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Lonergan v. Scolnick: Difference between revisions
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No contract had been formed. | No contract had been formed. | ||
|judgment=Affirmed. | |judgment=Affirmed. | ||
|reasons=* Judging from the | |reasons=*Judging from the Scolnick's language, he intended to sell the land to the first-comer. The ad in the paper was only a request for an offer. | ||
* The lack of specificity in the ad and the "over subscription problem" (elevated interest for a newly available offering causes demand to outstrip supply). | *The lack of specificity in the ad and the "over subscription problem" (elevated interest for a newly available offering causes demand to outstrip supply). | ||
|case_text_links={{Infobox Case Brief/Case Text Link | |case_text_links={{Infobox Case Brief/Case Text Link | ||
|link=https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/2d/129/179.html | |link=https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/2d/129/179.html |
Revision as of 16:29, December 1, 2023
Lonergan v. Scolnick | |
Court | California Court of Appeal |
---|---|
Citation | 276 P.2d 8 |
Date decided | November 23, 1954 |
Case Opinions | |
majority | written by Charles R. Barnard joined by Griffin, Mussell |
Facts
- "Scolnick" = defendant = owner of a 40-acre plot of land = seller
- "Lonergan" = potential buyer
- In March 1952, Scolnick put an ad in the paper offering to sell a plot of land. The ad didn't list a price.
- Lonergan responded to the ad, and a series of letters between the two regarding the property and the sale thereof took place.
- Scolnick told Lonergan that his minimum price was $2,500.
- On April 8th 1952, the Defendant (Scolnick) wrote to the Plaintiff and said that he better hurry and make an offer, because he was expecting to sell the land shortly.
- Scolnick then sold the land to someone else on April 12.
- A couple of days later, the Lonergan wrote to the Scolnick & offered to buy the land.
April 8th 1952
Scolnick writes to Lonergan
Scolnick sells the land to someone else for $2,500
April 12th 1952
April 15th 1952
Lonergan agrees to buy the land at $2,500
Lonergan opens an escrow account
April 17th 1952
Procedural History
Trial court found for the defendant.
Issues
Was there a contract?
Arguments
Plaintiff said that a contract already existed.
Holding
The April 8th 1952 letter of Scolnick didn't constitute an offer.
Judge Barnard: Contract formation requires a meeting of the minds upon mutually agreeable terms.
No contract had been formed.Judgment
Affirmed.
Reasons
- Judging from the Scolnick's language, he intended to sell the land to the first-comer. The ad in the paper was only a request for an offer.
- The lack of specificity in the ad and the "over subscription problem" (elevated interest for a newly available offering causes demand to outstrip supply).