161 P. 962 | Or. | 1916
Opinion by
Invoking the doctrine announced in Barrett v. Schleich, 37 Or. 613, 617 (62 Pac. 792), where it is said:
“The parol agreement to convey real property is the foundation, and the part performance thereof by the purchaser is the superstructure, which, considered as a unity, authorizes a court of equity specifically to enforce the contract”
—it is maintained by appellants’ counsel that, the complaint having failed to aver that a parol agreement to purchase the tract of land was ever consummated, or that pursuant to the terms of any contract possession of the premises was taken and improvements were made, the initiatory pleading does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit, and, this being so, an error was committed in overruling the demurrer interposed on that ground, which mistake was not cured by answering over. It is argued by plaintiff’s counsel that the use of the word “purchase” in the primary pleading implies the consummation of an agreement by the vendor to sell, and the purchaser
“On July 14, 1911, plaintiff commenced this suit against Barker and wife to compel specific performance of a contract of sale of certain town lots, alleging that in October, 1907, defendants, by a verbal contract, sold to plaintiff lots 5 and 6, in block 30, of Condon and Cornish’s Addition to Condon, Oregon, for the agreed price of $800; that, immediately upon the purchase, plaintiff entered into possession of the lots and expended $230 in erecting an additional building thereon; and that he has remained in exclusive possession as the owner thereof,” etc.
An examination of the printed abstract in that case shows that paragraph 2 of the complaint reads:
“That on or about the month of October, 1907, the defendants W. L. Barker and Annie L. Barker, by a verbal contract of the last-named date, sold and delivered possession of the above-described premises [referring to the preceding paragraph of the complaint] to the plaintiff herein, under said contract, and he, the plaintiff, has continued in possession of said premises from that time until the present, and has made valuable improvements thereon, and has ever since held possession as the exclusive owner of said property”: 277 Or. Briefs, 118.
It will thus be seen the complaint in the cause mentioned substantially alleges that possession of the lots was delivered by the defendants to the plaintiff pur
In Aitkin’s Heirs v. Young, 12 Pa. 15, 24, in speaking of the acts of part performance which will take
“That in order to constitute a good title by parol the possession must be contemporaneous with, or immediately consequent on, the contract, and in pursuance of it, and that these facts must be established by clear, precise, and satisfactory evidence.”
The importance of taking possession of real property, pursuant to the terms of an oral agreement to sell and convey land, is illustrated by the decision in Roberts v. Templeton, 48 Or. 65 (80 Pac. 481). See, also, the very extended notes to this case in 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 790.
It will be kept in mind, however, that the answer substantially avers the entry upon and possession of the land by W. H. Skinner were taken and held without any contract or agreement with Mr. Reid or anyone for the purchase of the land, and without the knowledge or consent of either Mr. or Mrs Furnas, which allegation was controverted by the reply. After the demurrer was overruled, the allegations of the answer hereinbefore quoted gave the plaintiff by her reply the opportunity to offer evidence to substantiate the issue as to the making of the oral contract with Reid for the purchase of the tract of land, and that pursuant to the terms of that agreement possession of the premises was taken and improvements thereon were made. If the controversy raised by the reply had been stated as new matter in that pleading and not as a denial of the averments of the answer, there would have been no departure, but a mere enlarge
The testimony shows that Mrs. Skinner owned a desert land claim near Hermiston, which right she sold, expecting to use the money as it matured under the terms of the agreement in completing the new house and improving the tract of land she had agreed to purchase. She was disappointed in the collection of the money thus due her, and was obliged to resort to expedients in order to meet the payment of her obligations. She with her husband borrowed from the Hermiston Bank & Trust Company $2,750 and $1,455, respectively, pursuant to an agreement that, if demanded, she would give as security a mortgage of her desert land claim.
J. H. Beid, having testified that $450 was agreed upon as the consideration to be paid for the tract of land desired, and that prior to concluding the bargain therefor he walked over the premises with the plaintiff’s husband, was asked:
“Didn’t Mr. Skinner state to you at the time of that purchase, Mr. Beid, that the land was being purchased as a home for Mrs. Skinner, and the lots must be satisfactory to her, or words to that effect?”
The witness answered: “Yes, sir.” Notwithstanding the circumstances adverted to, it is believed Mr. Skinner was acting as the agent of his wife, and not on Ms own account, when he negotiated with Mr. Beid, the then owner of the entire lands, for the purchase of the small tract; that she then had reason to believe, and did believe, that from the proceeds of the sale of her
“In order that specific performance of an agreement for the sale, exchange, or conveyance of land be decreed, it is not absolutely essential that there be mutuality of remedy ab initio. But the mutual enforcement of the contract should be practicable when*426 specific performance is adjudged. The court should then be able to enforce by its decree all of the terms, in praesenti; should have the power to supervise the performance of the contract by each of the parties, and in all of its parts.”
Another part of a headnote to that case is as follows:
“The legal principle that contracts must be mutual does not mean that each party must be entitled to the same remedy for a breach by the other. There must be mutuality of obligation, but not necessarily mutuality of remedy.”
See, also, House v. Jackson, 24 Or. 89 (32 Pac. 1027); Cooper v. Thomason, 30 Or. 161 (45 Pac. 296); West v. Washington Ry. Co., 49 Or. 436 (90 Pac. 666). Mutuality must exist when the aid of a court is invoked to protect and enforce the rights of the parties by its decree; and, as a recovery of the consideration and the execution of a deed could have been granted to either party when this suit was instituted, the oral contract was sufficient in this particular.
The lien created by the mortgage of the entire 320 acres, executed by Mr. and Mrs. Furnas to secure the payment of $2,500, for water rights appurtenant to the premises, was not disturbed by the decree rendered herein, nor could it have been, for that mortgagee was not made a party to this suit. If, however, Mrs. Skinner is compelled to pay any part of that sum, she can be subrogated and enforce the lien against the remainder of the land, after a merger as to her separate tract.
A careful examination of the testimony leads to the conclusion that the decree should be affirmed; and it is so ordered. Affirmed.