184 Ky. 200 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
On September 26,1907, the appellant, John E. Golden, entered into a contract with the appellee, ¥m. M. Cornett, by which Golden purchased a large tract of land from Cornett. The price agreed to be paid for the land, was $10.00 per acre, and of which $200.00 was paid at the time, and the remainder was agreed to be paid, thereafter, when the land should have been surveyed and the quantity ascertained, and a deed, conveying a good title, tendered, and toward this end, Cornett and Golden, each, undertook certain covenants, which are not necessary to be adverted to, as the questions, arising out of them, were fully considered in an opinion of this court, rendered on the 13th day of June, 1913, on a former appeal of this case, and may be found in 154 Ky. 438. Suffice it to say, that on the 19th day of November, 1910, Cornett instituted this suit, in the circuit court, against Golden, and in which he alleged, that the contract, which he had entered into with Golden, was a contract by which he had sold to Golden an option to purchase the land on •or before the 1st day of December, 1907, and that Golden had failed to exercise the option or to purchase or pay for the land, within the time agreed; that the option had expired, and that Golden was then claiming, that he had purchased the land, and that the writing with the claim of Golden cast a cloud upon his title, and asked, that the
Much argument is indulged by counsel, in their briefs, upon the question, as to whether or not Cornett, after the decision of this court, and the return of the action to the circuit court, should have been permitted, by amended petition, to seek to set aside the contract, upon the ground of fraud, which was a. distinct cause of action from the one relied upon by him in his originaljpetition, and whether the Riverside Coal & Timber Company, be-‘ ing a privy of Cornett, should have been permitted to
As to the defense of the Riverside Coal & Timber Company, that it was a purchaser for value, without notice of the equity of Golden, The evidence indisputably shows, that it had both constructive and actual notice of the contract between Golden and Cornett. It knew of the litigation between them, and while the action was pending and before the judgment of September 27, 1912, entered into negotiations with Cornett'to purchase the land. The deed was prepared at that time, but, was not delivered or accepted, until twenty or more days
This, however, was denied, and the facts as they appear from the record, are, that, on the 22nd day of May, 1903, Cornett entered into a contract with one Heydrick, for the sale of the land, and that the contract was recorded, in the office of the clerk of the county court, on the 24th day of July, 1903. It is alleged and denied, that this contract was abandoned by both parties. There is nothing in the record to indicate, that anything was ever done or attempted, in the way of carrying out this contract, until it is claimed that the sale evidenced by the deed of September 23,1912, was made in fulfillment of it. The deed is not in the record, and hence, we have no way of knowing whether it purports to be made, on account of the contract of May 22, 1903, or not, or what it purports to be. Cornett certainly abandoned the contract with Heydrick, as he sold the land, thereafter, first, to the Ford Lumber Company, and then to Golden. The contract, with Heydrick, recites, that the price to be paid for the land was $6.00 per acre, but, the other evidence is, that the price given or promised Cornett by the coal and timber company, when he made the deed, was $15.00 per acre. It is claimed, that Heydrick assigned the contract to the Riverside Coal & Lumber Company, on February 20,1912, but this is denied, and there is no evidence of the assignment ever having* been made. This court had'before it, for consideration, in Heydrick v. Dickey, 154 Ky. 475, a contract similar in its terms, to the one between Cornett and Heydrick, and it there held, that such a contract was unilateral and more in the nature of an option, than an executory contract of sale, and that time, was of the essence of such a contract, and the time for the grantee to make his election to buy or not to buy not being definitely fixed in the contract, it was his duty to make his election within a reasonable, time and demand performance of it, and if he failed to do either for a period of eight years, he was, at least, not entitled then, to have a specific performance of it. The contract, between Cornett and Heydrick, fixed twelve months from the execution of the contract, as the time within which, the contract shlould be closed, by the making of a deed and the payment of the money, unless Cornett refused to make the deed, and there is neither averment nor proof that he declined to make the deed. It is apparent, that
Another defense, urged by the Riverside Coal & Timber Company, was, that Golden was insolvent and unable to carry out his contract to purchase the land. - The contract between Golden and Cornett, however, was a contract for the sale of the land, and Cornett’s remedy, was to tender a good title and sue for a specific performance of the contract, or for a recovery of the purchase money, and he could not abandon the contract under circumstances, which justified a judgment against him, in favor of Golden, for a specific performance of it.
The judgment is therefore reversed, and cause remanded with directions to set aside the judgment, and for other proper proceeding's, not inconsistent with the former opinion of this court, and this opinion.