48 So. 807 | Ala. | 1909
The three counts of the complaint as last amended, assailed by the demurrers, contain these presently important averments: “The plaintiff agreed to buy and the defendant agreed to sell, for the consideration of $4,000 net, property in Tuscaloosa, Ala., on Madison street, known as the old jail and the opera house, and contents of the latter; and the plaintiff says that, although he was ready, able, willing, and off erect to comply with his part of the contract, the defendant failed to comply with the following provisions thereof, viz.: The defendant refused to convey the property above described to the plaintiff. * * *” The demurrers, in their first phase, take the point that the averments quoted fall short of the necessary acts in order to put the defendant in default and hence render him liable for breach of the contract, in that it is not averred that plaintiff tendered the money and a conveyance of the property to the defendant, or that no excuse for a failure to so tender the conveyance and the money is set forth in the counts. It is too clear1 for doubt that the intention of the parties, as expressed in the contract pleaded, contemplated that the payment of the money and the conveyance of the property should be contemporaneous, thus creating concurrent, dependent conditions upon each to do what each had engaged to do. — 99 Cyc. pp. 719, 720, and notes:
Witli reference only to the question of necessity vel non to actually tender the price agreed npon, a control ling consideration in determining to what extent the pleader must go in allegation of his acts under the contract in order to fix, and thus declare in his complaint, liability of the opposite party for the breach of the contract, has been thus stated in McGehee v. Hill, supra; “The seller ought not to be compelled to part with his property without receiving the consideration, nor the purchaser to part with his money without an equivalent in return.” From the quoted premise it is further said that one cannot proceed against his adversary in the contract “without an actual performance of the agreement on his part, or a readiness and ability” to do so; “and an averment to that effect is always made in the declaration containing defendant’s- undertakings, and that averment must be supported by proof.” (Italics supplied.) In Ledyard v. Manning, 1 Ala. 156, the same rule has been declared in this form: “When two acts are to be done at the same time on a day named, or generally, by the opposite parties, neither can maintain an action without showing performance, or an offer to perform, or, at least, a readiness to perform, though it was uncertain which of them was bound to do the first act.” (Italics s-upplied.) Our decision in McGehee v. Hill, supra, in the respect quoted above, found authority in Bank of Columbia v. Hagner, 1 Pet. 461, 7 L. Ed. 219, and the influence of that opinion in the establishment of the phase of the law under consideration may be seen by reference to 2 Rose’s Notes, p. 745 et seq.; and the doc
If actual tender of the money, rather than tender of performance, coupled with ability to perforin, ivas required of the purchaser, whose actual performance was not contemplated by the parties to be more than a concurrrent condition with that of his adversary to convey, he would be necessarily placed in the attitude of surrendering his money without the equivalent in return of the property he had engaged to buy. The readiness, willingness, ability, and offer of plaintiff to perform, and, on the other hand, the refusal thereupon of defendant to perform on his part, is averred. This phase of the de murrer was, therefore, properly overruled.
The phase of the demurrer objecting that it is not averred that the plaintiff prepared and tendered to the defendant a proper conveyance of the property affected by the contract cannot be sustained, since a refusal of the defendant to convey is expressly alleged. The decision of Garnett v. Yoe, 17 Ala. 74, is directly in point, and we will not depart from it.
The averment of agreement to buy at the sum stated in the complaint, no stipulation for credit being present, imports that the payment should be cash. — Robbins v. Harris 31 Ala 160. The counts are sufficiently definite in respect of the payment to be made by the plaintiff. In Manier v. Appling, 112 Ala. 663, 20 South. 978 cited for appellant, the counts were silent as to the sum to be paid for the shoes.
No error appears in the record, and the judgment overruling the demurrer is affirmed.
Affirmed.