98 Neb. 84 | Neb. | 1915
May 23, 1910, the parties entered into the following contract, which is partly printed and partly written:
“CONTRACT FOR CLOSING SALES.
“This agreement, entered into by and between A. J. Edmiston, as party of the first part, and L. U. Hupp and Richard McCluhan, as party of the second part, witnesseth: That said party of the first part has this day bargained and sold, and by these presents does bargain, sell and agree to convey by a good and sufficient warranty deed, January 1, 1911, * * * the following real estate in Sully county, state of South Dakota, to wit: The southeast quarter of section twenty-one in township one hundred thirteen, range seventy-eight.
“It is hereby agreed that said party of the second part. is to pay to said party of the first part, as the purchase price of said real estate, the sum of forty-six hundred forty dollars, payable as follows: Two hundred dollars cash, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged. Three thousand dollars payable January 1, 1911. The parties of the second part hereby assume a mortgage of fourteen hundred forty dollars drawing six per cent, per annum from May*85 28, 1910. Said party of the first part hereby reserves the following crops now growing on said real estate: “Possession of said real estate to be given on or before the 1st day of January, 1911. Deed to be made and delivered at Morse Bluff, Nebraska, on or before the 1st day of January, 1911.
“Said party of the first part hereby agrees to furnish said party of the second part an abstract of title showing perfect title thereto. Should said abstract show perfect title, said purchase price is to be paid in the manner aforesaid. Should abstract not show perfect title, party of the first part is granted two months in which to perfect the same. Should the abstract disclose a title so defective that same cannot be made perfect, then this contract shall be void, and any and all sums of money paid hereunder shall be repaid to party of the second part. Should either party to this contract fail, neglect or refuse to comply with each and every material agreement herein contained, on his part to be performed, the party so in default shall forfeit and pay over to the party not in default as liquidated damages the sum of one hundred dollars. In witness whereof, said parties have hereunto set their hands this 23d day of May, 1910.”
It is claimed by Edmiston, the plaintiff, to be a contract for the sale of the land described. It is claimed by the defendants to be merely an option to purchase; but they insist that if the contract, strictly construed, amounts to a contract for the sale and purchase of the land, nevertheless they understood, it to be a mere option contract, and that it should be so construed, in order that it may meet the mutual intentions of the parties. At the time the contract was made the defendant McCluhan paid the plaintiff $100 in cash, and the defendant Hupp paid him $50 in cash and gave his promissory note for $50. In December following the execution of the contract the plaintiff and his wife executed a warranty deed in due form for the premises, and deposited it, together with an abstract of title, in the bank at Morse Bluff, for delivery to the defendants, with instructions, to deliver these papers to the defendants up
For some time prior to the making of this contract, the plaintiff was the station agent at Morse Bluff, Nebraksa, and the defendant Hupp was the village barber, but conducted a real estate business as a side' line, while the defendant McCluhan was a well-to-do farmer living close to the village. In the spring of that year McCluhan arranged to go to Blunt, South Dakota, near which town this land is located, with a real estate dealer who was offering land in that vicinity for sale. He bought his railroad ticket from plaintiff, and plaintiff gave him the numbers of his land and suggested that he look it over. However, Mc-Cluhan did not inspect the land on that occasion. Shortly after the return of McCluhan from South Dakota, Hupp and the plaintiff entered into negotiations, but McCluhan and plaintiff never had any conversation in relation to the agreement. The contract was drawn, at the bank on blanks furnished by Hupp. The defendants testified that they thought they were signing an option contract, and that if they failed to complete the deal they would simply lose $100 each as provided in the final paragraph, or the stipulation in the contract. It is conceded that the defendant Hupp was, and is, insolvent, and his lack of means was, without doubt, known to the plaintiff. Defendants claim that they entered into this agreement, hoping that before the expiration of their option they might be able to sell the land at a profit, and with this in view risked the small payment which they made, but that they never understood that they were bound to pay the balance of the purchase price unless they might so elect. In December following
The issues appear to be narrowed down to the one question: What kind of an agreement did these parties believe they were making? Section 341 of the Code provides: “When the terms of an agreement have been intended in a different sense by the parties to it, that sense is to prevail against either party in which he had reason to suppose the other understood it.” Did the plaintiff have the right to suppose that the defendants thought they were entering into a contract which bound them irrevocably to the purchase of the land? He knew that Hupp had little, if any, means. He also had reason to believe that neither of the parties had inspected the land. The clause in the contract providing that, if either party defaulted, he should pay liquidated damages in the sum of $100 might well be understood by men who are not learned in the law to mean that, by forfeiting this amount, they would be relieved from all liability. It stands to reason that the defendant Hupp, who was without means, would
Specific performance is not generally a legal right, but is directed to the sound legal discretion of the court, and it will not be granted where its enforcement would be unjust. The plaintiff waited more than two years before bringing this action. It is not necessary to decide, and we do not decide, that by this delay he is barred of any remedy he might have; but it is a circumstance which we feel at liberty to consider in determining the view which the parties themselves took of the contract. Even assuming that the plaintiff believed he had made a contract for the sale of the property, we are constrained to believe that the defendants understood it in quite a different way; that they believed they had taken an option only, and that the plaintiff was aware of the view taken by the defendants.
The decree of the district court is
Reversed.