Court Opinion

ID: 9808308
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-31 20:33:30.078931+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:10:51.707220
License: Public Domain

Adams, J.
The cause of action is an alleged breach of contract by the defendants; all other questions are waived except such as relate to the application for an injunction, and these are ancillary. The primary *155breach, as averred by the plaintiff, is the failure of the defendants to maintain the “model village” as originally planned and laid out, according to the terms of the agreement set forth in the complaint. In their answers the defendants deny, not only the breach, but the execution of the asserted contract.
The plaintiff received her deed for the lot in question from E. W. Grove on 26 March, 1925, and at that time she was “entirely satisfied” with her purchase and her property. Her dissatisfaction arose at a later date. It may be granted that by virtue of her deed she acquired certain easements and that her lot became the dominant tenement with respect to her rights and privileges as described in her conveyance; but unless there was an agreement to that effect the servient tenement was not obligated to maintain such easements or to keep them in repair. Richardson v. Jennings, 184 N. C., 559; Lamb v. Lamb, 177 N. C., 150. The deed expressly excepts rights of way for water and sewer lines with privilege reserved to the grantor and his representatives to occupy the rights of way for the purpose of constructing and repairing the lines; but this stipulation was necessary for the protection of the grantor and his trustees, owners of the greater part of the property, and was evidently inserted primarily for their benefit and not as a contractual right of the grantee.
As stated in the complaint the cause of action is founded specifically upon certain representations said to have been made by E. "W. Grove chiefly in circulars and newspapers, but in part by his agents and salesmen, to the public generally and particularly to the plaintiff. He represented, so the plaintiff alleges, that he owned a large watershed on the property from which he would furnish for the residents of the village pure spring water already stored in a reservoir in the mountains; that he would transform the property into a modern village; and that he would maintain the village with all its improvements for residential prirposes. These are the material allegations, but the advertisements offered in evidence were nothing more than the statement of a proposed plan for the development of the property: engineers had surveyed the site, streets had been graded, water had been provided, electric lines were under construction. The scheme was described as “a bold experiment in scientific town planning”; as an example of what a munici-Xiality can be when planned by experts; as an idea of beautifying a thousand acres of land. The duty of the agents and salesmen was merely to show the property to prospective purchasers of the lots.
The evidence falls short of a contract on the part of E. ~W. Grove or his trustees to- perpetuate or maintain the village as at first laid out oí-as it was constructed when the plaintiff made her purchase. It is revealed by the plaintiff’s evidence that the indefinite maintenance of *156the improvements was not contemplated in the contracts of sale and that the salesmen were not authorized to make any agreement to that effect.
In the formation of a'Contract an offer and an acceptance are essential elements; they constitute the agreement of the parties. The offer must he communicated, must he complete, and must be accepted in its exact terms. Gravel Co. v. Casualty Co., 191 N. C., 313; Rucker v. Sanders, 182 N. C., 609. Mutuality of agreement is indispensable; the parties must assent to the same thing in the same sense, idem re et sensu, and their minds must meet as to all the terms. Croom v. Lumber Co., 182 N. C., 217.
The application of this principle defeats the plaintiff’s recovery for breach of contract. Neither in the advertisements nor in negotiations with' the salesmen was there an offer by Grove to keep up and maintain the improvements in the village and hence no acceptance of such an offer by the plaintiff. The “experiment in scientific town planning in anticipation of fifty years’ growth” may or may not have been a fantastic conception, but like many other “best-laid schemes” it seems to have failed of its purpose, apparently to the indiscriminate detriment of all who were financially interested in its success.
There are several exceptions to the admission and rejection of evidence but none of sufficient gravity to justify a new trial.
As the judgment of nonsuit is sustained the cause stated in the amended complaint necessarily fails. Judgment
Affirmed.