43 Wash. 301 | Wash. | 1906
This is an action for the recovery of money, brought hy the receiver of the Colby Trading Company, an insolvent corporation. Among the effects of said corporation, which passed into the possession of the receiver, was a certain written contract between Dexter Horton. & Cbmpany and the said corporation The contract hore date January 2,1903, and provided that Dexter Horton & Company agreed to sell and convey to said corporation certain real estate
“Provided, however, that this agreement is made subject to the final determination of the cause now pending in the Hnited States circuit court of appeals for the ninth circuit,
The installment payments due upon the contract in the months of February, March and April, 1903, were duly paid, and these, together with the $2,000 cash paid when the contract was executed, made the total sum of the payments $2,-550. The suit mentioned in the above quoted portion of the contract, which was. pending in the United States circuit court of appeals at the time the agreement was made, was thereafter, on or about the 19th day of October, 1903, decided adversely to Dexter Horton & Company, and to the effect that the London & San. Francisco Bank, or Arthur Scrivener as its trustee, had a valid mortgage upon the land covered by the contract, which was a lien thereon at the time the contract was made and at all times thereafter, the same being superior and paramount to the title of Dexter Horton & Company. After the decision in said cause by the United States circuit court of appeals, Dexter Horton & Company applied to the supreme court of the United States for a writ of certiorari to the said circuit court of appeals, for the review of said cause. The application was denied. There has been no appeal, and the decision remains unreversed and unmodified.
The cause was submitted to the court without a jury, upon the pleadings as the agreed statement of facts, which the court accepted as its findings of facts;. Conclusions of law from such facts were entered to the effect that the plaintiff is not entitled to the return of any of the money paid by said insolvent corporation on the contract set forth in the complaint, and that the action should be dismissed. Judg
It appears that* prior* to the time the contract between the parties was made* the United States circuit court had decreed that the lands about which they contracted were not subject to the lien of a certain mortgage. That decreh was, however, subject to reversal on the appeal heretofore mentioned. The agreement provided that, if the final judgment should be adverse to this respondent, thereupon all rights and obligations of the parties to the agreement should cease, and respondent should repay the amount of payments theretofore made. Appellant contends that the decree of the circuit court of appeals was the final determination of the cause* while respondent insists that there could not be a final determination until final judgment was entered by the circuit court, which was, in fact* never entered adversely to respondent as we have seen from the statement of facta From the view we take of the case, it is not necessary to' pass upon the contention as to what was the actual final judgment within the meaning of the contract. We may, for the purposes of this opinion* assume that appellant is correct in the contention that the decision of the appellate tribunal was the final determination of the cause. Starting with that assumption, we will examine appellant’s further contention that, by the determination in the appellate court, the condition in the contract was determined in favor of appellant here, and that the obligation of this respondent 1» return the money it had received became absolute without regard to' whether appellant had paid all installments theretofore due under the contract or not. It will be remembered that several payments were in default long before the .decision of the appellate court. Time was made of the essence of the contract, and it was also specifically provided that, if default should be made in any of the payments, all rights of appellant under the contract should be wholly at an end, and that respondent should re
Appellant’s next point is that the contract was nudum pactum,. It interpreted the contract to mean simply that respondent promised to convey if a certain mortgage was not a lien on the land. The contract involved more than that. A court of competent jurisdiction had declared that the mortgage was not a lien, and an appeal had been taken. The contract was therefore not made with reference to an existing fact, but with reference to a future judgment to be rendered on the appeal. The nature of that judgment was then a matter of uncertainty. The fact that the contract contained a condition dependent upon the uncertain event did not make it nudum pactum. There were two considerations- for the payments and promises of appellant. One was the agreement of respondent to sell and convey the property subject to certain conditions; the other was the surrender by respondent of its right to contract with or sell to another. These were in a legal sense an advantage to appellant and constituted a consideration for his payments and promises. The following comprehensive statement of what is sufficient to constitute a consideration, for a promise shows that there was such in this case:
“It may be laid down as a general rule> in accordance with the definition given above, that there is a sufficient consideration for a promise if there is any benefit to the promisor or any loss or detriment to the promisee. It is not necessary that a benefit-should accrue to the person making the promise; it is sufficient that something valuable flows from the person to whom it is made> o-r that he suffers some prejudice or inconvenience, and that the promise is the inducement to- the transaction. And in the matter of ‘a benefit, a mere expectation or hope, or a contingent benefit is sufficient; as, f'o-r example; the expectation of advantage or profit from the thing promised. Indeed there is a consideration if the promisee, in return
In Gulton v. Marcus, 105 Mass. 335, 43 N. E. 125, the promise was to return certain notes to the extent of $13,000 if the promisor found certain property to be worth the sum mentioned as its value. On failure to surrender the notes, it was sought to rescind the transaction; but the court said:
“But when a man acts in consideration of a conditional promise, if he gets the promise he gets all that he is entitled to by his act, and if, as events turn out, the condition is not satisfied and the promise calls for no- performance^ there is no failure, of consideration.”
The condition in the contract in question was not one which was under respondent’s control, leaving it to perform merely at its own election. In such a case the conditional promise does not make the contract unilateral. Michigan Stone etc. Co. v. Harris, 81 Fed. 928.
We therefore think the court did not err, and the judgment is affirmed.
Mount, O. I., Dunbar, Crow, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.
Reported in 86 Pac. 576.