64 Wash. 422 | Wash. | 1911
Action by respondents to recover back money paid upon a contract for the purchase of real estate. The contract was entered into February 14, 1907, and fixed the price of the land at $35,000, $2,000 of which was paid at the time, $14,000 was to be paid upon the delivery of deed within sixty days, and the balance was to go as a mortgage, bear
A few days before the sixty days expired in which the second payment was to be made, Mrs. Ready notified appellant she would be unable to make it, and requested an extension of thirty days. The result of these negotiations was a written offer by appellant, dated April 16, to extend the payment of the $14,000 an additional thirty days, conditioned upon respondent then making the payment $15,000 with interest at six per cent. This respondent declined to do, and on the same day filed the contract for record. At that time the taxes and local assessment had not been paid. Nothing more seems to have been done by either party, except that on May 18, 1907, appellant paid the taxes, and on June 22, the local assessment; until about September, 1909, when appellant tendered a deed to respondent and demanded the deferred payment, which respondent refused. She thereupon brought this action to recover the $2,000, and .obtained a judgment, from which this appeal is taken.
The finding upon which judgment was based was the sale
“Purchasers of real estate at tax sale prior-to the-first day of November, 1891, shall have no lien against said real estate for the amount of their payments, nor any title to said land, as against purchasers or incumbrancers for value and in good faith, unless they shall duly file their certificates of purchase, or tax deeds- in case the same may have been issued, for- record-in the office of the county auditor on or before the first day of November, 1892.”
No certificate of purchase or tax deed having been filed as required by the above act, the property was not subject to any lien created by the sale; and the sale alone, not being a lien, could offer no excuse to respondent. The taxes and local assessment, while due, did not become delinquent until June 1 and February-12 following, and appellant was not required to pay them except as within the terms of the contract, on or before April 16. The purpose of this provision was to insure these payments by appellant, and as respondent was to pay $14,000 to appellant within the same time, she had it within her own power to compel appellant to convey the property free from any burden of these liens. Respondent had, however, notified' appellant that she would not be -able to make
It is apparent from this record that it was not the failure to paj7 the taxes and local assessment that caused respondent to abandon this purchase, but her failure-to obtain the money with which to make the $14,000 payment, or to obtain a satisfactory extension. Having notified appellant, prior to April 16, of her-inability to make the payment and her wish for an extension, the law would hardly, with such a knowledge on its part, require the doing of a useless thing by appellant, and require it to make a payment of this tax and local assessment in order to clear a title not required, if at.all, for thirty days. If respondent could not. pay within the sixty days, and so notified appellant, it would excuse its further pex’formance within that time. Had she obtained an extension, it would have waived it, because the covenants were mutual and dependent. Kane v. Borthwick, 50 Wash. 8, 96 Pac. 516, 18 L. R. A. (N. S.) 486; Martin v. Pierce, 57 Wash. 389, 106 Pac. 1127.
The payment of the taxes was comparatively a small mattex*, and as appellant was to receive a payment from respondent of $14,000, there could be little if any question concerning its willingness and ability to perform that part of its contract, a perfoxmance which respondent, by virtue of the $14,000 payment, had at all times within her power. It was her default rather than appellant’s that breached this contract ; and such being the case, it was immaterial that these small defects existed against‘this title, which could have been removed at almost a moment’s notice. Johnston v. Johnson, 43 Minn. 5, 44 N. W. 668; Hampton v. Speckenagle, 9 Serg.
We cannot reach the same conclusion as the trial judge, and the judgment is reversed.
CHAnwicx, Ellis, and Crow, JJ., concur.