56 Wash. 415 | Wash. | 1909
This appeal involves only one question of law. In November, 1908, plaintiff George W. Reese entered into an agreement in writing, whereby he agreed to sell to defendant Simon P. Westfield certain lands at Sunnyside in Yakima county. The contract was the usual time contract for the sale of lands, and provided for the payment of the purchase price in installments, the last payment becoming due May 1, 1907. Defendants Milton and Door have succeeded to the interests of Westfield. A request for an extension of time was asked after the last payment had become due, but was refused. On October 1, 1907, a forfeiture was declared, and this action was begun to recover possession of the property. The contract contained the following clause:
The court made, among others, the following finding! “That the two last payments above mentioned (being intermediate payments) were made subsequent to the time on which they became due, and were accepted by the plaintiffs.” This forbearance, coupled with the time elapsing between the 1st of May, 1907, and the 1st day of October, 1907, might possibly bring this case within the rule of Douglas v. Handbury, ante p. 63, 104 Pac. 1110, but the facts are not before us, and for the sake of security in our judgment of the case, we have deemed it best to meet the main contention upon which appellant relies to defeat the judgment of the court below. The question is whether a forfeiture can be declared as against a purchaser who had met all payments, under his contract except the last payment, when the contract provides for the giving of an abstract and delivery of the deed. Appellant seeks to distinguish the case of Stein v. Waddell, 37 Wash. 634, 80 Pac. 184, upon which he says the judgment of the lower court was based, saying:
“In the case of Stein v. Waddell the seller had accepted a portion of that last payment which was in default after default was made, and then a few days later declared the forfeiture.”
But the decision in that case was not made to depend alone upon the payment of a part of the last installment. It rested
It is contended that the broad rule laid down in Stein v. Waddell was explained by the later cases, Voight v. Fidelity Investment Co., 49 Wash. 612, 96 Pac. 162; Garvey v. Barkley, ante p. 24, 104 Pac. 1108, and Sleeper v. Bragdon, 45 Wash. 562, 88 Pac. 1036. In the first case it was pointed out that there was no obligation to tender a deed until all the payments had been made, and that the last payment was not due until two years after the commencement of the action to forfeit the contract. The point here involved was not before the court. In the second case, the purchaser had wholly failed to perform the conditions of his contract, and forfeiture had been promptly asserted. In Sleeper v. Bragdon the purchaser had made default and had obtained an extension under an understanding that, if payment was not made within the time given, the forfeiture would be insisted upon. She was notified in advance that the vendor had elected to forfeit the contract, and she knew that, by her own act in failing to meet the extended payment, the cancellation of the contract was completed, and that she was not entitled to any further consideration or notice. Notwithstanding this she sought to tender the amount due, and demanded performance. The court held, and properly, considering the facts of the particular case, that her rights had ceased. The cases really in line with the case of Stein v. Waddell are Bruggemann v. Converse, 47 Wash. 581, 92 Pac. 429, and Tacoma Water Supply Co. v. Dumermuth, 51 Wash. 609, 99 Pac. 741. In the first case it was said:
In the latter case, after citing Stein v. Waddell and other cases, the court said:
“Under the above authorities, the respondents could only claim a forfeiture and put the appellant in default by tendering a deed and demanding payment of the purchase price, and this they failed to do.”
If the case of Stein v. Waddell and the succeeding cases to which we have referred have been hitherto misunderstood, we desire now, for the sake of certainty, to lay down the rule that, where land is sold under a time contract calling for payment by installments, and every installment has been paid except the last one, the vendor may, if he act with reasonable promptness, declare a forfeiture, unless by the terms of the contract he has agreed to perform some act necessary to the complete performance of his agreement, as, for instance, the giving of an abstract or the tender of a deed, in which event his power to forfeit depends upon his offer and ability to perform ; for, as this court has said, his duty to tender performance depends upon, and is concurrent •with, the duty of the vendee to meet the final payment.
While Ave admit that the conditions providing for forfeiture in contracts of this character are usually held to be for the benefit of the Arendor, and we have been hitherto, and are now, willing to give the vendor the full benefit of all the conditions of his contract, and say that all payments prior to the last payment are conditions precedent, we have no sympathy with the holding of some courts to the effect that the whole duty is upon the purchaser, and unless he tenders the last payment the vendor is entirely released from any obligation to convey or tender conveyance. The covenants are independent so long as no duty is imposed on the vendor, but if any covenant puts both parties to action and concurs in time, it must be
There is nothing in the assertion that any other rule will interfere with, or destroy, or invite a breach of, the contract as the parties have made it. What we have undertaken to show is that a tender of performance when stipulated in the agreement, as well as a tender of payment, is a part of the contract; the two engagements make the contract; the one is dependent on the other.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Fullerton, Morris, and Gose, JJ., concur.