53 Wash. 32 | Wash. | 1909
This is an action to enforce the specific performance of a contract for the sale and exchange of real property. It is unnecessary to set forth the contract, but, in short, the plaintiff L. P. Coonrod agreed, for a certain
“My recollection is that the supreme court ruled upon a very recent case and held simply this: that where the agree*34 ment was that the abstract was to be satisfactory and the parties submitted it to an attorney and the attorney rejected it, that you could not compel a specific performance. I think this motion should prevail, Mr. Shaefer. I do not see how the court could perform this contract under the plaintiff’s own testimony. The plaintiff himself testified — the very last conversation — the defendant told’ him he was liable to sell the property to somebody else. Now, that shows the abandonment of the contract, because if he still considered himself held by the contract, he would not talk about selling it to somebody else. I think on the testimony of the plaintiff himself that this motion should be sustained.”
We think the motion should be sustained foi the last reason assigned by the court. When the abstract was presented, an opinion was filed by one Riddle, holding that the title was not good. The defendants also obtained an opinion from attorney Adams to the same effect.
Many questions are discussed in this case which it seems to us are not pertinent. Objections are raised by the appellants, that the court erred in not admitting the opinion of an abstract company, in answer to the opinion rendered by Adams. As we shall see further on, though, the opinion of the abstract company sufficiently affirmed the opinion rendered by attorney Adams to warrant the defendants in objecting to the title. The respondents contend that it was shown that the land in question, both that of the plaintiffs and that of the defendants, was the separate property of the two separate spouses, and that, therefore, this action could not be^maintained. But a sufficient answer to that objection is that the testimony shows that deeds were executed by the plaintiff L. P. Coonrod and his wife to the defendant I. J. Studebaker, and .by the said defendant and his wife to the plaintiff L. P. Coonrod, conveying this land in accordance with the' contract which had been made between the husbands, and this was a ratification of the contract entered into by the husbands.
It is also contended by the appellants that some of the ob
“A. Yes, there was. We discussed pro and con — the conversation, or rather the objection Mr. Adams had raised and the answers the title company had made to them, and one objection I read that the title company had made the two both agree upon, and I told him that I would send the abstract back and have it corrected. Q. Well, what did he say to that ? A. He said that if he still had the property when that came back and the abstract was made satisfactory, and he still had the property, it was a trade.”
So that it would seem that there was no further waiver of time by the respondent, and that he did not consider himself bound any longer, but that if, when the abstract was made
“A. He objected to certain phases of the abstract and said it would take too long to get the title perfected, and I told him the only vital objection that I could find was the first page not being certified to. Q. Did you have them certified after? A. I did. Q. Now, did he at the time tell you that he declared and cancelled this contract, declared it null and void? A. No, not at any time.”
Again:
“Q. And you say he never told you that the deal was off; that it had taken you too long to straighten your title? A. No, not till December and then he didn’t say it was off point blank.”
Again:
“Q. And he told you also at that time that if later on, if he still had the property that he might possibly deal with you? A. That was the last conversation we had in his office, early in December. Q. When he said that? A. Yes. Q. And then did you have a conversation thereafter you say in the early part of December? A. Well, that was about the middle of December. Q. The last conversation you had? A. That was the last conversation.”
Now, this is substantially the testimony of the appellant in relation to the objection of the title and the time agreed to by the respondent for the correction of the abstract. It seems, under the testimony adduced, that it is not necessary to go into the question of title in all its detail, as it is conceded by the appellant that at every time there was an objection made to the title, the objection in some material particular was admitted. The respondent having waited a reasonable length of time and the abstract still having to be corrected at the time he saw fit to rescind, he was justified in refusing to perform the conditions of the contract, and of course the appellant cannot enforce specific performance
The judgment is affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Chadwick, . Fullerton, Mount, and Crow, JJ., concur.