152 Mass. 141 | Mass. | 1890
The only exceptions insisted on are to the refusals of the court to rule that the bill could not be maintained upon the evidence; and that, if entitled to a conveyance, the plaintiff is obliged to pay interest on the money tendered from the time of the tender.
It is contended that the description of the premises in the contract is indefinite, and is not aided by evidence. The description is of a “ one and one half story frame dwelling-house,
The agreement to convey is inserted as one of the provisions of a lease of the premises from the defendants to the plaintiff, and the defendants contend that the plaintiff lost his right to a conveyance by breaking covenants of the lease not to commit waste, and not to underlet the premises. The evidence was, in substance, that the plaintiff cut down trees of little value on the leased premises, and, being unmarried, allowed a family with which he lived to occupy the premises without paying any rent. The court might well have found upon the evidence that there had been no substantial breach of covenant by the plaintiff. It could not have found on the evidence that there was any breach of covenant or condition of which the defendants could avail themselves after tender of payment by the plaintiff under the agreement. The whole evidence showed that the plaintiff was entitled to relief.
The remaining exception is to the refusal of the court to add interest to the fifteen hundred dollars, to be paid by the plaintiff upon specific performance by the defendants of their contract by a conveyance of the premises. The lease of the premises from the defendants to the plaintiff was for years, and contained the following provision: “ It is a condition of this lease that said lessee shall have the right to purchase said premises any time within three years from date hereof for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars.” The lease was dated October 29,1884, and on October 27, 1887, the plaintiff, according to his own testimony, “offered and tendered” to the defendant Mrs. Bryer the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, at Boothbay, in the State of Maine, and demanded a conveyance of the premises described, which the defendants refused, and that “ thereupon the plaintiff deposited said sum of fifteen hundred dollars to his own credit in a bank
The question whether a vendee, who has complied with his contract for the purchase of a parcel of real estate in offering to pay the purchase money at the time fixed therefor, is entitled to the rents and profits thereof, may arise in two ways,—where he is not in possession of the premises, and where, as in the case at bar, he is in possession ; but in either case, if he elects to treat the premises, and thus the rents and profits, as his own, it would not seem reasonable that he should treat the purchase money also as his own, deal with it as such, derive a profit therefrom, and still be permitted to deny the claim for interest thereon. Even if he holds himself ready to obtain and pay the money when a conveyance is tendered, if he desires a decree which shall treat the land as his as of the date of the day when he made his offer of payment, the money should be treated as belonging
To the rule that the vendee must continue to pay interest, if he receives the rents and profits, there is probably an exception where the money which the vendee is to pay has been set aside and appropriated for the vendor, and he has been notified of this, knows that the money is drawing no interest, and is at his own disposal. “ But even if a purchaser gave such notice, yet if the money was not actually and bona fide appropriated for the purchase, or the purchaser derived the least advantage from it, or in any manner made use of it, the court would compel him to pay interest.” 2 Sugd. Vend. (8th Am. ed.) 316. Dyson v. Hornby, 4 DeG. & Sm. 481. In Powell v. Martyr, 8 Ves. 146, it is said by the Master of the Rolls, Sir William Grant: “ The rule is perfectly clear, and perfectly reasonable, that if a purchaser is let into possession and perception of the rents and profits, he shall pay interest for his purchase money”; and in that case it was held that, to excuse a purchaser from paying interest during the delay in clearing difficulties as to the title, it is not sufficient that the money was appropriated and unproductive, but the vendor must have notice of that. The English authorities establish the rule, that, even if the vendor is in fault, if the vendee would escape the liability to pay interest he must actually set aside the money and appropriate it for the vendor, must not in any way derive a benefit from it, and must notify the vendor of these facts, and that the money is thus lying idle. Calcraft v. Roebuck, 1 Ves. Jr. 221. Powell v. Martyr, 8 Ves. 146. Roberts v. Massey, 13 Ves. 561. Dyson v. Hornby, 4 DeG. & Sm. 481. Kershaw v. Kershaw, L. R. 9 Eq. 56. Regent's Canal Co. v. Ware, 23 Beav. 575. This rule is also sustained by many American authorities. Brockenbrough v. Blythe, 3 Leigh, 619, 638. Selden v. James, 6 Rand. 465. Walker v. Ogden,
Eastman v. Simpson, 139 Mass. 348, presents the question now discussed, although inversely. It was a case where the obligor of a bond for the sale of certain premises, who was thus in the position of a vendor, had remained in possession, and the question arose, upon a bill brought by the plaintiff, representing the obligee, who was entitled on certain terms to a conveyance, and who claimed to have made a sufficient tender to entitle him thereto, whether interest should be allowed in favor of the defendant on the sum which the plaintiff, as vendee, was bound to pay. The defendant had been charged with the rents and profits of the estate from the time when it was his duty to convey. An examination of the papers in the case shows that in the first report of the master, to whom the matter had been referred for an accounting, he had calculated interest on the sum to be paid by the vendee only up to the time of filing the bill. The case was recommitted, with an order to cast the interest on the sum to be paid by the vendee up to the date of the decree, which was done in a supplementary report. Upon this report and the computation so made a decree was entered, which was the decree appealed from in the case as reported. The opinion of the court, in terms, deals only with the question whether interest should be cast in favor of the defendant from
In the case at bar, the question whether it would be the duty of the vendor to show that the vendee had used the money tendered, or whether it would be the duty of the vendee to show that he had not, but had set it completely aside, upon which there has apparently been some difference of opinion, does not arise. According to the plaintiff’s own statement, he deposited the sum tendered in a bank near Boothbay, in which place the defendant Mrs. Bryer resided. But he deposited it in his own name, nor did he, so far as appears, give any notice of such deposit to her, or put her in any such position that she could