138 Ga. 746 | Ga. | 1912
1. If one party to a continuing contract, consisting of mutual obligations, renounces and repudiates it prior to the date fixed for performance, the other party is at liberty either to immediately treat such renunciation as a breach of the contract and sue for damages sustained therefrom, or to treat the contract as still binding, and wait until the time arrives for performance, in order to give the party who has repudiated the contract an opportunity to comply with its terms. Ford v. Lawson, 133 Ga. 237 (5), 238 (65 S. E. 444), and citations. But where the contract is for the sale of land, and the seller renounces and repudiates the contract before the time specified for the execution of a deed and the surrender of possession, the seller* not putting it out of his power to comply with the contract, by sale to others, or otherwise, an action commenced by the purchaser against the seller to compel execution of a deed and to obtain a decree for title, upon such repudiation of the contract by the latter, before the time for the execution of a deed and delivery of possession, is premature. Barton v. New England Mortgage Co. (Miss.), 25 So. 362.
(a) A cause of action must have existed at the time of the institution of the suit; and the fact that pending the suit the time arrived for the execution of a conveyance by the seller, and that he thereafter continued to repudiate the contract, would not authorize the action to proceed for the relief sought.
(&) The rulings above announced are not in conflict with those made in Miller v. Jones, 68 W. Va. 526 (71 S. E. 248, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 408), relied upon by counsel, which merely sought to enforce certain provisions of the contract in regard to acceptance of payment of installments of purchase-money and other charges, and did not seek to compel the seller to execute a deed or to have title decreed to be in the purchaser before the time agreed upon for making the deed. Relief of the latter kind would, in effect, change the contract; and in the ease cited it was distinctly ruled that such could not be done.
2. Because the suit for specific performance, in which the only relief sought by the petition as amended was to have a decree for execution of a deed and to have title decreed in plaintiff, was premature, the judge erred in overruling the demurrer, and thereafter in directing the verdict and entering a decree in favor of the plaintiff for the relief sought.
3. Inasmuch as the action was premature, other questions which go to the merits of the case will not be decided.
Judgment reversed.