Opinion
In this аction to quiet title to real property, respondents Rex M. Bartley and John Beale, purchasers at a foreclosure sale, sought to terminate the equitable interest of appellants Jack J. Karas and Frank V. Tharp, vendees under an installment sale contract. Appellants challenge the judgmеnt in respondents’ favor after a nonjury trial on the ground that the trial court erred by terminating their rights as defaulting vendees without affording them an opportunity to cure their default and reinstate the contract. We reverse.
*339 Facts
Under the instalment contract, executed July 7, 1970, and never recorded, appellants agreed to buy a home at 305 Wheeler Avenue, San Francisco, for $15,000. The terms of payment called for a down payment of $1,500, with the balance and interest payable in 210 monthly instalments of approximately $160 each. Standard time of essence and forfeiture clauses governed the instalment payments.
The sellers undеr this contract, Frank and Arlene Mays, had previously encumbered the property with deeds of trust recorded in 1965 and 1969. The first deed of trust secured an original indebtedness of $14,000, while the second deed of trust secured an original indebtedness of $3,493.71. 1
On the same day the contract was executed, the sellers executed a рromissory note for $900 in favor of Lawrence D. Virzi, their real estate agent, as payment of his commission for negotiating the sale. This note was secured by a third deed of trust to the property. Around this time Virzi was also assigned the beneficiary’s interest in the second deed of trust.
The sellers authorized Virzi to collect the instalment payments from appellants as they fell due and, upon full payment, to deliver an executed grant deed to appellants. Virzi was also directed to use the instalment payments to pay taxes on the property and make the periodic payments on the three secured notes.
Appеllants went into possession of the property, made payments, and expended an estimated $20,500 on improvements. They began to default on their payments in March 1977. Virzi notified them, in a letter dated July 27, 1977, that their continued default “jeopardize[d] [their] ownership of the property.” He warned them, by a letter sent June 10, 1978, thаt “foreclosure [would] be started on the property” if they failed to cure their arrearage of $1,640 within 10 days. Appellants tendered $1,300 on August 26, 1978, and Virzi accepted this partial cure of their default after they agreed to make double payments thereafter. Appellants made no further payment, although Virzi, by а letter dated December 9, 1978, again stated that “foreclosure proceedings [would] begin” if they failed to pay, within 10 days, at least $656 out of their existing arrearage of $1,476. During their default Virzi sometimes used his own funds to pay taxes and periodic payments on the note secured by the first deed of trust.
*340 On July 9, 1979, Virzi began a nonjudicial foreclosure proceeding against the sellers by recording a notice of default on the note secured by the third deed of trust. The trustee of the third deed of trust sent copies of this notice by certified mail to appellants and their attorney of record. The trustee similarly mailed copies of the notice of trustee sale on October 22, 1979.
At the trustee sale, held November 27, 1979, respondents acquired title to the property under the third deed of trust, through their successful bid of $5,860. Thereafter, on January 25, 1980, they began efforts to obtain possession and quiet their title against appellants.
During the trial, in August 1980, Virzi estimated that appellants’ аrrearage by that time was $3,936. Afterwards, while respondent Bartley was testifying, appellants tendered a check for $4,000 to cure the default and requested reinstatement. The trial court sustained an objection to this tender and request, and Bartley never responded.
Discussion
We first address respondents’ contention that aрpellants’ rights under the contract were terminated by the trustee sale. They rely on the principle that a purchaser at such a sale takes title free and clear of any rights of the trustor, or anyone claiming under or through the trustor, and of all other subordinate interests. (See, e.g.,
Hohn
v.
Riverside County Flood Control etc. Dist.
(1964)
The evidence does not support their contention that the installment contract was subordinate to the third deed of trust. Although the contract was never recorded, the evidence is undisputed that both Virzi and respondents had actual notice of its existence. Accordingly, the third deed of trust cannot be deemed superior under Civil Code section 1214 due to its recordation. (Civ. Code, § 1217;
Gribble
v.
Mauerhan
(1961)
Nor is the contract subordinate as one junior in time to the third deed of trust. The evidence supports the court’s finding that the two instruments were executed contemporaneously.
2
Where a deed and contract are made simultaneously and are so connected that they may be regarded as one
*341
transaction, they should be held to take effect in such order as will best carry out the intent and secure the rights of all parties.
(Biddle Avenue Realty Corp.
v.
Commissioner of Int. Rev.
(6th Cir. 1938)
We turn to appellants’ arguments. First, they assert that respondents waived their right to terminate the contract. (See
Barkis
v.
Scott
(1949)
Appellants have themselves waived their right to review of this question. The trial court made no express finding on waiver. As the record fails to show that appellants raised this defense by plea or argument, there is no basis to assume that the court considered the question and impliedly found in respondents’ favor. Wаiver is a factual question
(Kay
v.
Kay
(1961)
Next, appellants challenge the trial court’s conclusion that respondents were not guilty of unclean hands. They point to evidence indicating that respondents entered an agreement to pool their assets and increase their bidding power at the trustee sale. After doing so, they did not disclose their agreement, but took turns bidding so as to “throw the other bidders off,” particularly Virzi. Appellants claim that respondents thereby obtained title to the subject property in violation of Civil Code section 2924h, subdivision (f), and came into this proceeding with unclean hands.
Assuming that respondents’ actions did constitute misconduct at the trustee sale, this alone does not entitle appellants to the defense of unclean hands. For this doctrine to be invoked, the alleged misconduct must pertain to the subject matter involved and affect the equitable relations be
*342
tween the litigants.
(Fibreboard Paper Products Corp.
v.
East Bay Union of Machinists
(1964)
This action involved appellants’ rights to the subject property under a contract, as against respondents’ rights as successоrs to the sellers’ title. Appellants have not demonstrated that their rights were in any way affected or prejudiced by respondents’ conduct at the trustee sale. They did not attempt to bid at the sale. As previously noted, the sale itself did not terminate or otherwise affect their interests. Appellants suggest that they were prejudiced because the final bid might otherwise have been higher, and thus the excess proceeds of the sale awarded to them might have been greater. The evidence does not support this suggestion. Virzi, the only other bidder who testified, said that he was unwilling to spend more than his final unsuccessful bid, although he had funds in excess of respondents’ successful bid.
Appellants next contend that the court erred in its conclusion that their default was wilful or grossly negligent, precluding relief under Civil Code section 3275. In their view, the evidence shows only that they defaulted due to insufficient funds, and they reason that this alone does not amount to wilful or grossly negligеnt conduct.
Their argument is unpersuasive. Appellants had the burden of proving that their default was neither wilful nor grossly negligent.
(MacFadden
v.
Walker
(1971)
Lack of funds alone is also insufficient to mеet the burden imposed by Civil Code section 3275. There must be some additional showing that this cause is not itself attributable to wilful or grossly negligent conduct, e.g., where the earning capacity of the party seeking relief has been unexpectedly
*343
impaired by accident or illness.
(Scarbery
v.
Bill Patch Land & Water Co.
(1960)
We find no error in the court’s conclusion that appellants were not entitled to reinstate the contract pursuant to Civil Code section 3275.
Appellants also challenge the trial court’s conclusion that they were not entitled to reinstatement as wilfully defaulting buyers, pursuant to the antiforfeiture policy applied in MacFadden v. Walker, supra, 5 Cal.3d 809.
The rule announced in
MacFadden
is: a wilfully defaulting buyer who is not entitled to relief under Civil Code section 3275 may nonetheless be able, in proper cases, to obtain specific performance of an instalment land sale contract, in accordance with the antiforfeiture policy recognized in
Freedman
v.
The Rector
(1951)
The application of the
MacFadden
rule to the case before us is questionable, because appellants failed to seek sрecific performance of the contract. A decree of specific performance compels
the. full
execution of a contract, and those who seek it must fully perform on their part. (Civ. Code, § 3392.) Here, appellants merely requested reinstatement of the partially executed contract, tendering only the amount necessary to pay the estimated arrearage. (See
Dunner
v.
Hoover
(1941)
In cases decided before
MacFadden,
courts stated that a defaulting buyer could obtain reinstatement under Civil Code sеction 3275, but otherwise could obtain only restitution.
(Beck
v.
Combs
(1959)
However, the antiforfeiture policy applied in
MacFadden
simply provided the justification for use of an established equitable remedy, “carefully
*344
hedged around with protections to the person against whom it is invoked.”
3
(
MacFadden
v.
Walker, supra,
By contrast, there appears to be no established remedy of reinstatement other than that provided under Civil Code section 3275. Under that section a seller is given some protection, at least, by a judicial determination that the defaulting buyer acted reasonably and in good faith. (See
Hopkins
v.
Woodward
(1932)
Before
MacFadden,
where a seller brought a quiet title action to terminate a defaulting buyer’s contract rights, and the buyer offered to pay the arrearage as a defense to the action, the typical remedy afforded was not reinstatement per se.
4
Instead, courts held thаt “[t]he averment of an offer to pay any arrearages ...” invoked a line of cases beginning with
Keller
v.
Lewis
(1878)
We conclude that it is this rеmedy, rather than simple reinstatement, which should in proper cases be extended to a wilfully defaulting buyer who seeks reinstatement rather than specific performance. Not only does it derive from the same antiforfeiture policy applied in MacFadden (see Comment (1932) 20 Cal.L.Rev. 194, 198), but, like specific performanсe, it affords adequate protection for the nondefaulting seller.
Of course, as with specific performance, there is only a discretionary right to this type of relief, depending upon the equities of the particular case.
*345
(Cf.
Kosloff v. Castle, supra,
In this case, the trial court concluded that appellants’ offer to pay arrearages was untimely and immaterial. It appears that, for this reason, it did not consider the possible application of the rule applied in
Petersen
v.
Ridenour, supra,
The judgment is reversed.
Scott, Acting P. J., and Feinberg, J., concurred.
Notes
Respondents paid off the note secured by the second deed of trust in 1979 for $9,860, by which time the outstanding debt secured by the first deed of trust had been reduced to approximately $8,000.
For this reason we do not consider the possible illegality of the third deed of trust as a
subsequent
encumbrance prohibited by Civil Code section 2985.2. (See Civ. Code, § 1667;
C. I. T. Corp.
v.
Breckenridge
(1944)
Similarly, in the case relied on by
MacFadden
v.
Walker, supra,
Of course, reinstatement was permitted in
Barkis
v.
Scott, supra,
We note also that the trial court did not consider the issue of restitution. Even wilfully defaulting buyers have an unqualified right to restitution of any principal payments in excess of the seller’s damages.
(Freedman
v.
The Rector, supra,
