Court Opinion

ID: 9929887
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-05 17:03:16.759361+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:58:08.791641
License: Public Domain

COURT OF CHANCERY
                                   OF THE
                             STATE OF DELAWARE
MORGAN T. ZURN                                                  LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
VICE CHANCELLOR                                                    500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400
                                                                  WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734

                                    February 5, 2024
    Paul G. Enterline, Esquire                      Brian J. Ferry, Esquire
    113 S. Race St., P.O. Box 826                   P.O. Box 1351
    Georgetown, DE 19947                            Wilmington, DE 19899

         RE: Ronald Grant Morris v. Delmarva Real Estate Holdings, LLC,
             Civil Action No. 2022-1211-MTZ
Dear Counsel:

         Both parties disputing the terms of a purchase option have moved for

summary judgment. For the reasons detailed below, I grant the motion filed by

defendant Delmarva Real Estate Holdings, LLC (“Delmarva”) and deny the one filed

by plaintiff Ronald Grant Morris.

         I.    BACKGROUND 1

               A.    The Contract

         On September 1, 2017, Morris and Delmarva executed an agreement titled

“Commercial Triple Net Lease With Purchase Option” (the “LPO” or “Contract”)

1
  I draw the following facts from Morris’s complaint and the documents integral to it, and
the additional record submitted in connection with each motion. Citations in the form of
“Compl.” refer to Morris’s Verified Complaint, available at Docket Item (“D.I.”) 1;
citations in the form of “Def. Mot.” refer to Delmarva’s Motion for Judgment on the
Pleadings, available at D.I. 17; citations in the form of “Pl. Mem.” refer to Morris’s
Memorandum In Response To Defendant’s Motion For Judgment On The Pleadings And
Morris v. Delmarva Real Estate Hldgs., LLC
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February 5, 2024
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for a property at 14702 Baker Road, Delmar, Delaware, 19940 (the “Property”).2

Consistent with its title, the LPO set Morris’s monthly payment and the process by

which Morris could exercise a purchase option.3 The lease ran for five years, from

September, 1, 2017 to August 31, 2022, 4 and the purchase option began on

July 1, 2022 and expired on October 31, 2022.5 That is, the purchase option

extended beyond the expiration of the lease by two months.6 Delmarva could, “in

its sole discretion,” extend the lease on a month-by-month basis. 7

          The Contract includes a Purchase Option Amortization Schedule (the

“Schedule”) that reflects the parties valued the Property at $350,000 when the LPO

was executed, and Morris’s cost to exercise the purchase option at the end of the

lease term would be $292,092.02. 8 LPO Section 12 explained that for Morris to

Cross Motion And Memorandum For Judgment On The Pleadings Or, In The Alternative,
Summary Judgment, available at D.I. 20; citations in the form of “Def. Reply” refer to
Defendant’s Reply Memorandum, available at D.I. 24; and citations in the form of “Pl.
Reply” refer to Plaintiff’s Reply Memorandum, available at D.I. 28.
2
    Compl. ¶¶ 1, 2; D.I. 1, Ex. A [hereinafter “LPO”].
3
    See LPO.
4
    Id. § 2.
5
    Id. § 12.
6
    Id.
7
    Def. Mot. ¶ 3; see LPO § 2.
8
    LPO § 12.
Morris v. Delmarva Real Estate Hldgs., LLC
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exercise the purchase option, he needed to notify Delmarva in writing and submit a

$10,000 certified check by October 31, 2022. 9             That same section explicitly

explained the treatment of Morris’s monthly payments if he did not exercise the

option as specified:

          If Lessee fails to exercise this Purchase Option in strict accord with the
          terms and conditions herein or within the time provided herein, Lessee
          agrees and acknowledges that the full consideration paid to Lessor shall
          be retained by Lessor as consideration for this purchase option and
          neither party shall have any further rights or claims against the other by
          reason of this Purchase Option. 10

                B.     Morris And Delmarva Discuss Exercising, Then Extending,
                       The Purchase Option.

          On July 19, 2022, Morris contacted Delmarva’s representative Jim Gregory

via text message to ask whether the $10,000 purchase option payment would count

toward the purchase price, closing costs, or something else. 11 Gregory clarified it

counted toward the purchase price, and added that if Morris chose to pay that

9
    Id.
10
     Id. (emphasis added).
11
     D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A40.
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amount, he could “deposit it just like monthly rent,” and there was “[n]o need for

certified check and mail” 12 as Section 12 specified.

           The parties messaged about the deposit again two days later. Morris indicated

that he was trying to obtain financing to purchase the Property, there were two

“things on [his] credit report that [he was] paying to be removed,” and the

underwriter was “just trying to help [him] save on interest.”13 Gregory responded

and said, “Let’s wait until next week on the $10k. Not a big deal.” 14 Gregory

expressed hope that Morris could get final approval early in the week of July 25.15

On July 26, Gregory followed up with Morris and asked for an update when the bank

commitment was finalized; Morris confirmed he would provide it. 16

           On October 20, it was clear Morris would not receive financing before the

October 31 deadline. 17 Morris suggested extending the lease for another year or two,

but the parties did not reach a decision.18 On October 26, Gregory texted Morris

12
     Id. at A42.
13
     Id. at A44 (cleaned up).
14
     Id.
15
     Id. at A45.
16
     Id. at A46.
17
     Id. at A47–48.
18
     Id. at A48.
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twice that he would not extend the purchase option past December 31. 19 Morris

replied “Okay, that’s fine.” 20

         The next day, the conversation continued, with Gregory proposing the parties

enter another lease agreement if the bank financing did not materialize in time,

Morris proposing Delmarva finance the Property for ten years and permit him to

“pay [it] off anytime,” and Gregory flatly rejecting that idea and then reconsidering

it. Morris paused the conversation, asking if he could call Gregory later that

afternoon, and Gregory responded that Morris could call him the next day “or next

week.”21

         Morris was quiet for over two weeks. On the morning of November 15,

Gregory texted Morris that because it seemed Morris would not obtain the financing

to exercise the option, he would have to vacate the Property by December 31.22

Gregory then texted an image of the notice of lease termination document he was

19
  Id. at A49 (“I will stand by my offer thru end of December but after that I am selling the
property.”); id. (“I will mail you an official notice, but I’m not willing to go past December
on this.”).
20
  Id. (responding to Gregory’s text that he was “not willing to go past December on this”
with “Okay, that’s fine”).
21
     Id. at A52.
22
  Id. at A54 (“It doesn’t seem like your banking is working out so I’ll need you to vacate
by the end of December.”).
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drafting to send Morris by certified letter “in the next couple of days.” 23 That

evening, Morris responded congenially.24

           From December 4 through December 6, Gregory emailed with Morris’s

counsel. Gregory explained that “[t]he purchase option expired at the end of the

lease term,” but “[b]ecause [Morris] was actively working through the financing,

[Gregory] extended the option through December 31, 2022.”25 He further explained

that “there [wa]s no change in the option price of $292,092.02” and that it “[wa]s

due in full on or before December 31, 2022.” 26 Morris’s counsel thanked Gregory

“for th[e] information.” 27

           Morris’s counsel also passed along the lender’s request that Gregory verify

Morris’s monthly payments.28 Six months earlier, Gregory had sent a verification

letter from Delmarva, stating that “[Morris’s] monthly lease payments have never

23
     Id.
24
   Id. at A55 (“I forwarded the information, thank you! I hope you and Mrs. Pam are well
also bud.”).
25
     D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A20.
26
     Id.
27
     Id. at A21.
28
     Id.
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been late” since August 2017.29 But this time, Gregory did not oblige: instead, he

told Morris, “given the numerous late payments, I don’t think anything I could

reconstruct would present a favorable picture.” 30

         After days passed with Gregory not hearing from Morris or his counsel,

Gregory texted Morris on December 10. He repeated the December 31 purchase

deadline, added he was “willing to give [Morris] a 60-day month-to-month” lease,

and stressed there would be no extension if Morris continued to ignore him. 31 That

same day, Morris explained he was “not ignoring [Gregory], [he] simply need[ed]

proof [he] paid [Delmarva] the past 64 months, so [he] ordered 5 [years] of [his]

canceled checks.” 32 When Morris called his past payments his “downpayment,”

Gregory tersely responded that Morris had “NEVER made a down payment,” and

“the purchase option [would] not be extended beyond [December 31, 2022].”33

         Days went by again, and Gregory heard nothing. Gregory followed up

with a December 13 letter: “This is a reminder that your lease and purchase

29
     D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A13.
30
     Id. at A25.
31
     D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A56.
32
  Id. at A56; see D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A30 (“My client is now reconstructing 5 years of payment
records to satisfy the ‘underwriting requirements.’”).
33
     D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A56–56-a.
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option . . . conclude[] on December 31, 2022. Accordingly, if you are unable to

exercise the purchase option [by that date], you will need to vacate the

premises . . . .” 34 Delmarva stated Morris could extend the lease until the end of

February 2023, but emphasized that extension “does not extend the purchase

option.”35

           On December 14, Morris received preapproval for a mortgage to buy the

Property.36 The preapproval letter “d[id] not constitute a contract or guarantee to

lend.”37 On December 19, Morris’s counsel notified Gregory of the preapproval.38

This was the closest Morris had come to obtaining financing, and Gregory offered

prompt congratulations.39

           On December 21, Morris’s counsel notified Gregory that Morris had engaged

a law firm to handle closing, but he needed another extension of the purchase option

34
     D.I. 17, Ex C.
35
     Id.
36
     D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A34.
37
     Id.
38
  Id. at A35 (“Attached is the loan pre-approval letter for Mr. Morris’s purchase of the
property . . . [he] will proceed accordingly and notify you of the closing attorney.”).
39
     Id. (“Wow!!!! Good for him!!!!”).
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deadline. 40 His counsel asked Gregory to “please confirm if [the extension] is

satisfactory.”41 Gregory responded the same day, refusing to further postpone the

deadline and restating the consequences if the option expired.42 Morris’s financing

did not materialize in time,43 and his counsel commenced this action on December

30, 2022, expecting Delmarva would not extend the purchase option further. 44

                   C.   Morris Tries To Exercise The Option After It Expired.

           On January 3, 2024, Delmarva’s counsel wrote Morris’s counsel confirming

“[t]he option expired on December 31, 2022 because [Morris] failed to deliver the

written election to purchase with the $10,000 deposit money by that date.” 45 On

January 4, Morris’s counsel sent a letter confirming Morris was “ready, willing, and

able to pay the $10,000 deposit,” failing to mention whether Morris was ready to

purchase the Property, and asking how the $10,000 payment would affect the final

purchase price.46 On January 6, Morris wrote a personal check to Delmarva for

40
     Id. at A37.
41
     Id.
42
     Id. at A38.
43
     Compl. ¶ 7.
44
     D.I. 17, Ex. C; Compl. ¶¶ 10, 12.
45
     D.I. 17, Ex. D.
46
  Compare D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A60 with id. at A40–42 (indicating a July 2022 text exchange
between Morris and Gregory, with Morris asking Gregory the $10,000 downpayment
Morris v. Delmarva Real Estate Hldgs., LLC
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$10,000.00, then “forged [Gregory’s] signature on the back of the check, traveled to

Delmarva’s bank, and personally deposited the check into Delmarva’s account

without Delmarva’s knowledge or authorization.” 47

                  D.      Procedural History

         In this action, Morris seeks “an order of specific performance against

Delmarva directing it to convey clear and marketable title” of the Property.48

Delmarva filed its answer on April 4, 2023, and its Motion for Judgment on the

Pleadings on June 2.49 On July 5, Morris filed a cross-motion for judgment on the

pleadings or in the alternative for summary judgment, noting that Delmarva

introduced facts beyond the pleadings in its motion. 50 Delmarva filed an opposition

to Morris’s motion and reply in support of its own, seeking summary judgment in

Delmarva’s favor.51 Morris filed his reply on August 29. 52 The Court took the

impact on the purchase price, and Gregory attaching the LPO with his response that it
would go toward the purchase price).
47
     Def. Mot. ¶ 12; see D.I. 17, Ex. E.
48
     Compl. ¶ 23.
49
     D.I. 11; Def. Mot.
50
     See generally Pl. Mem.
51
     Def. Reply.
52
     Pl. Reply.
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motions under advisement on October 13.53                Delmarva’s separate action for

summary possession, pending in the Justice of the Peace Court, has been stayed

pending the resolution of this case. 54

         II.    ANALYSIS

         For the reasons that follow, judgment will be entered in Delmarva’s favor.

Time is of the essence in the Contract. This conclusion forecloses Morris’s argument

that Delmarva breached or repudiated the Contract by refusing to further extend the

time to exercise the purchase option.

                A.     Standard of Review

         While Delmarva moved for judgment on the pleadings, both parties’

submissions included documents outside the pleadings.55 Court of Chancery Rule

12(c) provides:

53
     D.I. 29.
54
     D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A62–75.
55
     See generally D.I. 17, Exs. A-E; see also D.I. 20, Exs. 1–2.
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         If, on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, matters outside the
         pleadings are presented to and not excluded by the Court, the motion
         shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as
         provided in Rule 56, and all parties shall be given reasonable
         opportunity to present all material made pertinent to such a motion by
         Rule 56.”56

Given that both parties requested a summary judgment and neither indicated

additional discovery was necessary, rather than ignoring the facts extraneous to the

pleadings, I will oblige the parties by considering the facts outside of the complaint

and rule on the parties’ motions as cross-motions for summary judgment.

         This Court will grant a motion for summary judgment where there are no

genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a

matter of law.57

56
   Ct. Ch. R. 12(c); 1 Donald J. Wolfe, Jr. & Michael A. Pittenger, Corporate &
Commercial Practice in the Delaware Court of Chancery § 4.06[c], at 4-28 (2d ed. 2019)
(“Consideration of extrinsic documents usually converts Rule 12(c) motion into a motion
for summary judgment.”); Jimenez v. Palacios, 250 A.3d 814, 841 (Del. Ch. Aug. 2, 2019)
(“Because the defendants present documents outside of the pleadings in support of their
motion, the defendants’ motion will be treated as one for summary judgment under Rule
56.”), aff’d, 237 A.3d 68 (Del. 2020).
57
     Ct. Ch. R. 56(c).
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         Where the parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment and
         have not presented argument to the Court that there is an issue of fact
         material to the disposition of either motion, the Court shall deem the
         motions to be the equivalent of a stipulation for decision on the merits
         based on the record submitted with the motions.58

         Morris’s Complaint presents two counts: Count I for “specific performance,”

and Count II for “damages for breach of contract against Delmarva.” 59 Morris’s

underlying cause of action on which the parties seek favorable judgments is breach

of contract.60 Morris claims Delmarva breached the Contract by not providing a

reasonable extension from the original October 31 deadline for the purchase option,

and by “repudiating” the Contract, committing an anticipatory breach, by insisting

that it would not sell the Property to Morris after the December 31 deadline.61

         To succeed on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party “must

establish that its construction of the . . . agreement is the only reasonable

58
  Garfield v. Boxed, Inc., 2022 WL 17959766, at *4 (Del. Ch. Dec. 27, 2022) (internal
quotation marks omitted) (citing Ct. Ch. R. 56(h)).
59
     Compl. ¶¶ 22–26, 27–28.
60
  Compl. ¶¶ 1, 28; see Wollard v. Yoder & Sons Constr., LLC, 2021 WL 141984, at *1 n.7
(Del. Ch. Jan. 15, 2021) (“Wollard brings six ‘counts,’ but in addition to two claims
sounding in contract and one in tort, the rest are not causes of action, but instead requests
for remedies: specific performance, ‘temporary’ injunction, and expedition.”).
61
   Pl. Mem. 9 (“Delmarva unequivocally rejected any further delay. This was an
anticipatory repudiation of the contract. Morris was justified in suspending his
performance and seeking judicial assistance.”); id. at 17.
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interpretation” as a matter of law. 62 The elements for a breach of contract claim are

well-established: (1) the existence of a contract; (2) the breach of an obligation

imposed by the contract; and (3) damages that the plaintiff suffered as a result of the

breach.63 The first element is undisputed; the second is at the heart of this matter.

Morris claims Delmarva breached the LPO by refusing to sell the Property to him,

and Delmarva claims any obligation lapsed when Morris failed to timely exercise

the purchase option.

         The material facts are undisputed: (i) the LPO provided for a five-year lease

expiring at the end of August 2022, with a purchase option expiring at the end of

October 2022; (ii) Delmarva extended the lease and purchase option until December

31, 2022; (iii) Morris did not tender the $10,000 required to exercise the purchase

option before the December 31 deadline; and (iv) Delmarva did not extend the

purchase option further.

62
     United Rentals, Inc. v. RAM Hldgs., Inc., 937 A.2d 810, 830 (Del. Ch. Dec. 21, 2007).
63
  Intermec IP Corp. v. Transcore, LP, 2021 WL 3620435, at *10 (Del. Super.
Aug. 16, 2021).
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               B.     The LPO Is An Option Contract; Time Was Of The
                      Essence; And The Option Lapsed.

         Delmarva did not breach the LPO by holding Morris to the December 31

deadline. The Contract is an option contract, making time of the essence. Because

time was of the essence, Delmarva could rightly insist that the purchase option did

not extend past the deadline; doing so was not a breach.

         “An option contract has two elements: the underlying offer concerning the

sale or purchase of the property and the collateral promise to hold that offer open.”64

Under Section 12, the LPO contains both elements of an option contract. First, it

contains an offer to sell the Property to Morris “for the purchase price of Two

hundred ninety-two Thousand, ninety-two Dollars and two Cents ($292,092.02.

64
     Walsh v. White House Post Prods., 2020 WL 1492543, at *5 (Del. Ch. Mar. 25, 2020).
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Refer to Exhibit A).” 65 Second, it contains a collateral promise Delmarva would

keep that offer open. 66 The LPO is an option contract. 67

         Contractual provisions in option contracts are construed strictly, and they

often contain express language requiring strict compliance. 68 “Despite equity’s

dislike of forfeitures, . . . requirements governing the time and manner of exercise

of a power of acceptance under an option contract are applied strictly,” and so “[t]he

65
     LPO § 12.
66
    Id. (indicating Lessor would keep the purchase option open for the Lessee for the
duration of the lease through two months after it terminated); see Alchemy LTD LLC v.
Fanchise League Co., LLC, 2023 WL 4670954, at *6 (Del. Ch. July 20, 2023)
(“In certain instances, an ‘option is simply a subsidiary part of a larger transaction’ where
it ‘is not necessary for either the parties or the court to make a separate valuation of the
option’ for it to be enforceable.” (quoting Walsh, 2020 WL 1492543, at *5 n.33)); Walsh,
2020 WL 1492543, at *5 n.33 (“At common law, an offeror’s promise to keep an offer
open must be supported by consideration. But where the option is simply a subsidiary part
of a larger transaction, . . . the consideration for the option is seldom a definitely
determinable portion of what the option holder gives to the other party. In that case, it is
not necessary for either the parties or the court to make a separate valuation of the option
in order that it should be enforceable.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
67
  3 Corbin on Contracts § 11.17 (2023) (noting cases from nearly every state categorize
agreements concerning real estate with a purchase/lease extension provision as option
contracts).
68
   Simon-Mills II, LLC v. Kan Am USA XVI Ltd. P’ship, 2017 WL 1191061, at *30–31
(Del. Ch. Mar. 30, 2017) (“[W]hen the optionee decides to exercise its option, it must act
unconditionally and according to the terms of the option . . . . Nothing less than an
unconditional and precise acceptance will suffice unless the optionor waives one or more
of the terms of the option . . . . Because the option itself affords the offeree protection
against the offeror's inconsistent action, the general attitude of the courts is to construe the
attempt to accept the terms offered under the option strictly.” (quoting 1 Richard A. Lord,
Williston on Contracts § 5:18 (4th ed. 2006) [hereinafter “Williston on Contracts”]).
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problem of a potential forfeiture [under an option contract] does not enter into the

matter.”69 The LPO did just that. Morris expressly “agree[d] and acknowledge[d]

that” should he fail to “exercise [the] Purchase Option in strict accord with [its] terms

and conditions within the time herein,” whatever amount he paid during the lease

“shall be retained [by Delmarva] as consideration for this Purchase Option, and

neither party shall have any further rights or claims against the other by reason of

this Purchase Option.” 70

         “When an option contract specifies the time for notice of acceptance, it is

almost universally held, in both law and equity, that the stated time is to be regarded

as of the essence, whether expressly so stated or not.” 71 This is so in Delaware:

“time is always of the essence in an option contract” when it provides clear and

unambiguous deadlines. 72 The Contract specifies the time for exercising the option:

69
  Id. at *31 (first quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 25, Rpt. Note cmt.d (2008);
then quoting 1 Williston on Contracts § 5:18 (4th ed. 2006)).
70
     LPO § 12.
71
     3 Corbin on Contracts § 11.17 (2023).
72
  Greenville Ret. Cmty., L.P. v. Koke, 1993 WL 328082, at *5, *6 (Del. Ch. Aug. 11, 1993)
(holding that the “time limits set for the exercise of rights . . . [were] clear and
unambiguous” and that it is a “universal rule” that “time is always of the essence in an
option contract,” regardless of whether it expressly says “time is of the essence”); Seokoh,
Inc. v. Lard-PT, LLC, 2021 WL 1197593, at *14 n.179 (Del. Ch. Mar. 30, 2021) (“[E]ven
in the absence of a clause making time of the essence, time will generally be regarded as
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         This purchase may be exercised on July 1, 2022 and the option must be
         exercised in writing (with the accompanying down payment) no later
         than October 31, 2022 . . . . If Lessee fails to exercise this Purchase
         Option in strict accord with the terms and conditions herein or within
         the time provided herein, Lessee agrees and acknowledges . . . neither
         party shall have any further rights or claims against the other by reason
         of this Purchase Option.73

Time is of the essence in the Contract.

         Morris argues that because the LPO does not explicitly state that time is of the

essence, he is entitled to reasonable time to exercise the option. His argument relies

on a misreading of Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp. 74 Osborn required “reasonable

time” because the single-sentence holographic contract did not set a deadline for

exercising the purchase option.75 It read in its entirety: “I, Michael Kemp agree to

pay Lucille Menicucci $275.00 per month plus utilities for twenty years for the

of the essence in option contracts and in contracts for the sale of property which is subject
to rapid fluctuations in value.” (quoting 14 Williston on Contracts § 43:7 (4th ed. 1993)).
73
     LPO § 12.
74
   Compl. ¶ 9 (“Where time is not of the essence of the contract, reasonable extensions of
time for performance of a real estate purchase are permitted and are appropriate.” (citing
Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 991 A.2d 1153, 1161 (Del. 2010) (“Unless the contract
provides that time is of the essence, we will permit the parties a reasonable time to obtain
financing and conclude the transaction.”))).
75
  See Pivotal Payments Direct Corp. v. Planet Payment, Inc., 2015 WL 11120934, at *4
(Del. Super. Dec. 29, 2015) (“Under Delaware law, when a contract does not have a
deadline or other time specified, the parties have a ‘reasonable’ amount of time to perform
the contract.”).
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purchase of property at 292 S. Delaware and Bay Ave. Slaughter Beach for

$50,000.”76 The Court devoted significant effort in determining whether the contract

was even valid, concluding it was.77 But the contract did not provide a deadline for

exercising the purchase option, so the Court inferred a reasonable deadline.78

Osborn does not disturb the conclusion that the LPO’s function as an option contract

and explicit deadline for exercising the purchase option makes time of the essence.

         And so, Morris had the option to purchase the Property only under the LPO’s

conditions and until its specified time. He did not accomplish the conditions by the

October 31 deadline.79 Nor did he accomplish them by the extended December 31

deadline. 80 Morris did not timely exercise the option. 81

76
     Osborn, 991 A.2d at 1156.
77
     Id. at 1158–61.
78
   Id. at 1161; see Alchemy, 2023 WL 4670954, at *5 n.66 (“[T]o the extent the Option
provision does not set a deadline . . . , a reasonable deadline for performance can be
inferred.” (citing Pivotal Payments, 2015 WL 11120934, at *4)).
79
     D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A47–48.
80
  On December 21, Morris’s counsel emailed Delmarva indicating Morris would not meet
the December 31 deadline and required an “extension of time.” D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A37. And
on December 30, Morris’s counsel notified Delmarva by letter that Morris filed this action
“to protect [his] rights under the contract,” indicating Morris would not timely exercise the
option. D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A58.
81
  D.I. 17, Ex. D (“The option expired because [Morris] failed to deliver the written election
to purchase with the $10,000 deposit money by [December 31, 2022].”).
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February 5, 2024
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         From there, the option lapsed, and so did Morris’s right to purchase the

Property. “Respect for the social utility achieved by the legal rule that time is of the

essence in option contracts[] requires the conclusion that plaintiff’s right to

repurchase expired or lapsed” when the lessee failed to exercise the option in the

time proscribed.82 Put another way, “[i]t is rudimentary real estate law that the

failure to exercise an option in the time proscribed results in its lapse.” 83 If an option

lapses, “the option becomes void, and all rights under the contract, along with any

consideration given, are forfeit.”84

         It follows that Delmarva had no obligation to keep the option open beyond its

proscribed date. 85 Since the option lapsed, Morris “cannot enforce the contract, as

82
     Greenville Ret. Cmty., 1993 WL 328082, at *6.
83
   Id. at *5 (explaining an optionee’s failure to exercise the option within its clear and
unambiguous time proscribed “results in its lapse,” and the right is extinguished if optionee
fails to exercise it by the deadline); accord Barnes v. Jackson, 2005 WL 2130220, at *2,
*5 (Del. Ch. Aug. 29, 2005) (holding the option expired because the lessee failed to provide
timely written notice).
84
     77 Paul M. Coltoff, Am. Jur. Vendor § 44 (2d ed. 2024).
85
  See Appleby Apartments LP v. Appleby Apartments Assoc., L.P., 2023 WL 5620830, at
*4 (Del. Ch. Aug. 30, 2023) (“It is fundamental that where the time of performance is
expressly made of the essence of a contract, a plaintiff must have performed his part of the
contract within the specified time if he is to be entitled to specific performance.” (quoting
Morgan v. Wells, 80 A.2d 504, 506 (Del. Ch. May 3, 1951))); id. at *5 (“[The plaintiff] is
not seeking specific performance of the Agreement. It is asking the court to rewrite the
contract by extending the closing deadline, and then enforce that revised contract. The
parties did not bargain for an extension of the closing date . . . . The relief sought by
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February 5, 2024
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contractual provisions in option contracts are construed strictly.” 86 The LPO itself

says so: in the event that Morris fails to timely exercise the option, “neither party

shall have any further rights or claims against the other by reason of this Purchase

Option.”87 Nothing in the LPO requires Delmarva to extend the option’s deadline

for Morris; rather, once the option lapsed, Delmarva’s obligations thereunder ended.

Delmarva’s refusal to sell the Property to Morris after the option expired was

consistent with the LPO’s terms. Delmarva did not breach any obligation imposed

by the Contract.

         To avoid this conclusion, Morris argues “although [the LPO is] titled as a

lease with a purchase option, [it] is in substance an installment sales contract,”

referencing the Schedule.88 But a contract can be an installment sales contract and

Apartments contravenes the time is of the essence clause and is inconsistent with the
Agreement’s plain terms.”); Simon-Mills, 2017 WL 1191061, at *36 (holding the plaintiff’s
inability “to perform [the option] trigger[ed] [defendant’s] right to void the [option]”);
see also HIFN, Inc. v. Intel Corp., 2007 WL 1309376, at *9 (Del. Ch. May 2, 2007) (“When
time is of the essence in a contract, a failure to perform by the time stated is a material
breach of the contract that will discharge the non-breaching party’s obligation to perform
its side of the bargain.”).
86
     Simon-Mills, 2017 WL 1191061, at *28.
87
     LPO § 12.
88
     Pl. Mem. 10.
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contain a purchase option: the two are not mutually exclusive. 89 The Schedule

shows that five years of payments were not enough to purchase the Property.90 The

LPO required an additional payment of $292,092.02. The Schedule and the LPO

“clearly indicate[] that [Morris] must remit [$292,092.02] in additional proceeds to

‘purchase’ the property.         This prototypical condition commonly precedes the

offeror’s performance.       Therefore, the ordinary, plain meaning of [the LPO]

establishes installment payment[s] with an option to purchase at the end of the term

and obtain title.”91 If Morris did not exercise the option and it expired, he agreed

“that the full consideration paid to Lessor shall be retained by Lessor as

consideration for this purchase option.” 92 Morris’s argument that the LPO is an

installment contract fails to unseat the LPO’s purchase option provision and its

preconditions.

89
  Morris claims the Schedule somehow renders “the final payment” to be “in effect a
balloon payment on a mortgage,” but this is not found within the four corners of the LPO,
and it would render the entire Section 12 of the LPO meaningless or mere surplusage. Id.
Morris’s interpretation is “contrary to the plain meaning of the document.” See Osborn,
991 A.2d at 1160–61.
90
     LPO, Ex. A.
91
     Osborn, 991 A.2d at 1160.
92
     LPO § 12.
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              C.      Delmarva Waived The Deadline And Timeliness
                      Requirement, Then Retracted That Waiver With A New Firm
                      Deadline.

       While Delmarva was under no obligation to offer Morris any accommodation

on the deadline, it did offer him an extension from October 31 to December 31, to

which Delmarva then held fast.93 In granting an extension, Delmarva waived the

option contract’s timeliness requirement; but by holding the line on December 31, it

retracted that waiver. The retraction was provided with reasonable notice, and so

the extension’s timeliness requirement was enforceable.

       By extending the deadline, Delmarva waived the option’s timeliness

requirement.94 “[B]right line provisions in contracts creating options are universally

93
  D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A49 (“I will stand by my offer thru the end of December but after that I
am selling the property.”); see id. at A56-a (“The option expired . . . . I graciously gave
you . . . more days which I now regret. But in either case, you either buy baker road by
12-31-22, or you’re out. I’ll give you 60 days to leave as long as you pay the rent but the
purchase option will not be extended beyond 12-31-22.”).
94
   See LPO § 12 (“If Lessee fails to exercise this Purchase Option in strict accord with the
terms and conditions herein or within the time provided herein, Lessee agrees and
acknowledges that the full consideration paid to Lessor shall be retained by Lessor as
consideration for this purchase option.”); see Amirsaleh v. Bd. of Trade of City of New
York, Inc., 27 A.3d 522, 529–30 (Del. 2011) (“[The doctrine] implies knowledge of all
material facts and an intent to waive, together with a willingness to refrain from enforcing
those rights . . . . [T]he facts relied upon must be unequivocal . . . .”); see also Hastings
Funeral Home, Inc. v. Hastings, 2022 WL 16921785, at *5–6 (Del. Ch. Nov. 14, 2022)
(finding defendant waived enforcement of the time period in the option agreement and
holding that because of the waiver, plaintiff did not fail to satisfy obligations relating to the
option time period).
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respected by courts unless the optionor is estopped or has waived the limitation they

imply.”95 “It is well settled in Delaware that a party may waive contractual

requirements or conditions.”96 All three elements of waiver were met: (1) the

October 31 deadline was a requirement capable of being waived; (2) Delmarva knew

of that deadline; and (3) Delmarva intended to waive it.97

         Delmarva retracted its waiver of the purchase option’s timeliness requirement

by setting a new firm deadline of December 31.98 “The waiving party may retract

the waiver.” 99 “To be effective, a retraction must be clear and unequivocal and must

place [the nonwaiving] party on notice of [the waiving party’s] intent to [enforce] .

. . the contract in spite of their earlier statements or conduct.” 100 When the waiving

95
     Greenville Ret. Cmty., 1993 WL 328082, at *5.
96
     See Amirsaleh, 27 A.3d at 529.
97
   See id. at 529–30 (“[T]hree elements must be demonstrated to invoke the waiver
doctrine: (1) that there is a requirement or condition capable of being waived, (2) that the
waiving party knows of that requirement or condition, and (3) that the waiving party
intends to waive that requirement or condition.”).
        Morris contends Delmarva waived the purchase option’s method of payment
requirement by telling Morris he could deposit the $10,000 downpayment in the same
manner as he deposited rent. I agree. But this waiver of the manner of payment shows no
intent to waive the deadline.
98
     D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A49, A53, A55–A56-a; D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A20.
99
     Amirsaleh, 27 A.3d at 530.
  Titan Inv. Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mort. Corp., 2012 WL 1415461, at *9 (Del. Super.
100

Mar. 27, 2012) (considering whether an email constituted a valid notice for a retraction of
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party gives reasonable notice of its retraction, “the effect . . . is to revive the right,

subject to the doctrine of equitable estoppel.” 101

       Morris contends Delmarva did not give Morris enough time before indicating

it intended to enforce the December 31 deadline. 102 Morris is correct that the notice

repudiation and determining it did not, in part, because the defendant removed the
retraction by subsequently verbally reaffirming its decision to repudiate), aff’d in relevant
part, rev’d in part, 58 A.3d 984 (Del. 2012).
101
    Roam-Tel P’rs v. AT&T Mobility Wireless Operations Hldgs. Inc., 2010 WL 5276991,
at *9 n.76 (Del. Ch. Dec. 17, 2010).
102
    Pl. Mem. 19 (“Ninety days is a per se reasonable standard.”); id. (“November 15, 2022
is the earliest date a ‘final’ ultimatum was issued. It gave Morris 45 days . . . . [But]
[g]iven the length of the contractual relationship . . . , this short-fused — forty-five day—
final warning was . . . not reasonable.”).
        Morris contends Delmarva gave notice that it would once again enforce a firm
expiration for the lease term on November 15, but did not give notice it would hold to a
December 31 option deadline until December 13. Id. at 20. But the undisputed facts
demonstrate Delmarva began notifying Morris of the December 31 option deadline on
October 26. See D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A49 (showing Gregory texted Morris October 26 saying,
“I will stand by my offer through the end of December but after that I am selling the
property”); id. at A53–54 (showing Gregory texted Morris November 15 saying, “it doesn’t
look like your banking is working out, so I’ll need you to vacate by the end of December”);
id. at A55–A56-a (showing Gregory texted Morris between November 15 and December
10 saying, “hope you can make this happen by 12-31-22 . . . . [T]he option expired . . . . I
graciously gave you 90 more days . . . you either buy [the Property] buy [sic] 12-31-22 or
you’re out. I’ll give you 60 days to leave as long as you pay the rent but the purchase
option will not be extended beyond 12-31-22”); D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A20 (showing Gregory
emailed
Morris’s counsel on December 6 saying “[t]he purchase option expired at the end of the
lease term. Because Ronnie was actively working through the financing, I extended the
option through December 31, 2022 . . . . [T]he option price . . . is due in full on or before
December 31, 2022”). In any event, because the reasonableness of Delmarva’s decision to
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of the retraction must be reasonable. But the reasonableness of notice of a retraction

is measured by “material change [in] position . . . in reliance on the waiver,” not by

time. 103 A retraction is performed with reasonable notice if the other party has not

“suffered prejudice or materially changed his position” in reliance on the retracted

waiver. 104

         Morris has offered no facts showing he materially changed his position in

reliance on the deadline waiver before Delmarva retracted it. As early as July 2022,

Morris was pursuing financing for exercising the purchase option. 105 His pursuit

continued, and Gregory extended the original purchase option deadline because

enforce a deadline is measured not by days, but against Morris’s reliance, the exact date
does not matter.
103
     Amirsaleh, 27 A.3d at 530 n.30 (quoting 13 Williston on Contracts § 5:16
(4th ed. 2024)); accord Roam-Tel P’rs, 2010 WL 5276991, at *9 n.77 (“[O]ur courts are
willing to allow a waiving party to change her mind in the absence of such detrimental
reliance or other prejudice.” (citing Bailey v. State, 525 A.2d 582 (Del. 1987))); id.
(“[W]here the requirement of a condition is waived in advance, the promisor may reinstate
the requirement by giving notice to the other party before the latter has materially changed
his position. Whether delay alone makes reinstatement unjust depends upon the
circumstances . . . .” (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 84 cmt. f)); see Bailey
v. State, 1987 WL 37178, at *2 (Del. 1987) (“[I]t does not appear that the State has changed
position or suffered specific prejudice as a result of defendant’s attempted withdrawal of
the waiver.”).
104
      Amirsaleh, 27 A.3d at 530 n.30.
105
      D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A43–44.
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“[Morris] was actively working through the financing.” 106 Morris kept working

toward financing.107 As of December 13, when Morris contends Delmarva gave

notice it would hold the December 31 deadline, Morris was still pursuing financing,

and had not yet signed a loan agreement or engaged counsel for closing.108

         In the absence of any detrimental reliance by Morris, Delmarva validly

retracted the timeliness waiver for the October deadline by giving reasonable notice

of a new firm deadline. 109 Delmarva made clear, early and often, that it would

require strict adherence to the December 31 deadline. Morris’s position remained

unchanged. Time was of the essence for the option’s extended December 31

deadline.

106
      D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A20.
107
   Id. at A21 (indicating Morris was in active communication with a lender, who sought
additional information for underwriting purposes); see also D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A56
(indicating Morris obtained proof of rental payments to satisfy the lender).
108
      D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A33; see id. at A34.
109
    D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A 49 (“I will mail you an official notice, but I’m not willing to go last
[sic] December on this.”).
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                D.     Morris Finds No Relief In The Doctrine Of Repudiation Or
                       The Delaware Code.

         Morris asserts Delmarva repudiated the Contract by refusing to adjust the

December 31 deadline after Morris obtained preapproval on December 14. 110 “A

party repudiates a contract when it takes an action that constitutes a significant and

substantial alteration of both the present and the reasonably anticipated future

relations created by [the] agreement.” 111 Delmarva did not repudiate the LPO or in

any way alter the relations it created by holding fast to the December 31 deadline.

Rather, Delmarva performed under the expectations of an option contract, which

lapses if not exercised in compliance with strict conditions.

         Morris also claims Delmarva’s adherence to the December 31 deadline

frustrated a statutory right to exercise the option after December 31. 112 Morris refers

to Title 25, Sections 314(d)(2) and 5106 of the Delaware Code.113 Neither of these

statutes requires Delmarva to extend the purchase option. Section 314(d)(2) pertains

110
      Pl. Mem. 17.
111
   Moscowitz v. Theory Ent. LLC, 2020 WL 6304899, at *26 (Del. Ch. Oct. 28, 2020)
(quoting PAMI-LEMB I Inc. v. EMB-NHC, L.L.C., 857 A.2d 998, 1014 (Del. Ch.
June 21, 2004)).
112
      See Pl. Mem. 20–21.
113
      25 Del. C. §§ 314, 5106.
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to conditional sales agreements; but the agreement at issue is a lease with purchase

option, not a conditional sales agreement. 114 Section 5106 requires that a landlord

give a tenant sixty-day’s notice before termination of the lease takes effect; it does

not extend option deadlines. 115 That sixty-day requirement would apply to Morris

as a lessee, but is irrelevant to his purchase option. 116 And Delmarva made clear that

Morris could extend his lease until February 28, 2023, well within sixty days of even

October 26.117

114
   25 Del. C. § 314(d)(2) (“[T]he parties may agree under the contract of sale to not engage
in a final settlement until fulfillment of a condition of paying the last installment of the
purchase price under a conditional sale, provided that the conditional sales agreement
includes provisions indicating: . . . (2) In the event of buyer or buyers default for failure to
pay, the buyer or buyers have a right to redeem the property by making full payment of the
remaining contract amount within 120 days of the seller or sellers providing written notice
of the default.”); see 175 A.L.R. 1366 (distinguishing lease agreements from conditional
sales agreements and explaining “whether the contract is one of conditional sale or a lease
is whether or not the party is obligated at all events to pay the total purchase price of the
subject of the contract. If return of the property is either required or permitted the
instrument will be held to be a lease; while, on the other hand, if the
so-called lessee is obligated to pay the purchase price, even though such price is designated
as rental or hire, the contract will be held to be one of sale . . . .”).
115
      See generally 25 Del. C. § 5106.
116
   Barnes, 2005 WL 2130220, at *4 (“While a lessor may be content for a fixed time to be
restricted to a fixed price for the sale of his property, it is another matter altogether to
conclude that an option to purchase is to continue for an indefinite period under the
authority of a ‘hold-over’ tenancy.”).
117
      See, e.g., D.I. 17, Ex. C.
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              E.     Morris Has Not Demonstrated Delmarva Frustrated His
                     Exercise Of The Option.

       Finally, Morris argues Delmarva’s refusal to give a clean payment history to

his lender “interfere[d] with Morris’s financing application,” asserting that “to the

extent there was any delay in Morris obtaining financing, Delmarva unjustly

contributed to it.”118 Morris made this argument for the first time in reply, so I will

make quick work of it. 119 Morris plugs this contention into three doctrines, none of

which aids his cause. First, he concludes that “Delmarva lacks clean hands.”120 But

the unclean hands doctrine is an equitable defense that operates to bar a

complainant’s equitable relief; it does not support a cause of action. 121 Second,

118
   Pl. Reply at 6; see Pl. Mem. 17 (“Morris ran into unexpected complications arising from
verifying the payment in the agreement. Delmarva was anything but helpful.”).
119
    Franklin Balance Sheet Inv. Fund v. Crowley, 2006 WL 3095952, at *4 (Del. Ch.
Oct. 19, 2006) (“[A] party is obliged in its motion and opening brief to set forth all the
grounds, authorities, and arguments supporting its motion. A movant should not hold
matters in reserve for reply briefs. Instead, reply briefs should consist of material necessary
to respond to the answering brief.”); Thor Merritt Square, LLC v. Bayview Malls LLC,
2010 WL 972776, at *5 (Del. Ch. Mar. 5, 2010) (“[C]ourts routinely have refused to
consider arguments made in reply briefs that go beyond responding to arguments raised in
a preceding answering brief . . . . Accordingly, based on its belated assertion, I find that
Defendants have waived this argument . . . .”).
120
   Pl. Reply at 6 (citing Cook v. Fusselman, 300 A.2d 246, 251–52 (Del. Ch. Dec. 8, 1972)
(denying specific performance when the party who seeks equity comes to the court with
“unclean hands”)).
  See, e.g., Am. Healthcare Admin. Servs., Inc. v. Azien, 285 A.3d 461, 492 n.13 (Del. Ch.
121

Nov. 18, 2022) (“It (the doctrine of unclean hands) is a rule that lays restrictions upon
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Morris argues this fact tilts the balance of the equities in his favor. This argument

might aid his pursuit of specific performance, but it does not bolster his underlying

breach of contract claim. 122

         Third, Morris cites Old Time Petroleum Company v. Turcol for the

proposition that “[d]enying a buyer the opportunity to specifically perform a

partially performed contract works an inequitable forfeiture of their reasonable

expectations and interests.”123 Nothing in the factual record indicates Delmarva’s

conduct approximates the lessor’s conduct in that case, where the lessor caused the

lessee’s forfeiture of the accompanying lease agreement in the interest of

“destroying the tenant’s right to enjoy the option privilege to purchase.”124 Indeed,

the undisputed facts do not demonstrate Delmarva frustrated Morris’s lease

agreement or his ability to exercise the option.            Morris’s lender requested

complainants and tells them that an appeal for relief to a court of conscience will not be
honored by one who has himself been guilty of unconscionable conduct.” (quoting Elec.
Rsch. Prods. v. Vitaphone Corp., 171 A. 738, 749 (Del. 1934))).
122
    See In re Aerojet Rocketdyne Hldgs., Inc., 2022 WL 2180240, at *20 (Del. Ch.
June 16, 2022) (noting a “party may not assert an equitable defense against a purely legal
claim, even when the legal claim is pending in a court of equity”).
123
   See Pl. Mem. 10 (citing Old Time Petroleum Co. v. Turcol, 156 A. 501 (Del. Ch.
July 9, 1931)).
124
      Old Time Petroleum, 156 A. at 505.
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verification from Gregory of Morris’s monthly payments.125 Morris’s counsel

notified Gregory of this request and explained it was for “underwriting purposes.”126

Gregory refused to help, asserting “[Morris’s] numerous late payments” made it

impossible for him to “reconstruct [anything that] would present a favorable

picture.”127 But six months earlier, Gregory had verified that from August 2017 until

May 10, 2022, Morris had never made a late payment. 128

            Even assuming Gregory’s refusal was unreasonable, Morris has not

established that refusal frustrated his ability to receive financing before the purchase

option expired. 129 Gregory refused to verify Morris’s payments on December 6; on

December 10, Morris shared with Gregory that he “need[ed] proof [he] paid

[Gregory] the past 64 months, so [he] ordered 5 ye[ar]s on [his] canceled checks.”130

125
      See, e.g., D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A21.
126
      Id.
127
      Id. at A25.
128
      Id. at A13.
129
   See Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Flagg, 789 A.2d 586, 591–92 (Del. Super. July 3, 2001)
(“If it appears that there is any reasonable hypothesis by which the non-moving party might
recover, the motion for summary judgment will be denied.”).
130
      D.I. 20, Ex. 2 at A56.
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Just days after Gregory’s refusal, Morris found a way to verify his lease payments.131

But Morris was still unable to obtain financing; while he received preapproval on

December 14, he was still working towards a commitment as of December 30.132

As of the time of his July 2023 Motion, Morris still “require[d] additional . . . time

to secure financing.”133 Morris has not established that Gregory’s refusal to provide

a history of timely payments is what impeded Morris from obtaining financing by

December 31.

         III.   CONCLUSION

         The LPO offered Morris a purchase option in which time was of the essence;

Delmarva waived that restriction but retracted that waiver in reinstating a firm

extension; and Delmarva’s insistence on the new deadline was in keeping with the

LPO, not in breach or repudiation of it. Morris has not established that Delmarva’s

refusal to give his lender a clean payment history caused Morris’s inability to finalize

131
   See id.; id. at Ex. 1 at A30 (“My client is now reconstructing 5 years of payment records
to satisfy the ‘underwriting requirements.’”).
132
      D.I. 20, Ex. 1 at A34; Compl. ¶ 7.
133
      Pl. Mem. 4.
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the financing by the deadline. 134 Delmarva’s motion for summary judgment is

granted, and Morris’s is denied.

                                                            Sincerely,

                                                            /s/ Morgan T. Zurn

                                                            Vice Chancellor

MTZ/ms

cc: All Counsel of Record, via File & ServeXpress

134
      But see Pl. Reply at 6 (citing D.I. 20, Ex. 1, at A13, A25).