Prospective buyers Normile and Kurniawan submitted a written offer to purchase residential real estate owned by Miller through a real estate broker. Their offer, on a standard form, included a stated time for acceptance (until 5:00 p.m. on a specified date) and provided for earnest money. Miller did not sign as offered; instead, she altered several terms (including price and/or other contingencies), initialed her changes, and returned the document through the broker. These changes were material and thus constituted a counteroffer, which by law operated as a rejection of the buyers' original offer. The counteroffer document still recited the same acceptance deadline. Normile and Kurniawan did not immediately accept the counteroffer. Before they accepted, Miller accepted a separate offer to purchase the same property from Segal. The broker then informed Normile and Kurniawan that the property had been sold—memorialized by the broker's colloquial warning, "You snooze, you lose." Later, but still before the 5:00 p.m. deadline stated on the document, Normile and Kurniawan attempted to accept by initialing Miller's changes and tendering the earnest money to the broker. Miller refused to perform, having already sold to Segal. Normile and Kurniawan sued seeking specific performance, contending they had timely accepted the counteroffer within the stated deadline and/or that the seller was bound to keep the offer open until that time.
Does a seller's counteroffer that includes a stated time for acceptance create an irrevocable option, and if not, is the offeree's power of acceptance terminated upon reliable notice that the offer has been revoked by sale to a third party?
A counteroffer constitutes a rejection of the original offer and creates a new offer that must be accepted according to its terms. A stated time for acceptance in an offer does not by itself create an irrevocable option; an option requires separate consideration (or a firm offer under applicable statute) to make the offeror's promise to keep the offer open binding. An offer is freely revocable any time before acceptance unless supported by consideration for an option. Revocation is effective when communicated to the offeree, and reliable indirect notice (such as from the offeror's agent or other trustworthy source) that the offeror has sold the property to another terminates the offeree's power of acceptance.
No contract was formed between Normile and Kurniawan and Miller. Miller's alterations were a counteroffer that rejected the buyers' original offer. The counteroffer was not an irrevocable option because it lacked consideration. The buyers' power of acceptance was terminated when they received reliable notice from the broker that the property had been sold to another, rendering their later attempted acceptance ineffective even though it occurred before the stated deadline.
The court first characterized Miller's response to the buyers' offer as a counteroffer because it made material changes to the proposed terms. Under the mirror-image rule, such a counteroffer rejects the original offer; thus, the initial power of acceptance held by Miller under the buyers' original offer was extinguished. The court next addressed the buyers' argument that the counteroffer remained open until the 5:00 p.m. deadline. The court rejected that view because a mere time limit in an offer does not transform it into an option; an option requires separate consideration supporting the promise to keep the offer open. Without consideration, Miller's counteroffer remained revocable at any time before acceptance. The court then turned to revocation. Revocation may be communicated either directly or indirectly, so long as the offeree receives reliable information that the offeror has taken definite action inconsistent with an intention to contract on the terms of the offer. The broker's statement that the property had been sold—the famous "You snooze, you lose"—was attributable to the seller's agent and constituted reliable notice that Miller had accepted another offer, a definitive act inconsistent with keeping the counteroffer open. Upon receipt of that notice, the buyers' power of acceptance terminated. Their subsequent attempt to accept by initialing the counteroffer and tendering earnest money before the document's stated deadline was thus ineffectual. Because there was no acceptance prior to revocation and no consideration to render the counteroffer irrevocable, the court concluded that no contract existed between Normile/Kurniawan and Miller. By contrast, Miller's subsequent acceptance of Segal's offer produced a valid, enforceable contract.
Normile v. Miller is frequently taught to reinforce several contract formation doctrines at once: (1) a counteroffer is a rejection of the original offer; (2) a stated deadline in an offer does not create an irrevocable option without consideration; and (3) an offeree's power of acceptance ends upon reliable notice of revocation, including indirect notice through a broker. It underscores that timing and communication are pivotal in offer-and-acceptance analysis and that real-estate negotiations often proceed through agents whose statements can carry legal effect. The case also provides a clean contrast between an unenforceable attempted acceptance after revocation and a valid acceptance by a competing buyer.
Normile v. Miller crystallizes the interlocking doctrines that control real-world negotiations: a counteroffer rejects the original offer; an offer with a stated deadline is not an option without consideration; and reliable notice of revocation ends the offeree's power to accept. The case's vivid facts—especially the broker's "You snooze, you lose" message—make the abstract rules memorable and practically salient.