161 Mo. 606 | Mo. | 1901
This is a suit in equity to enforce specific performance of a contract for the exchange of lands.
By written agreement between the parties in June, 1897, defendant agreed to convey to plaintiff certain real estate on Pine street in St. Louis, particularly described in the petition, for which plaintiff agreed to pay $10,000 and convey to defendant certain real estate on Market street in that city, also particularly described in the petition. The contract provided “that if any defect should be found in the title to either of said properties, so that this contemplated trade can not be made, then the party whose title proves defective hereby agrees to pay to the other party the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars as full compensation for the failure to consummate this contract; and in the event and upon such failure being made, this contract
There was a stipulation in the agreement for the plaintiff to take a lease from defendant for two years on the Market street property, the terms of which will be noted later when we come to discuss that feature of the agreement.
The parties immediately began investigations of the titles of their respective contemplated purchases, in the.course of which the defendant discovered that the plaintiff’s record title to the Market street property went hack no further than 1829, although the title had emanated from the French government in 1769, and for that reason refused to carry out the agreement for exchange. The subject was discussed between the respective representatives of the parties, and pending the discussion, the time for exchange of deeds was extended first to July 10 and again to July 17. A suggestion was made that the objection might be overcome by obtaining a guarantee of the title by the St. Lonis Trust Co., and while that matter was under consideration, the agent of the plaintiff wrote defendant’s attorney a note saying: “Mr. Seannell has just called to say that his attorney advises that the title to the Pine street lot is not as it should be, inasmuch as the alleys have never been dedicated and that he ought to have a guaranty against that; in other words, his attorney thinks your defect is more serious than the defect of the Seannell property, and Mr. Seannell thinks he ought not to he required to furnish a guaranty.” Several meetings were had between the respective representatives but the defendant’s objection to the plaintiff’s title was not satisfied and no adjustment of the difficulty was arrived at. On July 12 or 14, the defendant’s agent informed plaintiff
After the writing of the note, the agent of the defendant informed the agent of the plaintiff that the defendant would not proceed further in the matter, and all negotiations ceased. TTp to that time the only objection defendant had made to the plaintiffs title was that the record did not carry it further back than 1829. Afterwards before suit was brought, plaintiff made formal tender of his deed and the money required by the contract and demanded a deed to the Pine. street property, which defendant refused, and at the same time defendant tendered to plaintiff $250, which plaintiff had paid as earnest money on the signing of the contract and plaintiff refused it; then this suit was begun.
On the trial, the plaintiff showed title to the Market street property by deeds duly recorded beginning May 5, 1829, from Robert Wash to Robert Rankin, and running through regular succession down to 1881 and 1887, when the title carried by those deeds was conveyed to the plaintiff. And the evidence showed that the plaintiff and his grantors in those deeds had been in open, unbroken, adverse possession of the property for a period beginning in 1845, and that the plaintiff and his grantors in those deeds had paid all the taxes on the property from and including 1862 down to and including 1897. •
The defendants introduced deeds showing, first, a concession from the French government to Jacques Denis dated July 17, 1769; second, Jacques Denis to Francis Denaux dated
The deeds under which plaintiff acquired the lots contain a reservation of a three-foot strip along the rear end for a private alley for the use of the occupants of the lot east, to go west to a public alley.
In rebuttal, plaintiff showed a deed from Snitzer to him of the lot on the east, including the nine-inch strip he had sold; this deed was dated March, 1898, which was after the suit had begun. The explanation of the sale of the nine inches to Snitzer and its repurchase which plaintiff gives, is that when he came to build the house that now occupies the forty-foot, seven and one-half inch lot in question, he found that the east wall of the old house was a partition wall, one-half of which was the west vrall of Snitzer’s house, and he was about to have some trouble about it, which was avoided by selling his nine inches that the partition wall covered to Snitzer and building a new east wall for the new house against the old wall. The repurchase was made to enable the plaintiff to obviate the objection
Plaintiff also showed in rebuttal that the three-foot private alley had been fenced up as early as 1876 and had not been used as such since that date.
The finding and judgment were for the defendant and the plaintiff appeals.
I. The first question we encounter is, was the defendant justified in refusing to perform the contract because the plaintiff’s paper title went back no further than 1829, and, did not connect with the concession from the French government, subsequently confirmed by the United States? Up to the time defendant positively refused to carry out the agreement, the points in relation to the nine-inch strip and the three-foot easement had not been discovered, at least no mention of them, had been made in the discussions, but, so far as could be learned from what was said by defendant’s agent, the gap in the record from 1769 to 1829 was the only objection.
It is insisted for the respondent that the contract in question demands not only a reasonably good but an absolutely perfect title. The learned circuit judge who tried the case notes in his opinion that the contract was not written by a -lawyer, and on that ground accounts for some indefinite language employed. That fact may also account for the form of expression on this point. The language is, “if any defect should be found in the title,” etc. The argument for respondent places the emphasis on the adjective; if any defect should be found, the contract should end. In their brief the learned counsel say that the parties “meant just what those words express— any defect whatsoever in the record title notwithstanding that by evidence of possession or other facts not of record, the defect in the record title might be so far supplied as to make the title good and marketable.” Of course, if the parties had seen
A title acquired by adverse possession under our statute is in every respect as good for purposes of attack or defense, as a title by deeds miming back to the government. [Bank v. Evans, 51 Mo. 335; Shepley v. Cowan, 52 Mo. 559; Bledsoe v. Simms, 53 Mo. 305; Dalton v. Bank, 54 Mo. 105; Barry v. Otto, 56 Mo. 177; Ridgeway v. Holliday, 59 Mo. 444; Hamilton v. Boggess, 63 Mo. 233; Ekey v. Inge, 87 Mo. 493; Sherwood v. Baker, 105 Mo. 472; Long v. Stock Yards, 107 Mo. 298.]
Titles by deed often have to be helped out by parol evidence, as for example the record title shown by defendant in this case. The concession of the French government to
A court of equity would not force upon a defendant a title in which there was any real defect but it will not hesitate to require him to stand up to his contract when the title offered him is good beyond all reasonable apprehension. [Mastin v. Grimes, 88 Mo. 478; Greffet v. Williams, 114 Mo. 106; Mitchner v. Holmes, 117 Mo. 185; Rozier v. Graham, 146 Mo. 352.]
We conclude that the defendant was not justified in refusing to perform his contract when he did and upon the ground he did.
II. But after that, certain other alleged defects in the plaintiff’s title were brought forward, one relating to the nine-
When this contract was made, this forty-foot, seven and one-half-inch lot was covered by a three-story store building, the east wall of which was against the Snitzer wall. That building was mentioned in the contract and it constituted a conspicuous monument covering the property. Under those conditions if the contract had called for the land containing the building and had then undertaken to describe the lot by metes and bounds and in doing so had fallen nine inches short, and the plaintiff had attempted to force upon the defendant a deed, conveying only what was embraced in the metes and bounds expressed, reserving to himself the strip omitted, is there any doubt but that the court, at the suit of the defendant, would have compelled the plaintiff to convey all that the monument called for? Tbe converse of the proposition is equally true. [McGill v. Somers, 15 Mo. 80; Grandy v. Casey, 93 Mo. 595; Smith v. Land Co., 117 Mo. 438; Harding v. Wright, 119 Mo. 1; Ryland v. Banks, 151 Mo. 1.]
But the plaintiff’s record title shows that there is an easement for the benefit of the occupants of the lot east and the lot west, over three feet of the rear of the east twenty feet called for by the contract. The defendant becoming, as he does under this contract, the owner of the west twenty feet is of course in no danger of himself, but his apprehension is that that easement might be insisted on by the man on the Snitzer lot to the east. The evidence on this point went back no farther than 1876, but it showed that at that date there was a fence that closed that three-foot space, and it had never been used as an alley by any one, or otherwise than as a back yard by the occupant of the premises. The authorities cited by appellant on this point sustain his position that nonuser of an easement for twenty years, united with an adverse use of the ser
LEI. Since the institution of this suit, however, the plaintiff, for the purpose, has purchased the Snitzer lot and therefore his deed will not only convey to the defendant the nine inches in question, but will extinguish the easement.
As a general rule, specific performance of such a contract will be enforced if the party seeking it is able, when the decree is rendered, to make his title good. [Luckett v. Williamson, 37 Mo. 388; Isaacs v. Skrainka, 95 Mo. 524.] But that is not a universal rule, and it is claimed by defendant that it should not be applied in this case, because time was of the essence of this contract. In Mastín v. Grimes, supra, which was a case of this kind, it was said by Sherwood, J., for the court: “Time is not generally deemed in equity to be of the essence of the contract. And even if by the express terms of the contract a day of payment be fixed and time declared to be of the essence of the contract, still this is no bar to the .time of payment being postponed, or to this essential element being altogether waived.” And after showing that it is the duty of the court to see that the matter of time is not abused by either party, a quotation is made in that opinion from 2 Parsons on Contracts (5 Ed.), 662, to-wit: , “That is a reasonable time which preserves to each party the rights and advantages he possesses, and protects each party from losses that he ought not to suffer.” The United States Supreme Court has also likewise held (Cheney v. Libby, 134 U. S. 79). Courts of equity treat this like they treat every subject that demands
Plaintiff has shown disposition to do everything that could be done to give the defendant a clear title. If the defendant knew of this nine-inch strip and of this three-foot easement,
IY. The contract contains this clause: “Said Scannell also further agrees that he will accept a lease in usual form for said Market street property for a term of two years, beginning on the first day of July, 1897, at a monthly rental of one hundred and fifty dollars, payable on the last clay of each and every month during said term; said building to be used for commercial purposes only.” It is contended that the words “in usual form” render that part of the agreement so indefinite that it can not be enforced. There is nothing indefinite as to the terms and conditions of the lease. The contract is as explicit in all the essential parts as it could be. It is argued by the learned counsel for respondent that “it is common knowledge that leases of business property in St. Louis often, if not usually, contain special provisions about destruction of the building by fire, keeping roof in repair, payment of taxes, special assessments, privilege or restrictions concerning subletting and the like, and that there is no form of lease so constantly adopted or usual as to make the usual form.” Those matters mentioned by counsel do not relate to the form in which the terms of a lease may be expressed, but are themselves terms and conditions of the contract. No other terms or conditions, privileges or restrictions could be added to the lease called for in this agreement than those mentioned, and if a lease is drawn embodying in it those terms and conditions
Y. The answer pleads that plaintiff is estopped from claiming under this contract, because he notified defendant that he had found defects in defendant’s title, and that he would, therefore, not accept it if a deed was offered. There is no evidence to sustain that plea. It is aimed at the letter from Mr. Boeek to Mr. Eliot, in which Boeck says that plaintiff is advised that the alleys adjacent to the Pine street property have not been dedicated and he thinks plaintiff ought to have a guaranty against that, “in other words, his attorney thinks your defect is more serious than the defect to the Scannel property, and Mr. Scannel thinks he ought not to be required to furnish a guaranty.” That letter was written while the proposition to have the St. Louis Trust Company guarantee the title to the Market street property was being considered. It only means that plaintiff thought he ought not to be required to furnish such a guarantee, but it did not amount even to a refusal to do that.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court of the city of St.' Louis with directions to take an account of the rental value of the Pine street property from July 17, 1897, to date, deducting from the amount of such rents the amount of taxes, if any, the defendant has paid on that property, and of the rental value of the Market 'Street property for the same period, less the taxes, if any, paid by plaintiff thereon, and upon the coming in of said account enter a decree requiring a specific performance of the contract in suit according to the prayer of the plaintiff’s petition, except that the lease called for by the contract be not required, and give judgment for the plaintiff against the defendant for the