90 Ala. 373 | Ala. | 1890
The appeal is taken from a decree overruling a demurrer to the bill, by which appellee seeks to obtain the delivery and cancellation of a conveyance of lands, made by herself and husband to appellants, November 15, 1888. The language of the deed is: “For and in consideratinn of the sum of one dollar cash in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, we, S. T. Simpson and Mattie C. Simpson, of Lauderdale county, Ala., have granted, bargained and
The bill Avas filed in June, 1889. It avers that defendants have not paid or tendered any money, and have made no offer to take the property according to the terms of the instrument. Defendants contend, that the averments of the bill show that performance by them was prevented by the act of complainant, in repudiating the contract and revoking the instrument. It appears from the bill, that complainant and her husband notified the defendants in writing, March 15, 1889, that they revoked the option given by the instrument, and withdrew all propositions therein contained,. A waiver of the necessity of performance of a condition precedent in contracts is implied, when the party entitled to performance prevents the fulfilment of the condition, or absolutely refuses performance. “But a mere assertion that the party will be unable, or will refuse to perform the contract, is not sufficient; it must be a distinct and unequivocal, absolute refusal to perform the promise, and must be treated and acted upon as such by the party to whom the promise was made; for, if he afterwards continue to urge or demand compliance with the contract, it is plain that he does not understand it to be at an end.” — 2 Benj. Sales, § 860. The notice was not an absolute refusal, though it may be implied that complainant would refuse to receive payment if tendered; it disclosed on its face that complainant regarded the instrument as reserving to defendants a mere option to buy. The revocation, if unauthorized, could not have affected
It is difficult to see how an act which is ineffectual, and which would not have benefited complainant, nor have injured defendants, could have legally operated to prevent performance — that is, to have rendered performance impossible. If the instrument be revocable in its nature, as defendants contend, the revocation 'itself did not constitute the condition impossible, so as to release defendants from the duty of fulfilling it, or at least of offering to do so.—Brooklyn Life Ins. Co. v. Bledsoe, 52 Ala. 538.
But, is such the character of the contract? It appears from the bill that complainant made the revocation, deeming the conveyance a mere proposition to sell without consideration. The bill alleges that no consideration was paid; and there existing no obligation, or promise on the part of the grantees, to pay the agreed price, the instrument, though in form a conditional conveyance, can not be distinguishable in principle from an offer to sell, reserving to the other parties, without consideration, the privilege to buy or not to buy at their option. Such being the nature of the contract,. the proposition was revocable at any time before performance of the condition, or acceptance by an offer to perform, and the revocation terminated all the rights and privileges of the grantees.—Wilks v. Ga. Pac. Railway Co., 79 Ala. 180.
Defendants further contend, that if the conveyance is a mere offer to sell, coupled with an option which has been revoked, or, if irrevocable, the condition not having been performed, it casts no shade upon the title of complainant. While a court of ecpiity will not intervene to remove, as a cloud on the title, a deed void on its face, or when there is a mere apprehension of a suit, or the mere assertion of a hostile title, it will intervene where the inherent defect, which renders a conveyance invalid, can be made apparent by extrinsic evidence only. The jurisdiction is “protective and preventive;” and will be exercised whenever the deed may be injuriously used against the party complaining, when the evidence to impeach it may be lost. Justice Story observes: “Cases also may occur, where a deed, or other instrument, originally valid, has, by subsequent events, such as by satisfaction or payment, or other extinguishment of it, legal or equitable, become functus officio; and yet its existence may be either a cloud upon the title of the other party, or subject him to the danger of some future litigation, when the facts are no longer capable of complete proof, or have become involved in the obscurities
Affirmed.