107 Kan. 598 | Kan. | 1920
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On August 29,1903, A. J. Rice and John Vaughn entered into a written contract for the sale by the former to the latter of a tract of land for the sum of $500, of which $100 was then paid; the remainder was made payable in installments bearing 8 per cent interest, the last of which matured in four years; time was made of the essence of the agreement and by its provisions a failure to meet any payment promptly was to work a forfeiture of all interest of the purchaser in the land or the sum already paid, the vendor to have an immediate right of reentry. In 1912 Rice brought ejectment against Vaughn claiming a return of the land. Vaughn filed an answer asking
At the trial the plaintiff showed a chain of title from the government to himself and the defendant introduced the pleadings and judgment'in the first action. The plaintiff then, by way of rebuttal, offered to show that he had tendered a deed conveying a good title and demanded the balance due on the purchase price; that no payment had been made or offered since the rendition of the former judgment. This evidence was rejected and the court directed a verdict for the defendant, on which the judgment here appealed from was rendered.
1. The defendant maintains that his tender of payment, made before the bringing of the first action of ejectment, discharged the plaintiff’s purchase-money lien. It is true that a tender of payment of a debt, although not kept good, ordinarily effects a discharge of a mortgage or other lien securing it. (28 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 39; 27 Cyc. 1409; 26 R. C. L. 644.) Whether this rule would apply where a debt for the purchase money of land is secured by a reservation of title in the vendor accompanied by a right of forfeiture need not be considered. In his answer in the first ejectment action the defendant asked affirmative equitable relief — the conveyance to him of the land. That course prevented him from taking advantage of the rule if it was otherwise applicable. (28 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 39; 27 Cyc. 1409; 38 Cyc. 158, 159; 26 R. C. L. 645; Hunt on Tender, § 371.) Moreover, the judgment in the former action
2. The defendant further maintains that the rights of the plaintiff under his contract were merged in the former judg- ' ment and that the remedy of ej ectment is not open to him under the relations between the parties as therein established. The judgment, however, did not create a lien in favor of the plaintiff; it merely decided that such a lien existed. Notwithstanding the doctrine of merger the pleadings upon which a judgment is based may often be looked to in order to determine the manner of its enforcement. (Investment Co. v. Wyandotte County, 86 Kan. 708, 710, 121 Pac. 1097; Hurd v. Hixon & Co., 27 Kan. 722, 727; Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co., 127 U. S. 265, 292.) The rights of the plaintiff-as defined by the judgment are the same as those he had held under the contract. The fact that he had himself been in default might justify a court in refusing to enforce strictly the provisions in his favor relating to forfeiture as the result of the defendant’s failure to meet his payments promptly. And doubtless in the situation presented it would be inequitable to allow the plaintiff to recover the land without giving the defendant ample opportunity to make payment of the amount still owing on the purchase price. It is evident that the land is now worth much more than the lien against it. It would be manifestly unjust either to permit the plaintiff to repossess himself of it because of the defendant’s refusal under some misconception of the law to complete the payment upon demand, or to permit the defendant to retain it without paying for it. A foreclosure of the lien and a sale of the property might have been a reasonably adequate remedy, but there seems no occasion for confining the plaintiff to it. A judgment against the defendant for possession, conditioned upon his failure to make payment within a fixed period, will not as a practical matter be in any serious degree more disadvantageous to him than one of fore
There is no occasion for a further hearing upon the facts. The- attitude of the defendant here is a sufficient indication that his tender has not been kept good; therefore it does not relieve him from the payment of interest. (28 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 38.) It is not disputed that the plaintiff’s evidence as to his title showed .that he was able to make a good conveyance.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to allow a recovery to the plaintiff unless prior to July 1, 1921, the defendant shall complete the payment of the purchase price.