Court Opinion

ID: 1266467
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 05:17:32.189091+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:39:36.888419
License: Public Domain

287 S.E.2d 898 (1982)
Tarokh TAEFI
v.
Vernon R. STEVENS and Joanne B. Stevens.
No. 148A81.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
March 3, 1982.
*899 Perry, Patrick, Farmer & Michaux, P. A. by Roy H. Michaux, Jr., Charlotte, for plaintiff-appellee.
Richard A. Cohan, Charlotte, for defendants-appellants.
PER CURIAM.
The facts are adequately stated in the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Defendants contend that the Court of Appeals has incorrectly stated the rule for damages in a breach of contract for the sale of real estate. We do not agree. We have carefully reviewed the opinion of that court and the briefs and authorities relating to defendants' contentions. We conclude that the result reached by the Court of Appeals, its reasoning, and the legal principles enunciated by it are correct and adopt that opinion as our own with a single minor modification. After correctly quoting the rule stated in 77 Am.Jur.2d Vendor and Purchaser § 489 (1975) to the effect, in pertinent part, that the compensation to which the vendor is entitled is "limited to such damages as may reasonably be supposed to have been within the contemplation of the parties when they made the contract ..." (emphasis added), the writer of the opinion, in subsequently stating that court's belief that the jury could find that certain items of damages could have been within the contemplation of the parties at the pertinent time, used the words "at the time of the breach of the contract." (emphasis added). We believe this was obviously inadvertent and that the writer intended the proper time of determination to be when the contract to purchase was entered into.
Except as herein modified, the decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
MODIFIED AND AFFIRMED.