This is an equitable conversion case. Dissatisfied with a judgment favorable to the heir of the personalty, the heir of one-half of the realty advances two points of trial court error. We affirm.
Shawna Wolfe, now deceased, and her sister, appellant Mellane A. Parson, contracted on September 17, 1981, to sell 160 acres of their separate realty in Floyd County to their paternal uncle. Before the *691 sale could be closed Mrs. Wolfe died, intestate and childless. After her death, the sale was closed and the proceeds in dispute were placed in the registry of the court.
The dispute is between Mrs. Wolfe’s surviving husband, appellee Jamie R. Wolfe, and her sister, Mrs. Parson, her only heirs at law. Mrs. Parson says she inherited one-half of Mrs. Wolfe’s interest in the land when Mrs. Wolfe died and she is entitled to the proceeds from that interest. Mr. Wolfe says the land must be treated as personalty, under the doctrine of equitable conversion, and he is entitled to all proceeds from Mrs. Wolfe’s interest. 1 Thus, the single issue raised by Mrs. Parson’s points of error is whether the doctrine of equitable conversion is applicable. If it is, Mrs. Wolfe’s interest in the land is to be treated as personalty under the laws of descent and distribution and it belongs to Mr. Wolfe.
Equitable conversion is generally defined as that change in the nature of property by which, for certain purposes, realty is considered as personalty or personalty is considered as realty, and the property is transmissible as so considered.
Toledo Soc. for Crippled Children v. Hickok,
When there is an equitable conversion by contract, the purchaser of land is regarded in equity as owner of the land and debtor for the purchase money, and the vendor is a secured creditor “having a legal position not unlike that of a mortgagee.”
Simpson, supra
at 559. As indicated
*692
by the quotation in marginal note 2, the pivotal question, when determining whether an equitable conversion by contract has occurred, is whether the contract is specifically enforceable.
Accord, Sanderson v. Sanderson, supra; Guzman v. Acuna, supra; Willie v. Waggoner,
In this case, the contract is properly executed and contains all of the provisions necessary in order for it to be binding on, and specifically enforceable by, either the sellers or the buyer. Mrs. Parson advances two arguments to the contrary, however. First, she points to the following provision in the contract:
It being contemplated that Purchaser will obtain a loan upon the security of the real property above described to provide a part of the consideration herein-above provided for, the reasonable time hereinafter accorded Purchaser for performance of the obligation required of him by this Contract shall include a reasonable time for processing and consummation of such loan.
That provision, she says, was a condition precedent unfulfilled when Mrs. Wolfe died; thus specific performance was not a viable option at the critical time.
Whether a condition precedent exists is determined from a reading of the entire contract.
Hudson v. Wakefield,
Mrs. Parson’s second argument is grounded on the contract’s liquidated damages clause, which says:
As earnest money for prompt performance of this Contract on his part, Seller [sic] shall deposit in escrow, together with copy of this Contract, in First National Bank, Floydada, Texas, the sum of $5,000.00, and in event that Purchaser shall fail or refuse, upon tender of performance by Sellers, to carry out and perform the terms of this Contract, Sellers may, at their election, declare this Contract terminated, whereupon such sum of $5,000.00 shall forfeit and become the absolute property of Sellers as liquidated damages for breach of this Contract.
She argues that, because of this provision, there is no mutuality of remedies; therefore the contract cannot be specifically enforced. She cites
Willie v. Waggoner,
We conclude that the doctrine of equitable conversion is applicable to this case, that Mrs. Wolfe’s interest in the land *693 is to be treated as personal property and that, upon her death, it passed to her husband under the laws of descent and distribution. Points of error one and two are overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Descent and distribution in this case is dictated by § 38(b) 2 of the Probate Code, which states:
2. If the deceased have no child or children, or their descendants, then the surviving husband or wife shall be entitled to all the personal estate, and to one-half of the lands of the intestate, without remainder to any person, and the other half shall pass and be inherited according to the rules of descent and distribution....
Tex.Prob.Code Ann. § 38(b)(2) (Vernon 1980).
. Professor Simpson describes the differences in the two applications as follows:
"Equitable conversion by will is wholly a part of the law of wills, descent and distribution; equitable conversion by contract has a wide importance in the law of vendor and purchaser. The former depends upon the intention of the testator; the latter does not depend upon intention, but rather upon rules of law as to consequences of the right to specific performance of a land contract."
Simpson, Legislative Changes in the Law of Equitable Conversion by Contract, 44 Yale LJ. 559, 561 n. 10 (1935).
