Eddy v. . Davis

116 N.Y. 247 | NY | 1889

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *249 The trial court found, as conclusions of law, that the defendant "was not entitled to a conveyance of property, or of such right of way until the full sum of sixteen hundred dollars, the consideration provided by said contract, was paid, and that the provision in said contract for deeding the premises to the defendant, upon the payment of eight hundred dollars and interest, was for his (defendant's) benefit, and he could avail himself of it at his option, by paying such money at the times provided in the contract, and demanding a deed and tendering a bond and mortgage; not having paid or made such demand or tender, and having waived his right *251 to make any claim under this provision, as appears in the sixth finding of fact, the contract was to be treated as if it had been omitted, and the action having been brought to recover installments due, no tender of a deed by the plaintiffs was necessary to enable them to maintain this action."

The sixth finding of fact referred to was as follows: "That immediately before the commencement of this action the plaintiffs, by their attorneys, applied to said defendant and informed him that plaintiffs were ready and willing to perform said contract on their part, if he was ready to pay, to which defendant replied that he could not pay, and said he wanted to give up the property, and thereupon plaintiffs commenced this action."

It is undisputed that within two months after the defendant entered into possession of the property plaintiffs sold all their adjoining land, and thus put it out of their power to comply with their agreement with defendant, and keep open a right of way to the rear of his store; and at the time of the offer mentioned in the finding of fact I have quoted the plaintiffs were powerless to fulfill their agreement. The finding, therefore, that they were ready to perform, or that their offer and defendant's refusal constituted a waiver of tender of the deed cannot be sustained. A tender imports not only readiness and ability to perform, but actual production of the thing to be delivered. The formal requisite of a tender may be waived, but to establish a waiver there must be an existing capacity to perform. (Nelson v. Plimpton Elevating Co., 55 N.Y. 484; Lawrence v. Miller, 86 id. 137; Bigler v. Morgan, 77 id. 318.)

Here there was no existing capacity, as, having sold all the adjacent lands, plaintiffs could not perform their covenant "to keep open a right of way" back of defendant's store. The conclusion of a waiver is not, therefore, sustained. If, however, the construction put upon the contract by the learned trial court, in the conclusion of law I have quoted, is correct, then the finding of a waiver of tender of performance is unimportant. *252

Never having paid $800 of the purchase-money, defendant was not in a position to demand the conveyance, and there being in the contract, as construed by the trial court, no covenant on the part of the plaintiff to deliver the deed until the full consideration was paid, tender of the conveyance as a condition precedent to recover for unpaid installments was not necessary, and no question as to the sufficiency of the facts to constitute a waiver of tender could legitimately arise.

Where a contract for the sale of land provides for partial payments of the purchase-money prior to the delivery of the deed, the vendor may sue for such installments when due without tendering a conveyance. (Paine v. Brown, 37 N.Y. 228;Harrington v. Higgins, 17 Wend. 376.)

But when, after the installments are all due, the vendor brings an action for the purchase-money, he is not entitled to recover without proving an offer before suit to convey the land to the defendant on receiving the purchase-price. When the last installment falls due the payment of the whole of the unpaid purchase-money and the conveyance of the land become dependent acts. (Beecher v. Conradt, 13 N.Y. 108.)

And the same rule applies when an action is brought for any installment payable at or after the term fixed for the delivery of the deed. (Grant v. Johnson, 5 N.Y. 247; Pordage v.Cole, 1 Saund. 320b, Sergeant Williams' note.) So that if the fair interpretation of the contract is, as was held by the trial court, that there was no obligation on plaintiffs' part to deliver a deed until the whole of the purchase-money was paid, except in case of a demand therefor by defendant after payment of $800 and tender of a bond and mortgage for the balance of the purchase-price, then the judgment was right and must be affirmed.

We come, therefore, to the consideration of the question whether the learned trial judge was right in his construction of the contract that the provision for a delivery of the deed, when $800 was paid, was one for the benefit of the defendant, enforceable only on his demand, or whether it was a covenant *253 on the part of the plaintiffs to deliver the conveyance at the time named.

We can find no support for the construction adopted by the trial court in the agreement itself, and it is not based upon any finding of fact.

The construction is harsh, unfair and unnecessary. The parties appear to have provided expressly for all matters between them. We expect naturally to find mutual obligations in the contract. The vendee agrees to pay the purchase-money, and we look for an agreement on the part of the vendor to convey. If it is not contained in the clause of the contract under discussion, it does not exist in express terms, and we are forced to imply it from the nature of the instrument.

In Robb v. Montgomery (20 Johns. 15), cited by appellants, there was an express covenant to convey on payment of the purchase-money, and a further provision that if, after the first payment was made, defendant wished to get a deed, and to give a bond and mortgage for securing the two last payments, plaintiff would give a deed.

Thus the intent of the parties was clear that it was to be optional with the vendee whether he would take a deed on making the first payment.

Here there is no express covenant to give a deed at all, unless it is in the provision cited. The language used in this part of the contract does not express an option, but is that of a positive undertaking. It is: "Parties of the first part agree, onreceiving the sum of eight hundred dollars, * * * that they will execute and deliver * * * a sufficient deed."

We think the intent of the parties is plainly inferable from the language used, that this was a covenant on plaintiff's part to convey at the time and under the circumstances mentioned.

We have, therefore, an action to recover unpaid installments brought after the time stipulated for the delivery of the deed, and in such case, to entitle plaintiffs to recover, it was incumbent upon them to show an offer made before suit, to convey on receiving the stipulated part of the purchase-money. *254 (Grant v. Johnson and Beecher v. Conradt, supra.) The facts of this case are very similar to the cases cited. InGrant v. Johnson the contract was to sell the land for $950; $200 of which was payable in April, 1846, and $200 in April, 1847, and the balance in two annual payments thereafter.

The seller was to give possession in November, 1845, and a deed in May, 1846. The action was for the installment due in April, 1847, and this court held that delivery of the deed was a condition precedent to the payment of the second installment, and having made no tender, plaintiff could not recover.

In Beecher v. Conradt the purchase-money was payable in five installments. None were paid, and after they were all due plaintiff brought an action for the whole purchase-money. This court held that while the covenants as to the first four installments were originally independent, when the last installment fell due, conveyance and payment were dependent acts, and that no part of the purchase-money could be recovered without tender of a conveyance before commencement of the action. To the same effect are Hoag v. Parr (13 Hun, 95); James v.Burchell (82 N.Y. 108); Smith v. McCluskey (45 Barb. 621). The determination of the question what are and what are not dependent covenants is not one free from difficulty, and many of the cases are so irreconcilable that they are studied with little profit or assistance to the judgment.

Each case must be determined by the cardinal rule of interpreting all contracts, viz., to ascertain the intention of the parties to the agreement; and here we think there is no doubt the intention was to deliver the deed of the property when $800 of the purchase-money was paid. For all the installments falling due prior to that time plaintiffs might have brought their action and recovered without proof of offer to convey, but having waited until after the time fixed for the delivery of the deed, payment and conveyance became dependent and concurrent acts, and tender of performance was essential on their part to an enforcement of *255 defendant's obligations under the contract. The case seems to fall directly within the spirit of the second rule suggested by Sergeant Williams in his note to Pordage v. Cole (supra): "When a day is appointed for the payment of money, and the day is to happen after the thing which is the consideration is to be performed, no action for the money can be sustained without averring a performance;" and the rights of the parties under such circumstances as exist in this case are clearly stated by Judge GARDNER in Beecher v. Conradt as follows: "The defendant has lost his right to pay the installments separately, and the plaintiff his right to enforce collection by separate suits. There is but a single cause of action, one and indivisible. The defendant, if he would obtain his due, must pay all, and the plaintiff, if he would recover, must show such a performance on his part as would entitle him to all the unpaid consideration." None of the cases cited by the appellant are in conflict with the rule stated, under the construction we have given the contract.

Robb v. Montgomery (20 Johns. 15), in one respect, I think, must be erroneously reported. The case states that the declaration averred non-payment of all the installments.

If we are to understand by this that the action was brought to recover the whole purchase-money, and to regard the court as holding that no tender of conveyance was necessary, then the case is in conflict with all the later authorities. But if the action was to recover the first installment only, then the decision is intelligible. I think the action must have been for the first installment. The case as reported arose upon a demurrer by defendant to a replication to a plea in the answer and involved the single question whether the assignment of the contract and the conveyance of the land to Bemus by the vendor, before the first installment was due (Bemus being ready and willing and having the capacity to convey to defendant) was a bar to the recovery. The court held that it was not, and in so deciding is in harmony with later decisions, which hold that in an action by a vendor for an installment of purchase-money falling due prior to the time limited for *256 the delivery of the deed, want of title in the vendor is not a defense. (Harrington v. Higgins, 17 Wend. 376.)

These and all kindred cases will be found, I think, to have arisen on independent covenants in contracts, and the rule established by them has no application in an action by a vendor for purchase-money brought subsequent to the day stipulated for the delivery of the deed.

The appellant makes the point that the agreement to keep open the right of way was a personal covenant, having no relation to the title, and its violation furnished no excuse for refusal to pay the purchase-money.

The appellant is not in a position to raise such a question, being concluded by the finding of the trial court, that such right of way was necessary to the proper enjoyment of the store, and that the parties intended that defendant should have such way, and that it should be conveyed to him with the store; and we think a right of way, which the trial judge found to constitute in value one-half of the property agreed to be sold, cannot be regarded as an immaterial part of the consideration of the defendant's obligation. Having put it out of their power to convey the property which they had agreed to sell, the plaintiffs were not able to make a valid offer of performance, and hence not entitled to recover the unpaid purchase-money.

The order of the General Term was right and should be affirmed, and judgment absolute rendered for the defendant on the stipulation, with costs.

All concur.

Order affirmed and judgment accordingly. *257

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