206 Ky. 186 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The original petition in tbis case was filed in tbe Leslie circuit court by appellee and plaintiff below, R. B. Roberts, against appellant and defendant below, A. J. Asher, on October 22, 1913. When filed it sought the recovery of a personal judgment ag’ainst defendant for the sum of $500.00 for the violation of an alleged contract between the parties whereby the defendant agreed to pay plaintiff $1,000.00 as purchase price for a one-half undivided interest in five tracts of land in Leslie county that were patented by the Commonwealth to Philip Marcum and R. C. Potter in September, 1871, and which contract was made in the spring or summer of 1911, and was oral. At that time defendant claimed to own Potter’s undivided half interest in the land and was desirous of procuring the other half still supposed to be owned by Marcum, who was then and had been for a considerable time a resident of the state of Oklahoma. On December 12, 1911, pursuant to his undertaking in the oral contract with defendant, plaintiff secured a con
Later plaintiff filed what he styled an “amended and reformed petition,” in which he practically abandoned his cause of action set out in his petition and expressly withdrew his prayer for a personal judgment against defendant for $500.00, and alleged that after he had procured the contract from Marcum, above referred to, and after defendant had obtained knowledge of that contract, he fraudulently procured a deed from Marcum to the latter’s half undivided interest in the land, and plaintiff sought specific performance of his contract against defendant, upon the ground that the latter made his purchase with actual notice of plaintiff’s equity,- and took his title burdened with that equity, including the obligation to perform it under the same circumstances and conditions that Marcum would be compelled to do.
The answer denied the material averments of the petition as so amended and reformed, and afterwards defendant amended it and asserted title in himself and those through whom he claimed by adverse possession, and also interposed the plea of champerty. Neither of those defenses were responded to; nor was the amended
The right to enforce specific performance against defendant under the facts alleged, is a well established doctrine of equity and which this and other courts have unhesitatingly applied under the same or' similar facts. A recent ease from this court so holding, and in which other, domestic ones and text authorities are cited, is that of Thomas v. Haly Coal Company, 189 Ky. 698, and we deem it unnecessary to encumber this opinion with other cases or citations. The right to enforce specific performance against a subsequent purchaser with notice is bottomed upon a companion doctrine of equity saying that “a purchaser of land who acquires his interest therein with notice, actual or constructive, of an adverse claim of a third person under a prior contract or conveyance, or of an equity in favor of a third person, or who is not a purchaser for value, takes the land subject to such claim or equity, whether he has received a deed or not.” 39 Cyc. 1648, and Kentucky cases in note 18 to the text. See also 27 R. C. L. 686, paragraph 451. Later cases from this court so holding are: Winlock v. Munday. 156 Ky. 806; Everidge v. Martin, 164 Ky. 497; Vizard Investment Co. v. York, 167 Ky. 634; Speiss v. Martin, 192 Ky. 211, and the Thomas case, supra.
Notwithstanding the foregoing rights of a prior purchaser of the equitable title, he can acquire no greater one as against a subsequent purchaser, with notice than the one he possessed against his vendor, and as a corollary to that proposition, if he could not, because of some dereliction on his part, enforce specific performance against his vendor, neither could he do so against the subsequent purchaser with notice, since the latter, under the assumed facts, took only the place of the vendor but Avith no enlarged obligations. If, therefore, plaintiff at
We do not construe plaintiff ?s contract with Mar-cum upon which he relies as being anything more than an option to purchase the latter’s interest in the land at the price of $500.00, provided it is exercised within twelve months from the date of the contract; but, if it should be construed as an absolute agreement to convey, then, according to its express terms, that obligation existed only upon the condition of the payment of the purchase price by plaintiff, or some one for him, within twelve months, and which the writing made the essence of the contract. 36 Cyc. 711; Stembridge v. Stembridge, 87 Ky. 91; Jones v. Noble, 3 Bush 694; Magoffin v. Holt, 1 Duv. 95; Brock v. Tennis Coal Co., 29 Ky. L. R. 1283 (same, case 30 Ky. L. R. 1370), and many foreign cases cited in note 42 to the text. So that, it was the plaintiff’s duty in order to preserve his rights under his contract, to either pay or tender to Marcum the consideration agreed to be paid within the time he agreed to pay it if he had no knowledge of Marcum’s subsequent conveyance to defendant. That payment or'tender would: have saved his rights if he was unaware of the conveyance to defendant as against the latter. If, however, he received notice of the conveyance to defendant before the expiration of the twelve months, it was then his duty to make payment or tender thereof to defendant in order to obtain an enforced conveyance of the legal title from him, ■ since he, under the equitable doctrine, supra, assumed no greater obligation by accepting his conveyance from Marcum with notice of plaintiff’s equity than was contained in plaintiff’s contract. It follows, therefore, that plaintiff having neither paid nor tendered the purchase price to either Marcum or defendant within the time stipulated, he forfeited his right under his option or his contract, whatever it may be styled, and the court erred in holding to the contrary.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed with directions to set it aside and for proceedings consistent with' this opinion.