104 Kan. 204 | Kan. | 1919
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In a suit for specific performance a demurrer to the petition was sustained, and plaintiffs appeal.
The plaintiffs allege that defendant agreed to sell them a quarter section of land for $600, one-half in cash to be deposited in a certain bank for his benefit upon his delivery to the bank of a warranty deed, to them; and that it was further agreed that plaintiffs would at the same time deposit in the bank for his benefit a real-estate mortgage for $300 due in three years with interest at the rate of six percent per annum and covering the real estate in question, and that the agreement was evidenced by the following correspondence:
“Hanover, Ind., Feb. 28, 1917.
“McCarter & Crow:
“Dear Sirs: I will sell the S. E. %, 20-21-39, for $600.00, half cash, if taken soon. Yours truly, H. M. Rogers.”
“Mch. 2nd, 1917.
“Mr. H. M. Rogers, Hanover, Ind.
“Dear Sir: We note from your letter of the 28th ulto. that you will sell your S. E. of 20-21-39 for $600.00, one-half cash and the balance 3 years at 6 per cent. Please send deed and abstract to 1st Na*205 tional Bank of Syracuse, Kans., with instructions to deliver to our order on payment of $300.00 cash and a properly executed mortgage for $300.00 to run three years, drawing 6 per cent annually. Trusting to hear from you soon, we are, Respectfully,”
“Hanover, Ind:, Mch. 8, 1917.
“McCarter & Crow, |Syracuse, Kansas.
“Dear Sirs: Immediately after receiving your offer for my land, I rec’d one so much better that I have decided to take the latter. I think I am justified in this, as I am so far away that I did not know the value of the land. Yours, etc. H. M. Rogers.”
The demurrer was properly sustained. Plaintiffs’ letter to the defendant, which they contend closed the bargain and made a binding contract, shows, on the contrary, that the minds of the parties had not met upon the terms and conditions under which the deferred payments were to be made. Defendant had never stated what his desires were in respect to when, where or how the money should be paid, or the rate of interest it should draw. Some very essential conditions proposed by the plaintiffs in their letter required his acceptance before the contract for purchase and sale was complete. Until he had notified them in some manner of his acceptance, either by correspondence or by sending a deed to the bank with instructions to deliver it to plaintiffs upon the terms stated in their letter, the plaintiffs could not have been compelled to purchase had they seen fit to decline to complete the contract and notified him of the fact before his acceptance of the terms stated in their letter. In order to be a contract, it had to bind both parties.
For the same reason, plaintiffs’ contention that the defendant should not be permitted to mend his hold and rely at the trial upon a different ground for refusing to convey from that stated in his second letter is not sound. The rule stated in Redinger v. Jones, 68 Kan. 627, 75 Pac. 997, followed in Stanton v. Barnes, 72 Kan. 541, 84 Pac. 116; Paul Co. v. Shaw, 86 Kan. 136, 119 Pac. 546, and in Braniff v. Baier, 101 Kan. 117, 165 Pac. 816, cannot apply, for the reason that it made no difference what actuated the defendant in refusing to convey,’ since there was no contract in existence binding him to convey. After he has made a contract which he refuses to carry out, the rule contended for applies; and he will' not be permitted to place his refusal to perform upon one ground, and
The judgment is affirmed.