20. Land Sale Contracts (SOF) Flashcards
What is the procedure for land sales?
1) Land sale contract: Deed delivered to TP
2) Closing: Exchange of deed + purchase price
What is required for specific performance in a land sale contract?
Statute of Frauds
1) Writing
2) Signed by party ‘to be charged’
3) Description (Parties + Land + Price)
NO writing => 2/3 of the following elements must be met;
- Possession by Buyer
- Buyer’s substantial improvements
- Purchase price payment
What is the doctrine of equitable possession?
Possession
- Legal title => Seller (Seller holds in trust for Buyer as security for purchase price owed by Buyer) (possession ultimately follows legal title)
- Equitable title (after Buyer signs contract) => Buyer (real property)
Proceeds of sale
- Proceeds => Seller (personal property)
Who holds the risk of loss if the property is destroyed before closing under the doctrine of equitable conversion?
Fault of party
- Responsible party holds risk of loss
Fault of NO party
- Majority rule: Buyer holds risk of loss via equitable title (must pay ‘purchase price’)
- Majority rule: Seller must give credit to Buyer by removing insurance proceeds from purchase price (avoid Seller’s unjust enrichment)
- Uniform Vendor and Purchaser Risk Act: If Seller has legal title/possession at time of loss => Seller holds risk of loss
How does title pass if a party dies before contract completion under the equitable conversion doctrine?
Seller’s death
1) Legal title passes to Seller’s devisees/heirs
2) Legal title passes to Buyer (at closing)
Buyer’s death
1) Buyer’s devisees/heirs can demand land conveyance (at closing)
2) Buyer’s devisees/heirs must pay purchase price
What are the fundamental principles of a marketable title?
1) Implied
- NO need to be expressly stated
2) Every contract
- Including quitclaim deeds
3) Seller’s ability to provide
- NOT possess
4) Marketable title
- Reasonably free from doubt
- NO unreasonable risk of litigation
5) At closing
- NOT before closing
What is a marketable title?
Reasonably free from doubt
- Reasonably prudent person would be willing to accept (not perfect title, but free from questions that might present unreasonable risk of litigation)
Examples
- Defects in record chain of title
- Encumbrances
- Zoning restrictions
What are examples of defects in the record chain of title that would make title unmarketable?
Variations in description of land (between contract + deed)
Grantor’s lack of capacity
Deed defectively executed
Adverse possession
Future interests held by unborn/unascertained parties who transfer title
What are examples of encumbrances that would make title unmarketable?
Easements (reduces land value)
- NOT visible to Buyer
- NOT known to Buyer
- NOT beneficial to Buyer at closing
Covenants
Encroachments (significant)
- By Seller’s land/To Seller’s land
- NOT minor
- NO lawsuit to be enforced
Mortgages/Liens
- UNLESS purchase price can ‘satisfy’ mortgage/lien ‘at closing’
Can zoning restrictions make title unmarketable?
Existing violations
What can Buyer do if title is not marketable?
Buyer must notify Seller within reasonable time to cure defect
- Mortgages/Liens only
Seller fails to cure defect => Buyer’s remedies include;
- Rescission
- Damages
- Specific performance + Purchase price abatement
- Quiet title (clear actions vs title) (some states)
What are Seller’s liabilities after closing?
1) Merger (contract + deed)
2) Seller’s liabilities
- Express promises in deed
- NOT implied covenant of marketable title
Are land sale contracts required to be performed quickly because ‘time is of the essence’?
No (generally presumed)
- Closing date is NOT binding (in equity)
- Seller/Buyer can tender late performance ‘within reasonable time’
Yes
- Contract specifically states ‘time of the essence’
- Circumstances indicate parties’ intent
- Notice re ‘time of essence’
What happens if a land sale contract is performed late?
Non-breaching party can;
- Sue for incidental losses (additional mortgage interest, tax)
- Cancel contract => NO performance required
When must parties’ performance be tendered?
Concurrently
- Seller’s obligation to convey
- Buyer’s obligation to pay
- Otherwise NO breach until both tendered
Closing date extension automatically
- NEITHER party tendered
Tender excused
- Contract repudiated
- Contract is impossible