187 N.W. 425 | S.D. | 1922
June 6, 1919, plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract for purchase and sale of a half section of land in Minnehaha county, the material portions of which are: Plaintiff to sell to defendant the property comprising 320 acres, more or less, for $140 per acre, making a total consideration of $44,800. Plaintiff to deed property clear of incumbrance March 1, 1920. Defendant at said time to make payment of $12,800 and execute mortgage secured on the land in the sum of $30,000, bearing interest at 5J4 per cent, ten years from March 1, 1920. Possession to be delivered at said time. At time of contract defendant paid $2,000. Plaintiff to furnish abstract March 1, 1920, showing clear, merchantable title in herself. Plaintiff to take up $8,000 mortgage M&rch 1, 1920. It being agreed that time of payment should be an essential part of the contract.
Defendant failed to make the $12,800 payment due March 1, 1920, and assigned as reason for such failure- that 100 rods of wire fence, a feed bunk, and certain water pipe, claimed to aggregate in value $550, had been, since the making of the contract, removed from the premises, and also- claimed that plaintiff had failed to furnish an abstract showing merchantable title in herself and had failed to pay the $8,000 mortgage incumbrance. Defendant also claimed that land was incumbered by an easement, being a railroad right of way across a portion of the land, and which was not shown on the abstract furnished. Defendant also
It is admitted that defendant in January 1920, rented the premises in question to the codefendants Miller, and was under the contract of rental to receive $650 cash for pasture- and hay land, and two-fifths of the corn, oats, and barley, delivered at market. It is also admitted that defendant remained in possession of the premises through his tenants up to and including the trial of this case, which took place in January, 1921. Findings and conclusions were in favor of plaintiff, but the court ascertained the value of the property that had been removed from the premises after the making of the contract, together with the value of the land occupied 'by the railroad right of way, and deducted such amount from the payment that was to be made Miarch 1, 1920, which reduced said amount to $12,360. Judgment was entered, requiring defendant to pay plaintiff $12,360 and that he perform in accordance with the terms of the contract on or before March r, 1921, and that upon failure to pay and perform such conditions defendant should forfeit the $2,000 he paid on the purchase price, and that all his rights in the premises be terminated.
Numerous assignments of error, based on admission and exclusion of testimony, are urged by defendant. 'All of these have been carefully considered, but, being of the opinion that none constitute prejudicial error, we shall not discuss the same.
“He must rescind promptly, upon discovering the facts which entitle him to rescind.”
This, it is clear, defendant failed to do! On the contrary, he continued in the actual possession of the premises for nearly a year after he knew the facts upon which he now seeks to base a right to rescind.
“If the party can obtain substantially the thing for which he contracted — if the deficiency in quantity of the estate, or the extent of incumbrance, can be made the subject of compensation— and if such compensation can be given consistently with the conclusion that the purchaser would not have declined the contract, had he known of the deficiency or burden, then the court will enforce it upon him.” Guynet v. Mantel, 4 Duer (N. Y.) 86; Halsey v. Grant, 13 Ves. Jr. 73.
Lord Ersldne has said that:
“Equity does not permit the forms of law to be made instruments of injustice, and will interpose against parties attempting to avail themselves of the rigid rule of law for unconscientious purposes. Where, therefore, advantage is taken of a circumstance that does not admit a strict performance of the contract, if the failure is not substantial, equity will interfere. If, for instance, the contract is for a term of 99 years in a farm, and it appears that the vendor has 98 or 97 years, he must be non-suited in an action; but equity will not so deal with him, and if the other party can have the substantial benefit of his contract, that slight difference being of no importance to him, equity will interfere.*325 Thus was introduced the principle of compensation now so well established^ a principle which I have no disposition to shake.”
See Melick v. Cross, 62 N. J. Eq. 545, 51 Atl. 16.
Where the incumbrance can be removed merely by the application of the purchase money, and the court can provide for a conveyance of a clear title to the vendee, the mere fact that an incumbrance exists which the plaintiff has not removed, or even is unable to remove without the application of the purchase money, will not prevent a- decree for specific performance. 57 Kan. 70, 45 Pac. 82, 33 L. R. A. 81, 57 Am. St. Rep. 312.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the order and judgment of the lower court are affirmed.