Bathla v. 913 Market, LLC ( 2018 )


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  •            IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    KAMAL BATHLA,                              §
    §   No. 28, 2018
    Defendant Below,                     §
    Appellant,                           §   Court Below: Superior Court
    §   of the State of Delaware
    v.                                   §
    §
    913 MARKET, LLC,                           §   C.A. No. N16C-11-149-JAP
    §
    Plaintiff Below,                     §
    Appellee.                            §
    Submitted: November 14, 2018
    Decided:   December 20, 2018
    Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, SEITZ, and
    TRAYNOR, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.
    Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED.
    Jeffrey M. Weiner, Esquire, LAW OFFICES OF JEFFREY M. WEINER, P.A.,
    Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellant, Kamal Bathla.
    Charles J. Brown, II, Esquire, GELLERT, SCALI, BUSENKELL & BROWN, LLC,
    Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellee, 913 Market, LLC.
    STRINE, Chief Justice, for the Majority:
    This appeal concerns a dispute over which party to a failed commercial real
    estate sale is entitled to the buyer’s deposit. The seller, 913 Market, LLC, claims
    that it is entitled to the deposit because the buyer failed to close the deal on the agreed
    date, and it brought this action against the buyer claiming breach of contract and
    seeking a declaratory judgment regarding its rights under the purchase agreement.
    The buyer, Kamal Bathla, asserts two reasons why the deposit is rightfully his. First,
    he contends that 913 Market could not convey title free and clear of all liens and
    encumbrances, as required by the purchase agreement, due to potential claims by a
    previous potential buyer of the building that had also failed to close. Second, Bathla
    argues that one of the conditions precedent was not satisfied because the title
    insurance commitment he received contained an exception, relating to litigation risk
    from the previous potential buyer, that did not exist in 913 Market’s existing title
    insurance policy. In either case, Bathla maintains, he was relieved of any obligation
    to close, and therefore has a right to get his money back. Both of Bathla’s theories
    center around the notion that the previous failed buyer, who had bid a higher price
    than Bathla but then backed out of the deal, might somehow emerge to sue Bathla
    over the property.
    The Superior Court granted summary judgment for 913 Market. In rejecting
    Bathla’s first argument, the court reasoned that potential claims by the previous
    failed buyer did not cloud title because the previous buyer “had not perfected (nor
    did it seek to perfect) a lis pendens claim.”1 In rejecting Bathla’s second argument,
    the court read the purchase agreement as establishing a test based not on “what
    exceptions the Purchaser’s title insurance carrier might insist upon,” but rather on
    “whether Seller was able to convey satisfactory title, which it did.”2 Bathla appeals
    this grant of summary judgment.
    We affirm the Superior Court’s decision. Contrary to Bathla’s exhortations,
    the mere possibility that a previous potential buyer who failed to close might later
    claim an interest in the building does not constitute a lien or encumbrance under the
    purchase agreement, and the condition precedent identified by Bathla does not
    require that he obtain a title commitment with exceptions that mirror those of 913
    Market’s existing policy. And ultimately, the basic premise of Bathla’s case—that
    there was a genuine risk that the previous potential buyer would sue Bathla over the
    property—is implausible and does not provide a basis under the contract to avoid
    the obligation to close.
    I.
    In June 2016, 913 Market auctioned its eponymous commercial real estate
    property, located in downtown Wilmington.3 The highest bidder, InvestUSA, agreed
    1
    913 Market, LLC v. Bathla, C.A. No. N16C-11-149 JAP, slip op. at 4–5 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 31,
    2017).
    2
    
    Id. at 5.
    3
    
    Id. at 2.
                                                   2
    to pay $1,233,750 with a July 15, 2016 closing, but for unknown reasons, it failed to
    close the deal.4 On August 3, 2016, doubting the prospects of a deal with InvestUSA,
    913 Market struck an alternative deal to sell the building to Bathla, the second
    highest bidder, for $1,125,000.5 The new agreement’s recitals disclosed the previous
    agreement’s existence. Specifically, they stated that (1) 913 Market had “previously
    contracted to sell the” building under an existing contract, which the previous buyer
    had “failed to timely close”; (2) 913 Market “has agreed to enter into a ‘backup’
    contract with [Bathla] which shall become a primary contract upon termination of”
    that previous contract; and (3) 913 Market had already terminated the existing
    contract.6 Thus, the previous deal with InvestUSA was no surprise to Bathla.
    As required by the purchase agreement, Bathla deposited $118,125 with the
    escrow agent pending the deal’s completion.7 Absent the “wrongful failure” of 913
    Market to close the deal, the failure of one of the buyer’s conditions precedent, or
    other circumstances not relevant here, the agreement makes this deposit
    nonrefundable.8 The agreement further provides for liquidated damages in an
    4
    Id.; Opening Br. at 20–21; App. to Opening Br. at A-73.
    5
    App. to Opening Br. at A-16.
    6
    
    Id. 7 Id.
    at A-17.
    8
    
    Id. (“Absent (w)
    the wrongful failure of Seller to close hereunder, (x) the failure of a condition
    precedent under Section 4.1 below to be timely satisfied, (y) as otherwise expressively provided
    in Article 7 below, the Deposit shall not be refundable to Buyer and shall either be paid over to
    Seller should this Agreement be terminated for any reason or applied on account of the Purchase
    Price as below provided in subsection (c) of this Section 1.3.”).
    3
    amount equal to the deposit in the event that Bathla breaches the agreement, instructs
    the escrow agent to release the deposit to 913 Market upon Bathla’s default,9 and
    contains “time is of the essence”10 and integration11 clauses. The parties selected
    September 19, 2016 as the closing date.12
    Two provisions are plausibly relevant to Bathla’s obligation to close. First,
    Section 2.3 of the agreement requires 913 Market to convey title “free and clear of
    all liens and encumbrances other than real and personal property taxes not yet due
    and payable and the Permitted Exceptions (hereinafter defined).”13 A failure by 913
    Market to convey title free and clear would constitute a “wrongful failure” to close,
    entitling Bathla to get his deposit back.14 Second, Section 4.1(a) sets forth a
    condition precedent that “[t]itle to the Property shall be subject only to the same
    exceptions as shown on Seller’s title policy with the exception that the mortgage lien
    thereon shall be satisfied at Closing from the proceeds of sale.”15 If the building’s
    9
    
    Id. at A-24
    (“DAMAGES SHALL BE IN AN AMOUNT EQUAL TO THE AMOUNT OF THE
    DEPOSIT . . . AND . . . ESCROW HOLDER IS HEREBY IRREVOCABLY INSTRUCTED TO
    DELIVER SUCH DEPOSIT TO SELLER BY ESCROW HOLDER UPON SUCH DEFAULT
    BY BUYER, AND THEREAFTER RETAINED BY SELLER AS LIQUIDATED DAMAGES.”).
    10
    
    Id. at A-31
    (“Time is of the essence of this Agreement, it being understood that each date set
    forth herein and the obligations of the parties to be satisfied by such date have been the subject of
    specific negotiation by the parties.”).
    11
    
    Id. at A-30–A-31
    (“This Agreement and the items incorporated herein contain all the agreements
    of the parties hereto with respect to the matters contained herein; and no prior agreement or
    understanding pertaining to any such matter shall be effective for any purpose.”).
    12
    
    Id. at A-18.
    13
    
    Id. 14 See
    id. at A-17 
    (providing that the deposit “shall not be refundable to Buyer” absent “the
    wrongful failure of Seller to close” or certain other circumstances).
    15
    
    Id. at A-21.
                                                     4
    title were subject to an additional exception that did not appear in 913 Market’s
    existing policy, then this “failure of a condition precedent” would also entitle Bathla
    to a refund of his deposit.16
    In the days before closing, things soured. On September 15, 2016, Bathla’s
    title insurer, First American Title Insurance Company, issued him a title
    commitment containing an exception for any loss or damage resulting from any of
    InvestUSA’s “rights, title and interest to the subject property” under its July 15, 2016
    contract with 913 Market.17 Then, the day before the scheduled closing, Bathla’s
    counsel sent a letter to 913 Market claiming that the InvestUSA exception indicates
    that the Section 4.1(a) condition precedent would not be satisfied because “the title
    policy [Bathla] would be receiving is now subject to a new exception” that did not
    appear in 913 Market’s own title policy.18 The next day, 913 Market’s counsel
    informed Bathla that it interpreted the Section 4.1(a) condition precedent as relating
    to “the condition of the title of record,” not Bathla’s “proposed title policy,” and that
    Bathla’s failure to close that day would constitute a default and allow 913 Market to
    demand the deposit and terminate the agreement.19
    16
    See 
    id. at A-17
    (providing that the deposit “shall not be refundable to Buyer” absent “the failure
    of a condition precedent under Section 4.1 below to be timely satisfied” or certain other
    circumstances).
    17
    
    Id. at A-130;
    Opening Br. at 28.
    18
    App. to Opening Br. at A-134.
    19
    
    Id. at A-135.
                                                     5
    After Bathla failed to close, 913 Market brought this action in the Superior
    Court claiming breach of contract and seeking $118,125 in damages and a
    declaratory judgment regarding its rights under the purchase agreement.20 The
    Superior Court denied both Bathla’s motion to dismiss21 and later motion for
    reargument.22
    After discovery,23 both parties moved for summary judgment, which the
    Superior Court granted for 913 Market and denied to Bathla.24 In its summary
    judgment opinion, the court rejected Bathla’s charge that the possibility of
    InvestUSA later claiming an interest in the property made title unmarketable
    “because InvestUSA had not perfected (nor did it seek to perfect) a lis pendens
    claim.”25 The court also rejected Bathla’s conditions precedent argument, ruling that
    the purchase agreement establishes a test based not on “what exceptions the
    20
    App. to Opening Br. at A-12–A-14.
    21
    913 Market, LLC v. Bathla, 
    2017 WL 1507539
    , at *3 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 26, 2017).
    22
    913 Market, LLC v. Bathla, C.A. No. N16C-11-149 JAP, slip op. at 7 (Del. Super. Ct. May 10,
    2017).
    23
    In its summary judgment opinion, the Superior Court noted that Bathla had argued that 913
    Market’s “motion for summary judgment was premature because discovery has not yet been
    completed.” 913 Market, LLC v. Bathla, C.A. No. N16C-11-149 JAP, slip op. at 6 (Del. Super.
    Ct. Oct. 31, 2017). The Superior Court denied this request to delay summary judgment because
    (1) Bathla had not filed an affidavit explaining his need for additional discovery, as required by
    Civil Rule 56; (2) Bathla’s response to 913 Market’s motion for summary judgment did not
    “explain precisely what discovery he needs”; and (3) “in light of the court’s conclusion that the
    terms of the sales agreement are unambiguous, any extrinsic evidence divulged by further
    discovery would likely be inadmissible.” 
    Id. at 6–7.
    Bathla does not challenge this ruling on
    appeal. See Opening Br.; Reply Br.
    24
    913 Market, LLC v. Bathla, C.A. No. N16C-11-149 JAP, slip op. at 1 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 31,
    2017).
    25
    
    Id. at 4–5.
                                                    6
    Purchaser’s title insurance carrier might insist upon,” but rather on “whether Seller
    was able to convey satisfactory title, which it did.”26 An implementing final
    judgment followed, from which Bathla timely appealed.
    II.
    This Court reviews the Superior Court’s grant of summary judgment,
    including questions of contract interpretation, de novo.27 In doing so, the Court must
    “determine whether, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party, the moving party has demonstrated that there are no material issues of fact in
    dispute and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”28
    In interpreting a contract, the Court must “give priority to the parties’
    intentions as reflected in the four corners of the agreement.”29 The Court must
    “interpret clear and unambiguous terms according to their ordinary meaning,”30 and
    in an “unambiguous, integrated written contract,” the Court may not use extrinsic
    evidence to “vary[] or contradict[] the terms of that contract.”31 The test for
    ambiguity is whether “the provisions in controversy are fairly susceptible of
    different interpretations or may have two or more different meanings.”32 Thus, “[a]
    26
    
    Id. at 5.
    27
    See GMG Capital Invs., LLC v. Athenian Venture Partners I, L.P., 
    36 A.3d 776
    , 779 (Del. 2012).
    28
    Estate of Rae v. Murphy, 
    956 A.2d 1266
    , 1269–70 (Del. 2008) (quoting Green v. Weiner, 
    766 A.2d 492
    , 494 (Del.2001)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    29
    GMG 
    Capital, 36 A.3d at 779
    .
    30
    
    Id. at 780.
    31
    Galatino v. Baffone, 
    46 A.3d 1076
    , 1081 (Del. 2012).
    32
    Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 
    702 A.2d 1228
    , 1232 (Del. 1997).
    7
    contract is not rendered ambiguous simply because the parties do not agree upon its
    proper construction.”33
    Bathla’s arguments on appeal center around the notion that he was excused
    from closing because of potential litigation risk from InvestUSA, the previous
    potential buyer that backed out. He bases this theory on two different provisions in
    the purchase agreement: Section 2.3, which requires 913 Market to convey good
    title; and Section 4.1(a), which sets a title-related condition precedent to Bathla’s
    obligation to close.34 At bottom, Bathla claims he can avoid his contractual
    obligations because a party who had itself failed to close after signing an agreement
    to buy the property might reemerge and claim title.
    First, Bathla argues that he was not required to close because 913 Market
    breached Section 2.3 by failing to convey title “free and clear of all liens and
    encumbrances other than real and personal property taxes not yet due and payable
    and the permitted exceptions [sic].”35 Although his briefing is confusing on this
    33
    Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 
    616 A.2d 1192
    , 1196 (Del. 1992).
    34
    Bathla has not always been clear about which of these two provisions he is relying on. At times,
    he seems to suggest that he is only making a conditions precedent argument. See, e.g., Hearing
    Transcript, App. to Opening Br. at A-573 (Bathla’s counsel stating “[t]his is not a title question”
    and referring solely to the conditions precedent provision). At other times, he seems to argue that
    913 Market breached the title conveyance provision, which would be a distinct basis for avoiding
    his closing obligations. See, e.g., Reply Br. at 2, 6–11 (citing the title conveyance provisions of
    the contract, claiming that “[t]he Superior Court erred by holding that there could be no cloud on
    the title,” and collecting citations as to the definition of “marketable title”). We address both
    claims because, in any event, Bathla is not entitled to relief under either provision.
    35
    Opening Br. at 18 (emphasis omitted).
    8
    point, Bathla seems to view the phrase “Permitted Exceptions” as expanding the
    range of title defects to include any exception contained in his own title commitment
    that was not “permitted” under the purchase agreement, with the term “Permitted
    Exception” including only those exceptions that appeared in 913 Market’s title
    policy.36 Under this theory, the InvestUSA litigation risk is a title defect simply
    because it was not in 913 Market’s title policy. And in any event, Bathla charges,
    the specter of a potential claim by InvestUSA “in and of itself rendered title
    unmarketable.”37 Here, Bathla relies on a general theory that the threat of litigation
    creates a cloud on title that, irrespective of the “Permitted Exception” language,
    allows the buyer to back out.
    Second, Bathla argues that his obligations were excused by a failure in the
    condition precedent in Section 4.1(a) that “[t]itle to the Property shall be subject only
    to the same exceptions as shown on Seller’s title policy.” Specifically, he claims
    that his title insurer’s “insertion of Exception 17 [relating to InvestUSA] into its title
    commitment made it objectively impossible for title to the property to be subject to
    the same exceptions as shown in 913 Market’s title commitment,” so “title to the
    Property could not ‘be subject only to the same exceptions as shown on Seller’s title
    policy (commitment).’”38
    36
    See 
    id. at 19–24.
    37
    Reply Br. at 10.
    38
    
    Id. at 2–4;
    see also Opening Br. at 24–30.
    9
    Neither of these arguments has a viable basis in the contract. As to Bathla’s
    first argument, Section 2.3 does not support Bathla’s capacious understanding of
    what constitutes a title defect. To the extent that Bathla interprets the “Permitted
    Exceptions” language to expand the range of title defects, he misunderstands this
    provision. Section 2.3 requires 913 Market to convey title “free and clear of all liens
    and encumbrances other than real and personal property taxes not yet due and
    payable and the Permitted Exceptions (hereinafter defined).”39 In other words, 913
    Market must convey title without any liens or encumbrances on the property, except
    for certain liens and encumbrances that the parties have decided are acceptable:
    (1) property taxes that are not yet due and (2) “Permitted Exceptions” that the parties
    have enumerated. Thus, the “Permitted Exceptions” language limits, not expands,
    the range of issues that cloud the property’s title. Bathla’s reading flips this construct
    on its head.
    As for the notion that litigation risk related to InvestUSA “in and of itself
    rendered title unmarketable,” the mere possibility that InvestUSA might later claim
    an interest in the building does not constitute a “lien” or “encumbrance” under
    Section 2.3. To be sure, 913 Market did indicate it might sue InvestUSA for its
    failure to close to recover its deposit. Of course, that theory does not suggest that
    39
    App. to Opening Br. at A-18 (emphasis added). In an apparent drafting error, the contract does
    not define the term “Permitted Exceptions.”
    10
    InvestUSA could claim any right in the 913 Market property. It suggests the
    opposite: that InvestUSA had walked away and refused to buy the property, despite
    a possible contractual obligation to do so. But in any event, under Delaware’s “pure
    race statute,” any potential claim that InvestUSA might have on the property would
    have been extinguished had Bathla closed and recorded his deed.40 It is irrelevant
    that Bathla had notice of the prior InvestUSA contract.41 The fact that there was
    40
    See Eastern Savings Bank, FSB v. Cach, LLC, 
    124 A.3d 585
    , 497 (Del. 2015) (Seitz, J.,
    dissenting) (“Delaware has a ‘pure race recording statute.’ The statute provides that ‘[a] deed
    concerning lands or tenements shall have priority from the time it is recorded in the proper office
    . . . .’” (citing 
    25 Del. C
    . § 153)); N&W Dev. Co. v. Carey, 
    1983 WL 17997
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Jan.
    27, 1983), aff’d, 
    474 A.2d 138
    (Del. 1983) (TABLE) (“The statute . . . is a ‘pure race to the
    recorder’s office’ statute, that is, the first to file a valid deed gains priority in title.”); Mehaffey v.
    Raley, 
    2002 WL 31112196
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Aug. 29, 2002) (“Delaware is . . . a ‘pure race to the
    recorder’s office’ state which gives priority in title to the first grantee to file a valid deed . . . .”
    (internal quotation marks omitted); In re Unclaimed Proceeds from the Execution of Sale by the
    Sheriff of Kent Cty., 
    2013 WL 3482206
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. July 3, 2013) (“Delaware has a pure
    race recording statute, meaning that priority is granted to the promisee who first records his
    interest.”); cf. First Mortg. Co. of Pa. v. Fed. Leasing Corp., 
    456 A.2d 794
    , 795 (Del. 1982)
    (Ҥ 2106 is a pure race statute and as such the time of recording is determinative. The rule is first
    in time, first in right. In the instant case Federal recorded its mortgages in September, 1976, a full
    six months before FMCP, and, therefore, had priority.”); Guarantee Bank v. Magness Constr. Co.,
    
    462 A.2d 405
    (1983) (citing Federal Leasing for the same proposition); Handler Constr., Inc. v.
    CoreStates Bank, N.A., 
    633 A.2d 356
    , 366–67 (Del. 1993) (“Delaware’s mortgage recording
    statute for ‘lands or tenements’ is a pure race statute. As such, the time of recording is
    determinative of priority.” (internal citations omitted)); Eastern Savings 
    Bank, 124 A.3d at 589
    (“Section 2106 is a pure race statute, providing that the time of recording is determinative of the
    priority of competing creditors. The rule is first in time, first in right.” (internal citations and
    quotation marks omitted)).
    41
    See Carey, 
    1983 WL 17997
    , at *1 (reasoning that the defendant’s “arguments concerning the
    plaintiff’s prior notice of his claims of title and the plaintiff’s arguments about its status as a bona
    fide purchaser . . . need not be considered” because the defendant “lost the race to the to the
    recorder’s office,” and “questions of notice” are “irrelevant” under “a pure race statute”);
    Mehaffey, 
    2002 WL 31112196
    , at *3 (“Delaware is . . . a ‘pure race to the recorder’s office’ state
    . . . . As a consequence, ‘as between two grantees, both of whom gave a valuable consideration, a
    subsequent purchaser possessing knowledge of an unrecorded interest in the property would still
    take a superior interest in the property if he recorded his deed first.’” (quoting Carey, 
    1983 WL 17997
    , at *3); THOMAS W. MERRILL & HENRY E. SMITH, PROPERTY: PRINCIPLES AND POLICIES 921
    11
    eventually a lawsuit between 913 Market and InvestUSA is also irrelevant; 913
    Market filed its lawsuit against InvestUSA after the scheduled closing with Bathla.42
    Turning to Bathla’s second argument, Bathla incorrectly interprets the
    condition precedent language in Section 4.1(a) as qualifying his closing obligations
    based on the exceptions contained in his title insurance policy or commitment.
    Section 4.1(a) provides that “[t]itle to the Property shall be subject only to the same
    exceptions as shown on Seller’s title policy with the exception that the mortgage lien
    thereon shall be satisfied at Closing from the proceeds of the sale.”43 By requiring
    (2d ed. 2012) (“Race statutes create an exception to the nemo dat principle [i.e., “one cannot give
    that which one does not have”] and a partial exception to the good faith purchaser doctrine, insofar
    as the first party to record wins even if she has actual notice of a prior conveyance.”); 14 POWELL
    ON REAL PROPERTY § 82.02[1][c][i], LexisNexis (Michael Allan Wolf ed., 2015) (“Any notice
    received . . . concerning the prior interest is irrelevant.”); cf. Gaurantee 
    Bank, 462 A.2d at 407
    –08
    (holding that the prior mortgage holder’s notice-based argument “misconstrues the Delaware
    statute governing priority of mortgages” and that “the fact that [the subsequent mortgage holder]
    had notice of a potential mortgage is irrelevant”). See also Dep’t of Transp. v. Humphries, 
    496 S.E.2d 563
    , 567 (N.C. 1998) (“[A] ‘pure race’ statute protects any purchaser for value who records
    first, regardless of notice.”); Blevins v. Barker, 
    75 N.C. 436
    , 438 (N.C. 1876) (“No such
    encumbrance, by whatever name called, can be created so as to operate against creditors, and
    subsequent purchasers for value, until registered. . . . [N]o notice to the purchaser . . . , however
    full and formal, will supply the place of registration . . . .”); McDuffie v. Walker, 
    51 So. 100
    , 102–
    05 (La. 1909) (holding that, under Louisiana’s race statute, a subsequent purchaser who records
    first has priority even with actual knowledge of a prior purchase); Soniat v. Whitmer, 
    74 So. 916
    ,
    917 (La. 1916) (“[B]y the decision in [McDuffie], and many subsequent decisions, the once
    vexatious question of whether the purchaser of real estate can be affected by unrecorded claims
    against the property, even though at the time of the purchase he had actual knowledge of them, has
    been settled in the negative—let us hope forever.”).
    42
    Compl., 913 Market, LLC v. Investusa Holding Enterprises, LLC, C.A. No. N16C-09-240 CLS
    (Del. Super. Ct. June 12, 2018) (listing a September 27, 2016 filing date). Because there was no
    pending lawsuit at the time of the scheduled closing, we need not consider whether it is necessary
    for a claimant to follow the procedures set forth in Delaware’s lis pendens statute, 
    25 Del. C
    .
    §§ 1601 et seq., when there is actual notice of a pending lawsuit.
    43
    App. to Opening Br. at A-21.
    12
    that title “be subject only to” those exceptions that appeared in 913 Market’s title
    policy, this provision does not condition Bathla’s closing obligations on whatever
    exceptions happen to be present in the title commitment that he obtains. To be sure,
    a real estate purchase agreement may condition the buyer’s closing obligations on
    obtaining satisfactory title insurance.44 But this provision does not refer to Bathla’s
    title insurance. Instead, it simply refers to “[t]itle to the Property.” This exclusive
    reference to the property’s title, and not Bathla’s title insurance, ensures that Bathla
    can get out of the deal if the property’s actual title, viewed objectively, is subject to
    new exceptions that did not appear in 913 Market’s policy. 45 Bathla’s preferred
    interpretation, by contrast, would allow him to shirk his closing obligations without
    making a genuine effort to get his title insurance from another company.46
    When viewed objectively, there was no exception to the property’s title that
    would excuse Bathla from closing under Section 4.1(a). As discussed above, the
    supposed “hazard of litigation” that Bathla identifies could not affect Bathla’s title
    44
    See, e.g., 1 ALVIN ARNOLD & MYRON KOVE, MODERN REAL ESTATE PRACTICE FORMS § 19:3,
    Westlaw (last updated Nov. 2017) (“Seller shall convey to Buyer a good and marketable title and
    such as will be insured by a reputable title company at regular rates . . . .”).
    45
    See BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY, Westlaw (10th ed. 2014) (defining “title” as “[t]he union of all
    elements (as ownership, possession, and custody) constituting the legal right to control and dispose
    of property; the legal link between a person who owns property and the property itself,” or,
    alternatively, “[l]egal evidence of a person’s ownership rights in property; an instrument (such as
    a deed) that constitutes such evidence”); 63C AMERICAN JURISPRUDENCE 2D PROPERTY § 28,
    Westlaw (last updated Sept. 2018) (“‘Title’ means the right to, or ownership in, a thing.”).
    46
    The contract does not impose a “best efforts” or “commercially reasonable efforts” requirement
    on Bathla to obtain title insurance.
    13
    to the property. As a matter of law, had Bathla closed and recorded his deed, this
    would have foreclosed any claim by InvestUSA under Delaware’s pure race statute.
    As a matter of reality, Bathla’s theory makes no commercial sense. His theory rests
    on the notion that there was a plausible chance that InvestUSA, which had bid a
    higher price than Bathla but then backed out of the deal and failed to close, could
    and would sue Bathla if he closed and contend that it had a right to the property. On
    what basis? InvestUSA did not want the property; it backed out of the deal. Nothing
    changed between Bathla signing the contract and the scheduled closing, other than
    Bathla deciding that he did not want to close.
    The provisions of the contract between Bathla and 913 Market that explicitly
    refer to the prior contract that went South underscore just how strained it is for Bathla
    to try to use the InvestUSA deal as an excuse not to close. If, as Bathla contends,
    the mere prospect for a dispute between 913 Market and InvestUSA was enough to
    justify his own failure to close, there were contractual tools to address that easily.
    Bathla knew or should have known, from the recitals in the contract he signed, that
    he was paying less than InvestUSA had promised, and he should have assumed that
    913 Market might wish to recover the difference from InvestUSA for its failure to
    buy as it allegedly promised. If Bathla had wanted to close only if there was no
    dispute between InvestUSA and 913 Market, he could have insisted on making the
    absence of litigation between them or the receipt of a waiver from InvestUSA a
    14
    closing condition, or he could have insisted on an indemnification right. Bathla did
    not do so, and he has failed to articulate a rational interpretation of Section 2.3 or
    Section 4.1(a) that acts as a substitute for straightforward protections of that kind.
    III.
    The Superior Court correctly concluded that 913 Market did not breach its
    obligation to convey title free and clear, and that the condition precedent related to
    the property’s title was satisfied. As a result, Bathla’s failure to timely close
    constituted a breach of the purchase agreement, and 913 Market is entitled to the
    buyer’s deposit. The Superior Court was therefore correct in granting summary
    judgment for 913 Market, and we affirm its implementing final order.
    15
    VAUGHN, Justice, dissenting:
    The Superior Court granted summary judgment on a theory that InvestUSA
    had not perfected a claim on title by filing a notice of pendency. As the Superior
    Court put it, “there was no cloud on title because of a potential claim from
    InvestUSA because InvestUSA had not perfected (nor did it seek to perfect) a lis
    pendens lien.”1 On this reasoning, the fact that First American Title Insurance
    Company proposed to include an exception for the InvestUSA contract in Mr.
    Bathla’s owner’s title insurance policy did not defeat 913 Market’s ability to deliver
    good title because the InvestUSA contract was never a cloud on title.
    I think the Superior Court erred by allowing its decision to be influenced by
    the doctrine of lis pendens. The law of lis pendens establishes a method by which a
    party asserting a claim on title to real property in a pending civil action may give
    constructive notice of that claim to persons acquiring an interest in the property. 2
    Where a party has actual notice of the claim from an independent source, however,
    the giving or lack of giving of constructive notice through the filing or non-filing of
    a notice of pendency is irrelevant.         Notice is notice, whether it is actual or
    constructive. In this case, Bathla had actual notice of InvestUSA’s contract when
    he signed his contract. Since Bathla had actual notice of the InvestUSA contract,
    1
    913 Market, LLC v. Bathla, C.A. No. N16C-11-149 JAP, slip op. at 4-5 (Del. Super. Oct. 31,
    2017).
    2
    See 
    25 Del. C
    . §§ 1601, 1603.
    the filing of a notice of pendency would be superfluous, and the non-filing of a notice
    of pendency has no bearing on the rights and liabilities of the parties.
    The majority’s decision is that the mere possibility that InvestUSA might
    assert a claim against the property does not constitute an encumbrance, and, in any
    event, Delaware’s race recording statute would have extinguished any such claim if
    Bathla had simply gone to settlement and recorded his deed.
    I think the principle that should govern this case is that one who takes title to
    property with notice of an equity takes subject to that equity. An early case
    discussing this principle is Cieniewicz v. Sliwka.3 In that case, Mr. and Mrs. Sliwka
    owned real property, and they entered into an agreement to sell that property to Mr.
    and Mrs. Cieniewicz.4 The Sliwkas, however, then conveyed the premises by deed
    to a couple named Kopanski, who in turn conveyed the premises to a couple named
    Boc.5 The Cieniewiczs filed an action for specific performance against the Sliwkas
    and the Bocs, seeking to have the Bocs honor the Cieniewiczs’ contract with the
    Sliwkas.6 The Chancellor reasoned that in order for the Bocs to defend successfully
    against the Cieniewiczs’ claim, the burden was on the Bocs to establish that either
    they or the Kopanskis were bona fide purchasers for valuable consideration without
    3
    
    133 A. 695
    (Del. Ch. 1926).
    4
    
    Id. at 695.
    5
    
    Id. 6 Id.
                                               2
    notice of the Cieniewiczs’ claim.7 The Chancellor concluded on the facts that both
    the Kopanskis and the Bocs were bona fide purchasers for value without notice of
    the Cieniewiczs’ claim.8 The Cieniewiczs’ claim for specific performance was
    therefore denied.9
    Another example of a case applying this principle is Marsh v. Marsh.10 In that
    case, Franklin and Theresa Marsh entered into an agreement of sale with Double ‘S’
    Construction Co. to purchase a dwelling to be erected on a lot.11 While the house
    was under construction, Franklin and Theresa separated.12 Upon completion of the
    house, Double ‘S’ wished to proceed with settlement.13 Franklin told Double ‘S’
    that he and Theresa were getting a divorce, but that his son Wayne, and his wife
    Mary, would proceed with settlement.14 Without notice to Theresa, Wayne and
    Mary completed settlement, and the property was deeded to them. 15 Franklin paid
    part of the purchase price from his funds, and the balance was paid through a
    mortgage.16 Franklin, Wayne and Mary agreed that they would jointly occupy the
    7
    
    Id. 8 Id.
    at 695-96.
    9
    
    Id. at 696.
    10
    
    261 A.2d 540
    (Del. Ch. 1970).
    11
    
    Id. at 541.
    12
    
    Id. 13 Id.
    14
    
    Id. at 541-42.
    15
    
    Id. at 542.
    16
    
    Id. 3 house
    and Franklin would bear all costs including the mortgage payments.17 After
    settlement, however, Franklin and Theresa reconciled temporarily and moved into
    the property. The Court of Chancery, citing Cieniewicz, found that Theresa had an
    equitable interest in the property as a vendee in the agreement of sale with Double
    ‘S’ and that Wayne and Mary had notice of that interest. Applying the principle that
    one taking title to property with notice of an outstanding equity takes subject to that
    equity, the court impressed an equitable lien in Theresa’s favor on the property for
    one half of the amount of that portion of the purchase price which Franklin had paid
    from his funds.18
    Cieniewicz predates our pure race recording statute. The deed involved in
    Marsh was recorded in 1967. Our pure race recoding statute was adopted in 1968.
    But in the 1993 case of Handler Construction, Inc. v. CoreStates Bank, N.A., this
    Court stated, “The foregoing fundamental rule of equity, long recognized by
    Delaware courts, is that ‘a party taking title with notice of an equity takes subject to
    that equity.’”19 That case involved a dispute between two mortgagees. The first
    mortgage lacked a seal and, for that reason, was deemed an equitable mortgage
    only.20 The second mortgage holder (Handler Construction) had both constructive
    17
    
    Id. 18 Id.
    at 542-43.
    19
    
    633 A.2d 356
    , 364 (Del. 1993) (quoting John Adams, The Doctrine of Equity 151 (Robert
    Ralston, ed., 8th ed. 1890)).
    20
    
    Id. at 363.
                                               4
    and actual knowledge of the first mortgage.21 One of Handler Construction’s
    contentions was that an equitable mortgage was enforceable only between the parties
    to the equitable mortgage and foreclosure of that mortgage did not discharge a
    subsequently recorded mortgage. This Court applied the principle that a party taking
    with notice of an equity takes subject to that equity in rejecting that contention. 22
    Handler is distinguishable from this case in that it involved a dispute between the
    holders of two recorded mortgages.23 This Court’s assertion of the principle that a
    party taking with notice of an equity takes subject to that equity is, nonetheless, a
    forceful restatement of the rule, and the majority has not cited any case from this
    Court that has overruled the rule or found that the pure race recording statute has
    overruled it.24
    The title agent for First American was well aware of the rule that one taking
    title to property with notice of an equity takes subject to that equity, as appears from
    the following email he wrote to counsel for 913 Market on September 14, 2016:
    “Rich – we still have the issue of the open 1st contract. We can not close on the 2nd
    21
    
    Id. at 366.
    22
    
    Id. at 364-65.
    23
    See 
    id. at 358.
    24
    See, e.g., E. Sav. Bank, FSB v. Cach, LLC, 
    124 A.3d 585
    , 592 (Del. 2015) (finding, under the
    circumstances, “no equitable reason to set aside the provisions of Delaware’s pure race recording
    statute”). Moreover, the North Carolina and Louisiana cases are inapplicable here because, among
    other reasons, the recording statutes in those states expressly apply to (and thus set the priority of)
    contracts to convey land. See La. Civ. Code Ann. art. 3338(3); N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 47-18(a).
    5
    contract w/o taking an exception (unless there is a formal release of the 1 st
    contract).”25 The title agent explained the issue further in a later email:
    Rich – a couple of things to think about and give me a call:
    1. It is my opinion no title company will insure this deal
    without the exception we are taking. Any other title
    company would know about the first contract from the
    Seller[’s] Title Affidavit.
    2. To reiterate, if first buyer ‘believes’ Seller defaulted,
    he could sue for specific performance under the contract
    (which would result in the full purchase price/property
    being awarded if successful) – this is why we need the
    exception.26
    The title agent’s legal analysis is consistent with what I have always understood to
    be the law.
    The attorney for 913 Market responded to the title agent’s first email this way:
    Over 60 days have elapsed since closing was to have
    occurred under the initial contract. The potential risk of a
    successful claim from a buyer that has been silent for over
    60 days (even if time was not of the essence which is not
    the case here) cannot be substantial. This is a situation
    involving a client that has done multiple closings with
    your firm, and we are sincerely disappointed that you feel
    as stated below. Given the silence from the initial buyer
    our client will be proceeding against it to obtain payment
    of the deposit in accordance with its rights under the
    terminated contract.27
    25
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A-295.
    26
    
    Id. at A-296.
    27
    
    Id. The majority
    refers to First American as Bathla’s title insurer, which is true. But it is also
    true that First American was brought into the transaction by 913 Market, and there are references
    in the record to a substantial business relationship between 913 Market and First American.
    6
    The attorney for 913 Market did not argue that there was no need for the new
    exception because the recording of Bathla’s deed would cut off any possible claim
    from InvestUSA under the recording statute. Instead, he argued that there was no
    need for the exception because 913 Market had terminated the InvestUSA contract
    and the risk of InvestUSA asserting a claim against Bathla could not be substantial.
    The title agent was unpersuaded by the argument of 913 Market’s attorney
    and still considered the InvestUSA contract an encumbrance requiring an exception
    in the title policy. The record indicates that Bathla and his attorney learned that First
    American would be taking an exception for the InvestUSA contract on September
    15, 2016, four days before the contractual settlement date. On September 18,
    Bathla’s attorney wrote to the attorney for 913 Market and stated, “This new
    exception indicates that the Seller is unable to meet the condition precedent in
    Section 4.1(a) of the Agreement to convey the title subject only to the same
    exceptions as those listed in Seller’s original title policy.” 28 He also noted that his
    “client is still interested in purchasing the Property on the same terms and conditions
    contained in the Agreement” and requested “a short extension to resolve this
    issue.”29 It should come as no surprise to anyone that Bathla and his attorney would
    be alarmed to learn that First American planned on taking an exception for the
    28
    
    Id. at A-134.
    29
    
    Id. 7 InvestUSA
    contract. The attorney for 913 Market rebuffed the request for a short
    extension and took the position that if Bathla did not settle on September 19, he
    would be in default.
    The recitals in Bathla’s contract, although not entirely consistent with each
    other, describe Bathla’s contract as a “backup” contract, to become a “primary
    contract” upon termination of the InvestUSA agreement.30 Nothing in the record
    indicates that 913 Market provided Bathla with information showing a satisfactory
    termination of the InvestUSA contract or the circumstances explaining why that
    contract had failed to settle. The trial court’s only comment on the status of the
    InvestUSA contract was: “for reasons not apparent here, InvestUSA failed to close
    on the property.”31 The exchange of correspondence by the attorneys on September
    15 and 18 apparently resulted in a standoff that led to this litigation.
    If an agreement of sale is executed and acknowledged with the intent that it
    be recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds, as is often done with long-term
    installment sales agreements, I would agree that the priority of the agreement is
    subject to Delaware’s pure race recording statute. In this case, the InvestUSA
    contract was un-recordable because it did not contain an acknowledgement. It is
    30
    
    Id. at A-16.
    31
    913 Market, LLC v. Bathla, 
    2017 WL 1507539
    , at *1 (Del. Super. Apr. 26, 2017). The trial
    court made no findings of fact concerning why the settlement between 913 Market and InvestUSA
    fell through. There are allegations in the record that Bathla did not settle because he could not get
    financing, but there are no findings of fact on that allegation.
    8
    common for agreements of sale which are expected to go to settlement in a relatively
    short period of time to lack an acknowledgement. I would find that a party taking
    title with notice of the outstanding equitable interest of a vendee in such an
    agreement takes title subject to that interest.
    The issue in this case, as I see it, is whether the InvestUSA contract, which
    became an encumbrance when signed on June 15, 2016, was an encumbrance when
    the time came for settlement on the Bathla contract in September or whether, by
    then, the risk of litigation it presented had become so remote and improbable that it
    was no longer an encumbrance. I would reverse the judgment of the Superior Court
    and remand the case for further proceedings to include findings on this issue.
    9