76 Cal. 590 | Cal. | 1888
This action was brought to enforce the specific performance of a contract for the sale of real estate. Defendant filed a cross-complaint praying affirmative relief, and judgment was rendered for him for possession of the property and cancellation of the contract. Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment, and insist that it is not supported by the findings. The findings are, that on the seventeenth day of July, 1882, the defendant made to plaintiff J. L. Requa an offer in writing in the following words and figures:—
“ I will take Re qua’s note for eighteen hundred, dollars for one year from the twentieth day of September next for the part of my block 88 on which Judge E. B. Hall now resides, on the corner of Sala and Garden streets, in the city and county of Santa Barbara, California; I to execute a good and sufficient deed for it on the payment of said note; possession August, proximo; the said Requa to pay me for the rent, and the interest on the said note, arid house and lot; Requa to have until the 20th instant, all day, to inform acceptance or not of the foregoing proposition, at his office.
(Signed) “S. P. Snow.
“July 17, 1882.”
The plaintiff J. L. Requa accepted the above offer in the following words and figures:—
“I hereby accept the foregoing offer, and execute herewith my promissory note accordingly:— “$1,800. Santa Babeaba, September 20,1882.
“ One year after date, for value received in house and lot, as aforesaid, I promise to pay $1,800, with interest, —$12 per month for each and every month, in advance.
“J. L. Requa.”
It is well settled in this state that delay to comply with his agreement to pay for such a length of time, without rendering a reasonable excuse for it, is an insuperable objection to enforcing, in his favor, a specific performance of the contract to convey land. In Green v. Coviliaud, 10 Cal. 317, the court says: "Will a court of equity enforce a specific performance of an agreement to convey lands when the plaintiff shows no compliance or offer of compliance on his part with the agreement, nor any excuse ¡therefor, for the period of twenty-one or twenty-two months from the time he bound himself to perform? And this question, too, is decided in effect by Brown v. Coviliaud, 6 Cal. 568, from which opinion the negative of the proposition results as a logical necessity.”' Here the court finds that between the first day of March, 1886, and the commencement of this action, the land in controversy enhanced in value so as to be worth five thousand dollars when the action was commenced. This is more than double the sum which plaintiff agreed to pay'for it. The rental value for the two years next preceding the trial of the action is found to have been from twenty to twenty-five dollars per month, and fifteen dollars per month from the date of the contract up to two years before the commencement of this action. The equities appear to us to be wholly on the side of the de
Judgment affirmed.
Bearls, C. J., McFarland, J., Paterson, J., and Thornton, J., concurred.