57 Wash. 106 | Wash. | 1910
On January 31, 1907, the appellants entered into a written contract with the respondents in the words following, omitting signatures and acknowledgment:
“Real Estate Contract.
“San Francisco, January 31, 1907.
“Received from Herbert V. Perry and Chas. H. Colpe the sum of five thousand ($5,000) dollars as deposit for the purchase by them from us of the Washington Block, situated on First Avenue, Seattle, King County, Washington, legally described as follows:
“The purchase price of said property to be two hundred
The abstract of title was delivered to the respondents in due time, and by them submitted to their attorneys for examination. About May 1 the respondents ascertained that the'wife of the appellant Dawson was insane and confined in
“December 26, 1907.
“To Erik O. Lindblom and Richard B. Dawson,
“San Francisco, California:
“You and each of you, will take notice that, because of your having failed, refused and neglected to perform the contract you made with us on the 31st day of January, 1907, for the sale and transfer to us of the Washington Block on First Avenue, in the city of Seattle, Washington, free from all encumbrances, except a certain mortgage specified in said contract, we have elected to rescind and do hereby rescind the said contract and every part thereof; and you will also take notice that, in addition to the sum of five thousand dol
On January 17, 1908, the wife of the appellant Dawson was discharged from the sanitarium, and on April 1 the appellants tendered performance. On January 25 this suit was commenced for the recovery of $5,000 paid by the respondents on the contract, terminating in a judgment in their favor. The judgment has been brought here for review by an appeal.
The first error assigned is that, under the contract, the payment of the purchase price and the execution and delivery of the deed are concurrent acts, and that the respondents, before declaring a rescission, were required to tender performance. Admitting this as a general rule, the inquiry is, is it applicable in this case. It is conceded, that the appellants own the property in equal shares; that the appellant Dawson was a married man at the time he acquired the property, and that, at the time of the execution of the contract and continuously thereafter until after the respondents gave notice of their election to rescind, his wife May Dawson was insane and incapable of doing business. It is well settled in this state that property acquired by either spouse after marriage is presumed to be community property. Assuming for the present that the interest of the appellant Dawson in the property was of a community nature, it becomes apparent that a tender of performance would have been a useless thing. The appellants, as the respondents knew, could not then convey a good, marketable title free from defects, as they had engaged to do.
“Readiness and willingness to perform on their part would take the place of actual performance, and a formal tender
See, also, Sutthoff v. Maruca, ante p. 102, 106 Pac. 632; Hartley v. James, 50 N. Y. 38.
The court found:
“(5) That upon the plaintiffs ascertaining the defects in the title to said property, they notified defendants thereof and demanded of the defendants that they perfect their title to said property, in order that they might convey good title to the plaintiffs according to the terms of said contract.
“(6) That, although the plaintiffs were at all times ready, willing and able to perform said contract, and had offered so to do, the defendants had failed, refused and neglected to perfect their title to said property, and at none of the times mentioned in the complaint, nor at any of the times down to this date have the defendants had good and marketable title to said property.”
The finding that the respondents were ready and willing to perform is abundantly supported by the evidence. Upon discovering the insanity of the wife, about May 1, 1907, they •demanded that the appellants proceed with diligence in order that they might convey a marketable title. Several conferences were held between counsel for the respective parties and, tiring of the delay, the respondent Perry went to San Francisco about the middle of December,. 1907, to ascertain from the appellants the cause of the delay. He testified that the appellant Dawson finally said to him that he must take such title as the appellants could then convey, and that his wife “could write as well as he could, even though she were insane;” that she would unite in the deed. It is obvious that the deed of an insane woman would not convey a marketable title. When the respondents ascertained that the wife of one, of the parties had been adjudged insane, they could have rescinded at once. While time is not made the essence of the contract, the appellants were bound to convey within a reasonable time.
“If a vendor agrees to convey title at a given time, and has no title when the date of performance arrives, the ques
By analogy the rule thus announced applies to this case. The appellants did not have a good, marketable title which they could convey, either when the contract was made or at the time of the rescission.
The next question to be considered is, Did the respondents waive their right to rescind by calling upon the appellants to perfect a marketable title? The attorney who conducted the negotiations for the respondents testified that the appellants’ counsel assured him that the guardian’s sale would be effected within sixty or ninety days. This assurance was given some time in May, 1907. The latter testified that the time stated was only an estimate. We think the answer is that they consented that the appellants should have a reasonable time in which to procure the title at a guardian’s sale. The record, however, discloses that the appellants did not proceed with reasonable diligence. Had they done so, the guardian’s sale could have been effected, if at all, before the date of the election to rescind.
Referring again to the testimony of the respondents’' counsel, we find that about May 25 he demanded the appointment of a local guardian, and refused to accept any title proceeding from a sale made by the foreign guardian. The petition for the appointment of a resident guardian was not filed until some three months later. It will be observed that the consideration to be paid for the property was $215,000. Admittedly the respondents could not be required to hold themselves in readiness indefinitely to pay this sum. Moreover the evidence tends to show that the appellant Dawson, a few days before the rescission, notified respondents that they must accept the title as it stood or not take it at all. He denies that he made this statement, but its truth is in harmony with the act of the respondents in
In Hawes v. Swanzey, 123 Iowa 51, 98 N. W. 586, cited by the appellants, it was held that, when the vendees discovered a defect in the title and did not demand a return of the advanced payment, and by frequent inquiries as to the progress made in the efforts of the vendor to perfect title they impliedly consented to a reasonable time to enable the vendor to cure the defects, and that having thus acquiesced in the delay “until the title was in fact perfected according to their demands and until plaintiff was fully prepared to comply with the contract on his part, equity will not allow defendants to assign that delay as a reason for absolving them from its performance on their part.” In Bales v. Williamson, 128 Iowa 127, 103 N. W. 150, also cited by the appellants, the vendee made the first payment when the contract was executed, and the second payment August 15,1902. The final payment was due March 1, 1903. In November, 1902, the vendors furnished the vendee an abstract of title, which was submitted to an attorney, who gave an opinion pointing out various defects in the title. In February, 1903, a corrected abstract was given to the vendee. On February 28 the vendor tendered a warranty deed, and on March 3 demanded payment. The vendee declined to make payment, insisting that the title was still defective. On March 13 the vendee gave the abstract to another attorney who, on March 16, advised that the defect be cured by an action to quiet title. The vendors, acting upon this advice, commenced an action which resulted in a decree quieting the title on September 2, 1903. Pending the action and on July 27, the vendee com
The appellants urge that the interest of the appellant Dawson in the premises was his separate property. The evidence which forms the basis for the contention is that the money which Dawson put into the property was earned by him at Nome, Alaska, and that, under the laws of that place, his earnings were his separate estate. The record discloses that both the husband and wife were at Nome, he working at different things, as she expressed it, and she keeping house. The wife further testified that the marriage occurred at Phoenix, Arizona, about seventeen years before the trial. We have not been able to discover from the record whether Nome was their domicile or merely their temporary abode. As we have stated, in this state the presumption is that all property acquired by either spouse after marriage is community property. This rule is so well established that the citation of authority is not necessary. The law of the domicile controls as to personal property acquired during coverture. Thayer v. Clarke (Tex. Civ. App.), 77 S. W. 1050. In the absence of evidence as to the domicile of the parties at the time the money was earned, the presumption will be indulged that the domiciliary law is the same as our own. Clark v. Eltinge, 29 Wash. 215, 69 Pac. 736. In Elliott v. Hawley, 34 Wash. 585, 76 Pac. 93, 101 Am. St. 1016, cited by the appellants, the record shows that the husband had not been in this state for ten years preceding the trial, and that the wife, who was asserting the separate character of the property in litigation, had never been a resident of this state. In Brookman, v. Durkee, 46 Wash. 578, 90 Pac. 914, 123 Am. St. 944, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 921, also cited by the appellants, the opinion states that the husband and wife were domiciled and had their
After the respondents had refused to take the title without the wife’s interest being conveyed, as we have pointed out, a resident guardian was appointed. In the petition for the appointment, united in by the husband, it was alleged that the interest of the husband and wife in the property was a community one. In the light of the acts of the appellant Dawson and the averment as to the nature of the title in his sworn petition, he will not now be heard to say that the wife had no interest in the property. Moreover, the contract required the appellant to convey a good, marketable title, free from defects, and it cannot be said that such a title could be conveyed by the deed of the husband alone. A title to be a marketable one must be one which a prudent investor, well informed as to the facts and their legal bearing, ready and willing to perform his contract, would be willing to accept. Such a title must be free from probable litigation and, except in rare cases, must be fairly deducible of record. 29 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 613. A “good title free from incumbrances as shown by a complete abstract of title” must be title disclosed by the records. A title based upon an ex parte affidavit showing the names of the heirs of the deceased owner is not such a title. Crosby v. Wynkoop, 56 Wash. 475, 106 Pac. 175; Watson v. Boyle, 55 Wash. 141, 104 Pac. 147.
It is finally contended that the respondents could not rescind without first cancelling, or offering to cancel, the contract which had been filed for record. The judgment recites that the contract has been rescinded by the respondents, and that it is of no further force or effect. The complaint sets forth the contract in haec verba, and alleges that the respondents have elected to rescind. The doctrine of status quo, as applied to this class of cases, is that the adverse party must be placed in substantially the same position he occupied before entering into the contract. This
The Washington Block is a business block situate on First avenue in Seattle. At the time of the execution of the contract, there were at least two unexpired leases upon the property, which the respondents insisted, and still insist, were incumbrances. They further urge that it was the duty of the appellants to procure their release in order to make the title marketable. Several conferences were held between the attorneys for the respective parties at which the leases were discussed and tentative propositions were made and considered. A reading of the evidence convinces us, however, that there was no meeting of minds of the contracting parties in this matter subsequent to the execution of the contract. The leases, under the holdings of this and many other courts, were an incumbrance upon the property, and the appellants’ title was not a good, marketable title free from defects. However, the concluding clause of the contract provides: “Purchasers to receive rents of said property from the date of the deed to them.” Whether this provision modifies that part of the contract providing for a good, marketable title is an interesting and important question which we do not find it necessary to decide. The case will be remanded with directions to modify the judgment so that the issuance of the execution will be suspended until the respondents have filed a release of the contract as herein provided. In all other respects the judgment will be affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Fullerton, Morris, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.