91 F. 705 | 4th Cir. | 1899
This cause is here on appeal from the circuit court for the Eastern district of North Carolina. The appellant was the plaintiff, and the appellee the defendant, in the court below. The record shows that on the 9th day of January, 1889, the defendant, Henry Parker, Frusa, his wife, A. W. Early and Eugenia, his wife, entered into a contract with W. P. Taylor and James T. Brinkley, by which they sold and conveyed to said Taylor and Brinkley all their right, title, and interest in and to all pine trees growing and being upon a certain tract of land in Bertie county, N. C., containing 240 acres, more or less. On the same day, the said Henry Parker and wife entered into two contracts with the said Taylor and Brinkley, by which said Parker and wife sold their right, title, and interest in the trees on two other separate and distinct tracts of land. The three contracts were the same in substance and form, and all contained the following provision: “To have and to hold the same unto W. P. Taylor and Jas. T. Brinkley, the said parties of the second part or their assigns, for the term of five years from the date hereof,” with the exclusive privilege of entering upon the land for the purpose of removing the trees. Subsequently, the plaintiff, the Camp Manufacturing Company, became the owner of all the interests and privileges of Taylor and Brinkley held by them under the three contracts above mentioned.
On the 30th day of May, 1893, after the plaintiff had acquired the
“This agreement, made May 30th, 1893, by and between Henry Parker and wife, Frusa, Bertie county, North Carolina, parties of the first part, and the Gamp Manufacturing Company, a corporation charfered under and by the laws of Virginia, and duly organized, party of the second part, witnosseth: That ihe parties of the first part have covenanted and agreed with the party of the second part that it, the said party of the second part, its successors and assigns, shall enjoy all the rights and privileges on and over the lands acquired by virtue of a contract made between the said parties of the first part and W. P. Taylor, which contract -was made in January, 1889, and duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds for Bertie county, and by the said Taylor transferred to the party of the second part for five years, upon the condition that the said Parker be paid a sum of money equal to the interest at 8 % at the beginning of each year in advance on the purchase money named in the contract with Taylor, above referred to, beginning from the expiration of the time for cutting and removing' of timber mentioned in contract aforesaid. It is understood that, if the i>arty of the second part fails to pay any amount when due, if. shall have a notice of ten days, and if, after the expiration of the ten days, it remains unpaid, this contract is at an end.”
In pursuance with this contract, the plaintiff, on the 17th of January, 3894, paid the defendant the sum of $316.48, the amount claimed by him under the agreement, and for which defendant sent the plaintiff a receipt February 35, 1894. The next payment was due January 9, 1895, and on the 10th of that month the defendant, Parker, wrote the plaintiff as follows:
“Aulander, N. C., Jany. 10, 1895.
“Gamp Manufacturing Co., Franklin, Va—Gentlemen: I write to ask yon io please calculate the interest on the amount yon owe me for all timber sold you, and send me a check for the same. You wrote me last year, when you sent cheek, that my calculation did not correspond with the calculation in your office. Plea.se inform me of the difference. You will remember that I sold the Axum Peel tract at $5 per acre, but I never have known how much it run out, and please inform me how many acres it plotted out; if so, you will oblige me.
“Yours, etc., Henry Parker.”
The plaintiff did not reply to this letter, and on the 22d of January, 1895, the defendant wrote again to the plaintiff, which letter the evidence shows is lost, but its contents are shown by the testimony of the appellee, Parker; and in this second letter he gave no notice or intimation that he intended to enforce the forfeiture. In answer to the question, referring to this letter, “State, if you can, the contents of your letter to the Camp Manufacturing Company demanding payment of your timber,” he answers, “I wrote them my money was due, and I wanted it. The letter was dated January 22, 3895.”
On the 7th of February, 1895, the plaintiff sent the defendant a check for $116.48, and wrote him as follows:
“Franklin. Va., Feb. 7th, 1895.
“Mr. Henry Parker, Aulander, N. O.—Dear Sir: Yours of ,Tan. 10th came duly to hand, and we would have sent check sooner, but have been waiting to try and give you the information asked for, but now find that we will*708 have t(5 see our Mr; Rogers, before giving -you the information asked for. We now inclose our check for $116.48; this being the same as paid you last year. Shoúld we find upon investigation that you are entitled to any more, will send you check for thal. Trusting this will be satisfactory, we remain
“Yours, truly, Camp Manufacturing Co.,
“By R. X Camp.”
This check, Parker, on the 20th of February, 1895, returned to the plaintiff, with the following letter:
“Gentlemen: I have received your letter inclosing check. I return the check. Under the terms of our contract, you have forfeited all right to the timber, and you must not undertake to cut it without further agreement. You received my demand of the 10th, and again of the 22nd, and did not remit within ten days. I refer you to the contract of extension. I will, however, give you a chance to enter into another agreement with me if you wish it.
“Very respectfully, ’ Henry Parker.
“Camp Manufacturing Co., Franklin, Va.”
It will be observed that the contract of May 80, 1893, between the plaintiff and defendant and wife for an extension of time, refers to a contract “made between Parker and wife, parties of the first part, and W. P. Taylor, which contract was made in January, 1889.” It does not in terms embrace and describe the three contracts herein-before designated as made in January, 1889. Because of this omission in the contract of extension, counsel for the defendant insists that the contract of extension is void for indefiniteness, and that the bill should be dismissed on that ground. This contention cannot be sustained. Parker and wife were parties grantor in all three of the deeds of January 9, 1889, and Taylor was one of the grantees in all three of the deeds. The basis of the annual payment of 8 per cent, on the purchase’money named in the contract with Taylor was the whole of the purchase money paid under the three contracts for the timber conveyed, which amounted to $1,456, the interest on which, at 8 per cent., amounted to $116.48.- The parties dealt on the basis of the three contracts. The defendant got the benefit of the three contracts, and no question was ever raised as to what timber was included in the extension contract of May 30, 1893, until after the bringing of this suit. The whole correspondence and every act of the parties shows that all of the timber conveyed in the three contracts of January 9, 1889, was intended to be embraced in the contract of extension. This being the understanding of the parties, the defendant, having gotten the benefit of the agreement under this understanding,- is estopped from repudiating a contract under which the parties acted, and the effect of which they mutually understood.
The amount of interest claimed by the defendant was 8 per cent, on $1,456. The record shows that according to a 'survey made of the three tracts of land by John F. Newsom, for Taylor and Brinkley, after they had purchased the timber, the purchase money that was paid for the same was $1,426.92, the interest on.which at 8 per cent, would be $114.15. This difference is what led the plaintiff to say, in its letter of January 17, 1894, in sending its check to the defendant for $116.48: “This amount does not exactly agree with the papers which we have in the office, and we will thank you to advise
There are certain clearly defined and fixed principles touching the doctrine of forfeiture, which we will apply to the facts presented by the record in this case. ,
Tate v. Crowson; 28 N. C. 65, was a case where a lease was given upon condition that the lessees, at the end of each year, should give bond and surety for the rent of the succeeding year. The contract contained this condition: ,
“And, in case they [the lessees] should fail at llio end of any one year to give such bond and security, then this lease to cease and terminate, and the said Thos. B. Tate shall have the right to enter into the premises, and take the same into his possession.”
“But the law leans against forfeitures, and is very strict in requiring a lessor to do everything literally, at the time and place needful to work it. The lessor is not compelled to avail himself of a forfeiture, hut he may waive it; and therefore, where the agency of the landlord is involved in any way in the act which is to work or prevent a forfeiture, he ought to so act as to make it appear clearly that he means to insist' upon the forfeiture, and thereby enable the other party, by compliance in time, to save his land.”
In Insurance Co. v. Eggleston, 96 U. S. 572, the supreme court says:
“We have recently, in the case of Insurance Co. v. Norton, Id. 234, shown that forfeitures are not favored in the law, and that courts are always prompt to seize hold of any circumstances that indicate an election to waive a forfeiture or an agreement to do so on which the party has relied and acted.”
It is insisted on behalf of the defendant that time is of the essence of the contract of May 30, 1893, and this appears to be the view taken by the circuit court. We do not deem it necessary, in our view of the case, to discuss this question. In Cheney v. Libby, 134 U. S. 68, 10 Sup. Ct. 498, where the same point was made and insisted upon, the supreme court said:,
“But there are other principles, founded on justice, that must control the decision of the present case. Even where time is made material by express stipulation, the failure of one of the parties to perform a condition within the particular time limited will not in every case defeat his right to a specific performance, if the condition be subsequently performed, without unreasonable delay, .and no circumstances have intervened .that would render it unjust or inequitable to give such r.elief. The discretion which a court of equity has to grant or refuse specific performance, and which is always exercised with reference to the circumstances of the particular case before it, may, and of necessity must, often be controlled by the conduct of the party who bases his refusal to perform the contract upon the failure of the other party to strictly comply with its conditions.”
We deduce from these decisions that a party (in a case like this) seeking the enforcement of a forfeiture must, where notice is required, do everything literally at the time and place needful to work it; that, where he indicates an election to waive a forfeiture, the court will not enforce it; and that, even where time is made material, on the failure of one of the parties to perform the condition) where the condition has been subsequently performed without unreasonable delay, the court will not enforce a forfeiture.
We think it clearly appears from the record that the defendant waived his election to enforce a forfeiture at the time he might have done so by the terms of the agreement. Instead of the letter of January 10, 1895, being a notice which informed the plaintiff that, unless it paid the interest due within 10 days, the forfeiture would be enforced, it amounted to nothing more than a request that the plaintiff ascertain the amount of interest due, and send a check for the same. As further showing a waiver of the forfeiture, the defendant, on the 22d of January, 1895, sent a second request of the same tenor as that made in the letter of the 10th of the same month.
“It is admitted that Henry 1’arker, the second day after receiving said check, consulted F. I). ‘Winston, his attorney, at liis home in Windsor, as to his rights under ills contract; and, upon being advised that the contract was at an end by a failure of the company to remit within ten days after notice, he wrote the company, and returned the check.”
It is thus seen that, at the time the defendant made his election to enforce the forfeiture, the plaintiff had complied with defendant’s request to send him a check, and had fully paid, if it had not overpaid, the amount due the defendant; and that, under the circumstances, without unreasonable delay.. Certainly, no injustice or injury was done the defendant by the short postponement of payment. On the other hand, the forfeiture claimed involves valuable property rights of the plaintiff. It is not the termination of a naked lease, without loss to the lessee, but involves the loss to the plaintiff of a large quantity of valuable timber, for which the defendant had been fully paid before the parlies made the contract of extension. To permit the defendant to enforce his claim of forfeiture, without having given the notice provided for in the contract of extension, will be to allow him to take possession of property for which he has received value, and the title to which is vested in the plaintiff; and this, on a contract having no other purpose than to give the plaintiff further time within which to remove the timber it had purchased, and for which it had paid. To do this would be unjust and inequitable to the plaintiff. The decree of the circuit court will he reversed, and the cause will be remanded, with directions to the court below to proceed in conformity to this opinion. Reversed.