75 Me. 493 | Me. | 1883
This is an action' upon a written promise signed by the defendant of the following tenor, viz : "Ellsworth, February 25,1880. I hereby agree to pay H. B. Saunders, thirty-five hundred dollars ($3500) when he shall be able to convey to us by good and sufficient deed the Joseph G-ott lot, so called, situated on the western side of Long Island, in Bluehill Bay, and said to contain one hundred acres more or less.”
As a consideration for this promise by the defendant the plaintiff ■ offers the following writing signed by himself and which makes a part of the declaration in his writ, viz: "Ellsworth, February 25, 1880. I am to give Taylor, Curtis, Proctor and Morse, a deed of the Joseph Gott Island lot, so called, said to contain one hundred acres, more or less; conveying by said deed to them a good and sufficient title upon the payment to me by said Taylor etals. of the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars on delivery of said deed.”
These two instruments are not only of the same date, but as the case shows were made at the same time and are but parts of one and the same transaction. Hence they must be construed together as constituting one contract.
The case shows what is entirely consistent with the written contract, construed as a whole, that at the time the several promises were made, the plaintiff had no title to the land and that
But it is claimed that the defendant’s refusal to rescind was a waiver of the failure of the plaintiff and he is now estopped to deny the continued existence of the contract.
It may be true that there was a waiver of the failure to obtain a title at that time, but assuming that the contract continued, there was no waiver of any of its terms. If it continued after
The failure in the first instance had resulted mainly, perhaps entirely, from the fact that the supposed owner had parted with his title. But when this fact was ascertained it was also learned into whose hands the title was conveyed. If, then, the plaintiff would continue the contract in force, it was his duty to make all reasonable exertions to procure the title from the new owner. Instead of that, from his own testimony, it appears that he made no effort to that end until February 9, 1881, nearly one year after the contract was made and after the alleged waiver of the first failure. It further appears that at that time the negotiation for the purchase began and ended in success on the same day.
This long delay which the plaintiff does -not see fit to explain, we think unreasonable. In coming to this conclusion we do not in any degree rely upon the speculative value or want of it in the land. Such value is too uncertain and partakes too largely of the nature of gambling to have any countenance or recognition in the law. We rely upon the more definite and certain rule laid down in Howe v. Huntington, supra, that when a matter of contract is to be done within a reasonable time, it means, "so much time as is necessary conveniently to do what the contract requires should be done.” This rule seems to be well sustained by the authorities cited, and is peculiarly applicable in this case, in which it seems to have been contemplated and understood by the parties that the contract was to be performed in the shortest convenient time. The non action of the defendant in regard to it, shows that he had for a long time considered it at an end and the law justifies that conclusion.
Judgment for defendant'.