6 N.M. 380 | N.M. | 1892
This is an action in assumpsit upon the common counts simply, to recover the purchase money upon a contract under seal for the sale of land. The defendant pleaded the general issue. To prove her case, the plaintiff introduced evidence to the effect that the defendant, by his agent, had represented the title to the premises to be perfect, and that she had purchased relying upon such representations, but that, in. truth and fact, such representations were fraudulent. She introduced a contract of sale to prove its terms, and the amount she had paid on the same. The defendant objected to this evidence, upon the ground that the contract was sealed, and, as this was an action in assumpsit, it could not be received as evidence, as it could only be material and relevant in an action of covenant. (1) The plaintiff claimed that the contract was rescinded because of the false representations as to the title. In proving that the title was bad, the plaintiff introduced a “trust deed,” so-called, from one Apodaca to Julian Vow, through whom the title devolved upon the defendant, which trust deed passed the title to Vow for specific purposes solely, not in any sense requiring that he should possess the fee. And she contends that when the trust deed was executed, ,all right and interest to the land passed again to Apodaca, and that Vow had no interest in the property which he could pass to the grantors of the defendant. 'That at Apodaca’s death the property went to his heirs, and that, as the defendant did not possess the interests of all those heirs, his title was not good, as he had represented. The record, in the recorder’s office of Bernalillo county would have shown this title to be imperfect. The defendant contended that the plaintiff could have consulted, and that it was her duty To so have done, the records of the county recorder, ;and that she would there have found that the title was imperfect, and, as she has failed so to do, she can not mow complain. (2) That the title was good under the .so-called “trust deed,” as it in law passed to Vow a •fee. That, at least, there was afterward a good warranty deed given to Vow by Apodaca and wife to cure .any defects which might have been in Vow’s title, but That that deed was lost. The court heard evidence ¡«pon the loss of this alleged deed, and of the diligence rused in searching for it, and upon its execution, and Thereupon refused to allow evidence of its contents to ¡be given. (3) That the man Vow had title to the land in controversy by adverse possession. The court refused to allow evidence of this claim to be given. (4) Then, under the contract for sale of the property in' controversy, the defendant was under no legal obligation to make a good title until the last payment by the plaintiff, and that, as that time had not come, -the plaintiff could not rescind the contract; at least, not until she had placed the defendant in gtatu quo, ■and was not in default herself under any of the requirements of the contract. That she was in default in the payment of one or two installments under the contract, and that she had not offered to pay the defendant for the fourteen months use of the place when she attempted to rescind the contract; therefore he had not been placed in statu quo. There was a trial to a jury. Instructions given and refused. Some of the instructions asked to be given by the defendant were interlined by the court before they were given. Verdict for the plaintiff. Motion for a new trial, which was overruled. Judgment upon verdict for plaintiff, and the defendant appeals.
The defendant makes forty assignments of error, but it is unnecessary, for a proper decision of this case, ■to consider all of them. "We will consider only those which it seems to us fairly and correctly meet all the questions raised by the record.
1. It is insisted that, as this is an action in assumpsit, the contract for the sale of the land ought not to have been admitted in evidence, as it was under ■seal. This proposition would hold good if the contract had been introduced for the purpose of recovering under the terms of that instrument and for the breach •of its covenants. Then the action should have been by covenant. Chit. Pl. 115; 4 Am. & Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, 464. But it is contended in this case that the ■contract was rescinded. It is upon this theory that the plaintiff has proceeded. If this theory is correct, then plainly, as the defendant has received from the plaintiff money upon a contract which has now no existence, ■and as she has received no equivalent for her property, she is entitled to have it refunded. She certainly can not recover it under any of the terms of the land contract, for under her theory there is no such contract. Under such circumstances, where one becomes' possessed of another’s money by force of the terms of a contract which have failed, he holds the money for the use of that person, and, upon failing to redeliver it, may be made to respond in damages by the action of assumpsit. 7 Lawson, Rights, Rem. & Pr., sec. 3691; 1 Chit. Pl. 155. It was, then, clearly proper to admit the contract in evidence under this form of action, to prove how, when, and what amount had been paid upon it before it was rescinded.
The evidence in this case shows that the plaintiff delivered, or offered to deliver, the keys of the premises to the defendant, and vacated the place. It is contended, however, that the other party, here the defendant, should have been paid the rental value of the place for the time that the plaintiff occupied it, and that he was not in statu quo until this was done. This raises a nice question. “In statu quo” means being placed in the same position in which a party was at the time of the inception of the contract which is sought to be rescinded. Now, at that time the defendant had merely the possession of the place. If the jury believed the testimony, that was delivered to him, and hence he was in statu quo. It will be contended, however* that what he really possessed at the time of the contract was the possession of the premises, and the possibility of the rental value for the time which the plaintiff held it, and that the latter has not been returned. On the other hand, he has been in possession of the money of the plaintiff, which represents fully that rental value. If that value belongs to the defendant he has it, and he-could have pleaded a set-off and recovered it. As a matter of fact, the court instructed the jury to allow for the same; and if this was a proper instruction, as-there was no set-off pleaded, that instruction must have-been predicated upon the ground that in law the rental value was tendered and paid in the purchase money. Why should the plaintiff be called upon, before suing for what has wrongfully been taken from her, to pay over to the party who has deceived her yet more money as a condition precedent, when the law gives the vendor the right to plead a set-off and recover what is due him from the moneys actually in his hands? Supposing the defendant financially worthless, the practical operation of the contention here would be, to use a general principle .of law, to enlarge the gains of one whose wrong has already deprived the vendee of her money. It may be said that the plaintiff would have a lien for the money upon the land in question. But that is the fatal error in the defendant’s case — the title is not in the defendant. Upon that allegation the case rests; and the plaintiff gains her case only by substantiating it. If, then, the title is not in the defendant, then has-he any right to the rental value? Is not the plaintiff holden to the rightful owner of the fee for that rental value? If she is, then certainly she has placed the-defendant in statu quo when she gives him what she received from him — the bare possession. We do not-wish to be understood as holding that as a legal proposition, good in all cases, upon failure of title in a contract for sale of land, the vendor is placed in statu quoby the simple return of the possession of the land, but only that, under the peculiar circumstances of this case, that was all that was required. While a party must not be in default himself when he seeks to rescind a contract, yet in this case it would have been absurd for the plaintiff to have paid further installments upon a contract which she knew was guarantying her no-protection, especially as there was an attempt on the-part of the defendant to correct the defect in the title before she rescinded the contract, and there is no-showing that the default was not caused by the plaintiff waiting to see if this defendant could correct the title. It is not, however, the invariable rule that the vendee should place the vendor in statu quo before bringing an action for the purchase money. But it is held that a contract may be rescinded for fraudulent representations of the vendor’s title, or where it is necessary for the protection and indemnity of the vendee, and the action may be brought for the money paid before restoring possession. Taft v. Kessel, 16 Wis. 291, 297. The principle therein enunciated applies in this case.