59 Wash. 108 | Wash. | 1910
Appeal from a decree of specific performance. The plaintiff below was H. A. Halferdahl. On motion James Kiefer has been substituted as respondent in this court.
In May, 1907, the defendant and H. V. Perry entered into a contract for the sale and purchase of lots 7 and 8, block 6, D. T. Denny’s second addition to North Seattle. The purchase price was fixed at $6,000, to be paid in two installments, $3,000 October 6, 1907, $3,000 October 6, 1908, with interest from date of contract. Time was made the essence. Neither of these installments was paid. The contract was assigned a number of times, and finally was transferred to H. A. Halferdahl, who brought the action October 6, 1908, pleading a waiver of the payment due October 6, 1907, and alleging a prior tender of $6,517, the amount then claimed to be due. Answer was filed, denying the waiver and admitting a tender of $5,000. Upon the trial the court ordered a specific performance of'the contract upon payment of the amount found due, and defendant appeals.
The only question to be considered here is appellant’s contention that the contract was forfeited. No offer of payment of the first installment was made October 6, 1907, and on October 7 the appellant mailed a written notice of forfeiture to Perry, addressed to him at his Seattle address, with appellant’s return card on the envelope. The same was not returned to appellant, but Perry testifies he did not receive the notice, and the court below so found. Some time thereafter appellant made leases of one of the lots to Jahn & Company, who inclosed the lots with a high board fence, and used it for storage purposes. The other lot was leased to McGrath & Duhamel, who erected a substantial one-story building thereon, upon stone piers, which was used for the storage of material used in the constructing of the post-office building at Seattle. It is also shown that appellant has paid taxes and assessments on the two lots, amounting to $177.10, which under the contract Perry assumed. Some time after the notice of forfeiture was mailed to Perry, he
It seems clear from all these circumstances that appellant had exercised its election of forfeiture, and that such was the understanding of Perry and Halferdahl. Both written and verbal notice of such election was given. Whenever interviewed by Perry or others representing his interest, appellant maintained its position that the contract had been forfeited. The placing of Jahn & Company and McGrath & Buhamel in possession of the premises, and the character of the improvements erected upon the premises under these leases was in itself notice. It is true that it was understood that, until deed passed, the appellant was permitted to continue in its use of the premises, but-the change and character of the possession by Jahn & Company and McGrath & Duhamel was so different from the use and possession exercised by appellant that it must be held as a notice and election on the part of appellant to assume ownership over the premises and forfeit any right given Perry under the contract. If the first payment had been made, then the making of the second payment and the delivery of the deed would be mutual and dependent covenants, and appellant could not declare a forfeiture without a tender of the deed. But this was not the situation at the time the first payment fell due. There-
“It may, then, be laid down as an acknowledged rule in courts of equity . . . that where the party who applies for a specific performance has omitted to execute his part of the contract by the time appointed for that purpose, without being able to assign any sufficient justification or excuse for his delay; and when there is nothing in the acts or conduct of the other party that amounts to an acquiescence in that delay, the court will not compel a specific performance. The rule appears to be founded in the .soundest principles of policy and justice. Its tendency is to uphold good faith and punctuality in dealing.” Benedict v. Lynch, 1 Johns Ch. (N. Y.) 370, 7 Am. Dec. 484.
The same rule has been announced even in cases where time is not made of the essence (Stewart v. Allen, 47 Fed. 399; Taylor v. Longworth, 39 U. S. 172) ; especially where, as in the case before us, no equitable reason is shown for the default and noncompliance. It is undoubtedly the correct rule that equity will not enforce a forfeiture until its right has been clearly established, but that does not militate against the equally well established rule that a forfeiture may be declared for a nonexcusable failure to comply with the terms of the contract as to payment, when by its terms, or its equitable interpretation, time is of the essence. Douglas v. Hanbury, 56
Respondent urges that, before a forfeiture could be declared, a deed must be tendered, and cites cases from this court where such a rule is announced. Such would be the rule if the covenants were mutual and concurrent, as for instance as we have before referred to, the default was in the last payment only. But such is not the case here, and the tender of the deed is in no sense a condition precedent to the right of forfeiture.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to dismiss the action.
Rudkin, C. J., Gose, Chadwick, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.