124 Mo. 551 | Mo. | 1894
This was a suit for the specific performance of a contract for the conveyance of real estate. The facts leading up to the contract are to the following effect:
The defendant Jamison by his deed dated-the fifteenth of February, 1888, and delivered on the twenty-seventh of April of that year, conveyed to the plaintiff
On the eighth of April, 1890, the plaintiff tendered the defendant $800 and demanded a deed, which tender the defendant refused, and hence this suit. The plaintiff did not pay off the Creech debt of $4,427; nor did he ever tender to Creech or the defendant the amount of that debt.
The trial court in stating the account, charged the plaintiff with the $2,700 note and interest, and deducted therefrom the $2,180 on account of omnibus line property received by the defendant, leaving a balance due the defendant of $739. To this amount the court added repairs and also $381, paid by defendant on the Creech note, and deducted therefrom rents of the farm, leaving a balance of $623.85, due to the defendant on the $2,700 note. The plaintiff paid this sum into court, and an order was made divesting the defendant of all title to the land and investing the same in the plaintiff, and awarding a writ of restitution.
1. The answer of the defendant sets out the contract, deeds and transactions before mentioned, and in connection therewith makes numerous averments of fraudulent conduct on the part of the plaintiff. According to the answer, these various transactions to which the plaintiff was a party, constituted one continuous scheme concocted and devised by the plaintiff to
2. The question then is, whether the plaintiff put himself in a position to demand specific performance of the contract of May 6, 1889. In other words, was he bound to pay the Creech debt as a condition precedent to a conveyance from the defendant? To an understanding of this question we may recall the prior transactions, dropping out of view the three hundred and eighty-five acres. The plaintiff, in the original purchase of the entire lands, assumed and agreed, as a part of the consideration, to pay off the Ansley note secured by the deed of trust on the one thousand, eight hundred and eighty-five acres. This he failed to do. He caused the note to be purchased for and in his interest. The purchase of this note by plaintiff or by others for him was not a payment of it. The defendant was personally bound on that note, and held the second lien on the land for $2,700. A payment of the note according to the contract would have relieved him of all personal liability and at the same time advanced his second lien to a first lien. When the plaintiff caused the land to be sold under the Ansley deed of trust, he made, breach of his contract, and the defendant had a perfect right to come forward and purchase at that trustee’s sale as he did. By his purchase at that sale he acquired a good title to the one thousand, eight hundred and eighty-five acres as against the plaintiff. To raise the money to pay his bid he executed the Creech deed of trust. Thus matters stood at the date of the contract of the sixth of May, 1889.
Turning to that agreement we find it provides that the plaintiff shall have until the ninth of April, 1890, the day on which the Creech note matured, ( to
The question then arises when was Basye bound to pay this Creech debt to entitle him to a deed from the defendant. As to this the contract says: “If said BaSye shall not redeem said land as herein above specified, by the ninth of April, 1890, then he shall relinquish and release all claims to said land, and said Jamison shall surrender to said Basye his notes and relinquish to him all claims for the purchase price of said real estate.” Nothing is more clearly expressed in the agreement than this, that Basye was bound to perform all agreements by him to be performed by the ninth of April, 1890, and this included the payment of the Creech note. The decree of the circuit court seems to go upon the theory that plaintiff was not bound to