therein. Held:
1. (a) Among the claims of error asserted in both cases, Bremer contends that the superior court erred in failing to find the contract unenforceable as too vague and indefinite as to essential terms. In Georgia, it is settled that an "agreement between two parties will occur only when the minds of the parties meet at the same time upon the same subject matter, and in the same sense." (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Southern Med. Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
Hall correctly points to Radio Webs v. Tele-Media Corp.,
A preemptive right [or right of first refusal] merely sets a requirement that when the owner decides to sell the person holding the preemptive right must be offered the opportunity to buy. (Emphasis supplied.) See generally 1A Corbin, Corbin on Contracts, 261.
Hasty v. Health Svc. Centers,
The right of first refusal Hall seeks to enforce is devoid of any triggering term. As such, it is no more than an unenforceable agreement to agree in the future. "No contract exists until all essential terms have been agreed to, and the failure to agree to even one essential term means there is no agreement to be enforced." (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Reichard v. Reichard,
(b) The foregoing notwithstanding, Hall's right of first refusal is unenforceable because the plain and unambiguous meaning of the right is limited to two years duration, and the right expired prior to the time Bremer sold Booker Lots 4 and 5 in the instant case. "The cardinal rule of construction is to ascertain the intention of the parties." OCGA
Consistent with the rule that the whole contract should be looked to in arriving at the construction of any part of a contract, OCGA
motions for summary judgment in part upon the finding that "the mere existence of [the right of first refusal which Bremer sought in Hall's property by his Special Stipulation 5] raises the possibility that the term 'right of first refusal' was meaningful to the parties at the time of contracting."
Absent the two-year time period, a reasonable time period would be set by the rule of contract enforcement. See Shiver v. Benton, supra at 287-288 (1); see also Hinson v. Roberts,
(c) Further, it is undisputed that Hall drafted Special Stipulations 1 through 3. Having found such stipulations ambiguous as a matter of law, the superior court also erred in failing to construe such ambiguity in favor of nondrafter Bremer. OCGA
Finally, since the writing at issue lacks the elements needed to create a binding and enforceable contract, neither specific performance nor damages were obtainable based thereon. Stribling v. Ailion,
2. In light of our disposition in Division 1, we need not address the remaining enumerations of error.
Hunter, Maclean, Exley & Dunn, John M. Tatum, for appellee.
2001
Notes:
1. The superior court found that at Bremer's request Hall added Special Stipulations 4, 5, and 6 to the contract in his own handwriting at closing of the sales agreement, having "dictated" the stipulations he wanted in the contract, Special Stipulations 1-3, to his attorney the previous day.
2. Upon the consent of the parties, the superior court equitably reformed the 1994 sales contract to show Lots 4 and 5 as the subject matter of the Special Stipulations, such lots having been misdesignated as Lots 1 and 2 in the Bremer/Hall contract.
3. Hall correctly conceded below that Special Stipulation 3 is unenforceable under Georgia law and did not rely on it insofar as he sought specific performance of the right of first refusal.
4. OCGA
5. In the event of conflict, a specific rule of construction takes precedence over a general rule of construction. Alexander v. Steining,
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This document cites
- Supreme Court of Georgia - LEE v. GREEN LAND COMPANY, INC., 272 Ga. 107, 527 S.E.2.d 204 (2000)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - HUGHES et al. v. COBB COUNTY et al., 264 Ga. 128, 441 S.E.2.d 406
- Supreme Court of Georgia - REICHARD v. REICHARD., 262 Ga. 561, 423 S.E.2.d 241
- Supreme Court of Georgia - HERTZ EQUIPMENT RENTAL CORPORATION v. EVANS., 260 Ga. 532, 397 S.E.2.d 692 (1990)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - HEWATT et al. v. LEPPERT., 259 Ga. 112, 376 S.E.2.d 883
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