85 Wis. 649 | Wis. | 1893
The following opinion was filed May 23, 1893:
On the 3d of January, 1891, the respondent, Gla/rh, signed, sealed, and delivered to the appellant, Burr, the following agreement or option:
“ Witnesseth, that for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar paid by the said second party [Burr] to said first party [Ciarle], receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, said first party does hereby agree to sell, transfer, and convey to said second party, by a good and sufficient deed of warranty, free and clear of all liens and incumbrances of any nature-whatever, at any time within nine months from this date, upon the payment to said first party by said sec*651 ond party of the sum of twenty-three thousand and five hundred dollars ($23,500) cash, the following real estate situated and being in the city of Stevens Point, county of Portage, and state of Wisconsin, to wit: [Here follows a long description of the property by metes and bounds, lying on the Wisconsin river, and a dam across the river, with its appurtenances, rights, and privileges, the piers and booms in the river, the said mill thereunto belonging, and tools, machinery, rights, and franchises thereunto belonging, with reservations of the property belonging to the Jackson Milling Company, known as the ‘North Star Mills,’ and the right of way of a railroad company.] It is hereby agreed and understood that the said second party shall have the exclusive right to purchase the above-described property upon the terms hereinbefore mentioned, at any time within nine months from this date.
“ [Signed] OweN Claee. [Seal.] ”
It is alleged in the complaint that the appellant, Burr, made a written acceptance of this option or proposal, and unconditionally, on the 7th day of July, 1891, and that on the 3d day of September,-1891, the respondent (the plaintiff) tendered and offered to the appellant (the defendant) a warranty deed of the premises, in accordance with the terms of the aforesaid contract, with the usual covenants as to title, possession, and against incumbrances, duly executed, witnessed, and acknowledged by the plaintiff and his wife, and at the same time demanded the said sum of $23,500, the consideration therefor, and the defendant refused to pay the same.
The answer of the defendant, Burr, states substantially the following facts: (1) There was another action pending in the same court between the same parties and for the same cause of'action. (2) The option or proposal was made as alleged. (3) There was a sawmill on the premises-, with
The matters of this answer were set up in the complaint in the other action pending, by the defendant, Burr, against the plaintiff, Clark, and the issues and findings are the same in both actions, and the two appeals were heard together. In the other action Burr, the defendant here, as the plaintiff, demands the specific performance of the contract as modified by said condition of acceptance, and in this action the plaintiff, Clark, demands judgment for ■the whole of $23,500 on a tender of the deed of the prem
Among other findings of the above facts the circuit court found “ that all of said transactions were had at one and the same interview between said parties on the 9th day of July.” These transactions are found immediately above, and are the written acceptance of the offer, and the written demand of the defendant, Burr, to have the said $9,500 insurance money credited on or deducted from the said $23,500, the consideration of the offer. They being one and' the same transaction, and such we understand to be the above finding, there was no unconditional acceptance of the option or offer made by the plaintiff, Glark. The acceptance was conditional upon the deduction of the insurance money from the consideration of $23,500, and an offer to pay the balance. The finding is supported by the evidence. It is certain that the defendant never offered to pay to the plaintiff the whole of the $23,500 for the property as it then was. The defendant alleges in his answer that the written acceptance and the written demand for said deduction were made at the same time. The plaintiff does not pretend, that on the 9th day of July, when he claims that the defendant made an unconditional written acceptance of his offer, he then offered to convey, or that he was ready to convey, the premises to the defendant. There was a mortgage on the property and he afterwards paid and discharged it by applying on it said insurance money, which was payable to the mortgagee. Then, and riot until then, was he ready to make the deed, and on the 2d day of September, 1S91, he first tendered the deed to the defendant on his payment of the whole $23,500; and the defendant refused to accept the deed on that condition, and refused to pay the money. This was virtually a re
The facts and the findings of the court clearly show that there never has been a contract of the parties for the purchase of the property. The minds of the parties have never met upon the subject. The condition of the property had materially changed after the option was given, and the so-called “acceptance” of it was burdened with a condition suitable to such changed condition of it. The defendant refused to accept the option, and proposed to buy the property for the same price, deducting the insurance, and the plaintiff refused to sell on this condition, or to accept the defendant’s proposal. After the plaintiff was able to make the deed, he renewed the first proposition, and the defendant refused to accept it. And so the matter stands, and such were the conclusion and end of the whole transaction, and neither party is bound by any completed contract.
A contract of purchase is the first necessity of an action for specific performance or for the purchase money, and there is no contract. The court cannot advise the parties what they had better do under the circumstances. It has no such jurisdiction. The parties must come before the court with a contract to be enforced, or to recover damages for its breach. The position of the respondent before this court is that there was a completed contract upon the ’acceptance of the offer, and that of the appellant is that there was a completed contract in some way, and that in equity he is entitled to have the deduction of the insurance money made from the $23,500 consideration. But we cannot take cognizance of the case upon such a voluntary and mutual submission of it, against the facts and finding of the court.
The acceptance, by letter, of a proposal by letter to sell
The acceptance in this case is accompanied by a demand widely and essentially different from the offer, suited to the changed condition of the property, and for deduction of’nearly half of the consideration. It is not an acceptance, but a new proposal or offer by the defendant, which is also rejected by the plaintiff. The law in such a case is too well settled and apparent to require the citation of more authorities.
A motion by the appellant, Burr, for a rehearing in the case of Burr v. Clark, was denied September 26, 1893.