127 Iowa 218 | Iowa | 1905
On tbe 12th day of September, 1902, Michael Finnegan (the plaintiff’s ward) and the defendant entered into a written contract for the conveyance to Finnegan of certain land owned by the defendant. Five hundred dollars of the purchase price was paid at the time, and Finnegan agreed to assume the payment of a mortgage then on the land, and to pay the balance of the agreed price in cash on the 1st day of March, 1903, at which time the defendant was to execute and deliver to Finnegan a conveyance in fee simple, with the-ordinary covenants of warranty. The contract also provided that the defendant should furnish an abstract showing good and sufficient title in him. The petition alleged these facts, and, further, that the defendant failed to furnish any abstract of title before the 4th day of April, 1903, or until after he had been notified of the plaintiff’s election to rescind the contract; that prior to the 1st day of March, 1903, the defendant leased the land for a
The demurrer should' have been overruled. By the terms of the contract, the defendant was to furnish the ven-dee an abstract showing good and sufficient title; and, while no particular time therefor was fixed, the law requires that it be furnished in reasonable time for examination before the contract is to be performed. It was a condition precedent, and the defendant was not entitled to the balance of the money due under the contract until he had complied therewith. Wilhelm v. Fimple, 31 Iowa, 131; Maichen v. Clay, 62 Iowa, 452; Bartle v. Curtis, 68 Iowa, 202; Lessenich v. Sellers, 119 Iowa, 314; Webb v. Hancher, 127 Iowa, 269. The contract provided for a deed with the ordinary covenants of warranty, and the purchaser would be entitled to immediate- possession thereunder. Brandt v. Foster, 5 Iowa, 287. And the execution of a validTease of the premises, and possession thereunder, would render it impossible for -the vendor to convey the title and the possession which he had agreed to give. Van Wagner v. Van Nostrand, 19 Iowa, 422; Maichen v. Clay, supra; Stroff v. Swafford, 79 Iowa, 135; Webb v. Hancher, supra.
Furthermore, the petition alleged that on the 1st day of March, 1903, the defendant did not have a good and sufficient title to the land. With the averments as to the lease and as to the condition of the defendant’s title at the time he was to convey, it was wholly unnecessary for the plaintiff
Tbe judgment is reversed.