In this case, Appellant Carlyle McGill filed suit against Respondents seeking specific performance on three contracts for the sale of land. The master-in-equity ruled in favor of Respondents, finding that the contracts contained a condition precedent which had not been satisfied. We affirm.
Factual/Procedural Background
Respondents are owners of undivided interests of a tract of land near Hickory Grove, South Carolina by way of intestate succession and devises from wills. Appellant owns a tract of land adjacent to Respondents’ property. Although Appellant was aware that many of the owners did not live in the area and that some owners were unknown, he approached Respondent Tracy Moore regarding a possible offer to purchase the land, and in 2000, Appellant’s attorney drafted a “Contract for Sale.” The contract provided:
4. PRICE: The Purchase Price is $1,000.00 per acre, with final purchase price being based on the acreage shown on new survey. All heirs of Rufus Alton Moore hereby agree that his or her share of the purchase price will bein accordance with their individual percentage of ownership as determined by the probate of the Estate ...
5. CLOSING: Closing shall be held on or before thirty (30) days from the date the last contract is signed or if not possible by that date, then the parties hereto agree to an extension time of thirty (30) days.
Appellant presented nine identical contracts to various owners, of which eight owners signed. 1 Of the eight signed contracts, five were closed and Appellant received deeds representing the interests of those owners. The remaining three were never closed. After Appellant’s repeated requests to close the three contracts failed, Appellant filed suit seeking specific performance. Respondents filed a counterclaim seeking partition or sale of the property and moved to allow certain owners not named in the original complaint to intervene. The master granted the motion to intervene and appointed a guardian ad litem to represent the interests of any incompetent person or person under the age of eighteen who may have had a claim to any interest in the property.
At trial, Appellant and Appellant’s wife testified. Respondents, however, argued that contract interpretation was a question of law and did not present any evidence. The master found that the language in the contract created a condition precedent requiring all owners to sign a contract before the closing could take place. Therefore, because one of the contracts was never signed, the master ruled Appellant was not entitled to specific performance.
Appellant appealed the master’s order, and this Court certified the case pursuant to Rule 204(b), SCACR. 2 Appellant presents the following issues for review:
I. Did the master err in holding that the language of the contracts created a condition precedent?
II. If the contract set forth a condition precedent, are Respondents permitted to enforce such a condition since the condition would have been for the benefit of Appellant?
III. Did the master err in denying specific performance because Appellant substantially complied with any condition of unity?
IV. Did the master err in excluding testimony regarding the intent of the parties?
Standard of Review
An action to construe a contract is an action at law.
Pruitt v. South Carolina Med. Malpractice Liab. Joint Underwriting Assn.,
Law/Analysis
I. Condition Precedent
Appellant argues that the master erred in finding that the contract contained a condition precedent. We disagree.
The cardinal rule of contract interpretation is to ascertain and give legal effect to the parties’ intentions as determined by the contract language.
Schulmeyer v. State Farm Fire and Cas. Co.,
Appellant argues that the primary purpose of the contract was for the purchase of individual interests in the property and that “from the date the last contract is signed” relates only to the timing of the closing. In our view, Appellant impermissibly focuses on one provision in order to create an ambiguity and ignores the rest of the language in the contract indicating that the contract required unity of all owners before closing would take place.
See Schulmeyer,
Had Appellant intended to purchase the interests of an individual owner without regard to the other owners’ interest, he could have easily drafted a contract to reflect this intent. In our view, to construe the contract according to Appellant’s interpretation would not be faithful to the entire document and would not reflect the parties’ intentions. Accordingly, we hold that the contract contained a condition precedent which was not satisfied.
Appellant argues that even if the contract contained a condition precedent requiring all owners to sign the contract, this condition would have been for the benefit of Appellant, which he could waive and which could not be enforced by Respondents. We disagree.
In
Ehlke v. Nemec Const. Co., Inc.,
the court of appeals held that where a condition precedent was solely for the benefit of one party, it could not be asserted as a forfeiture by the other party.
III. Substantial Compliance
Appellant argues that even if the contract contained a condition precedent requiring all owners to sign the contract, he substantially complied with this condition because eight of the nine contracts distributed were signed. We disagree.
If a contract contains a condition precedent, that condition must either occur or it must be excused before a party’s duty to perform arises.
See Worley v. Yarborough Ford, Inc.,
IV. Testimony
Appellant argues that the master erred in excluding his testimony regarding the intent of the parties in using specific terms in the contract such as “all heirs” and “closing.” We disagree.
The parol evidence rule prevents the introduction of extrinsic evidence of agreements or understandings contemporaneous with or prior to execution of a written instrument when the extrinsic evidence is to be used to contradict, vary or explain the written instrument.
In re Estate of Holden,
We hold that the master properly excluded this testimony. The terms in the contract are unambiguous and Appellant was therefore barred from introducing evidence to explain these terms.
See Silver v. Aabstract Pools Spas, Inc.,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the master correctly denied Appellant specific performance relief.
Notes
. Owner Iola Moore Smith was unable to sign the contract because she was incompetent, and before family members could obtain a power of attorney, she passed away.
. Respondents and the guardian ad litem argue that we should dismiss this appeal because Appellant failed to serve the notice of appeal on the guardian ad litem pursuant to Rule 203, SCACR. We find Appellant was not required to serve the notice of appeal upon the guardian ad litem because this appeal does not involve the partition action and thus, the guardian ad litem is not an "adverse party" in this appeal and not a "respondent.”
. This argument appears to be an estoppel claim. However, any estoppel issues are not preserved for review as Appellant did not raise the issue of estoppel before the master and has not explicitly raised it to this Court.
