45 N.Y.S. 524 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
Lead Opinion
. The abstract propositions of law for which the appellant contends, and most of which were charged by the court, are' unexceptionable, •namely, that the title of the premises having proved defective, the plaintiff had the right, on the 12th of October, 1894, to refuse to • carry out the contract and to receive from the defendant the amount of his advances with interest, and that on that daté the question
That the parties had the right to regard the contract as still existing between them, and could have agreed that the question of their rights thereunder should be submitted to the court, is not open for serious discussion. Upon the conflict in the testimony, the trial judge properly submitted the question as to whethei1, by arrangement between the parties, it was left to the court to decide who was to stand the expense of carrying the title, and correctly instructed the jury that, in order to entitle the plaintiff to recover back the
Considering that the church was in possession and had the benefits, if any, resulting therefrom, and that the plaintiff was not in default at any time, it is difficult to determine upon what principle of law .a conclusion other than that reached by the. learned trial judge could , be arrived at, viz., that the defendant was not. entitled to exact such payment from Mr. Stqiner. The latter was entitled to a deed “ free from incumbrance,” and until the tender of such conveyance with the corresponding ability to convey, the vendee could not be placed in default. It was, in effect, this question of whether Steiner had unreasonably refused to perform that was submitted to the General Term.. That court, as we have stated, decided that his objections were good, and.left him free to rescind the contract and get back what he had paid thereon if he so elected. As stated,, however, .neither side claimed that the contract was extinguished by the result of the proceedings in court, but, on the contrary, performance was tendered by both parties; and Steiner having concluded to take, notwithstanding the restrictions, the meeting in October was with a view to carrying out the contract; and, standing in this attitude to each other, the counsel for the church insisted that the order of the court authorizing the sale defined the duties of the trustees, and that by such order they were required to close the title as of March first, and were bound to collect the principal sum as of that date, with interest thereon accruing from the postponement of such payment, without regard to the cause of such delay. The fallacy of this • contention, we think, lies in a failure to recognize that it. was not the purchaser who was in default, but the church; and the question,’ upon whom should fall any expense resulting from the delay, must necessarily be determined, if.it is to be determined at all, by a consideration of' who was responsible or caused the delay. .Therefore, when the parties met in October, after the lapse of several months-
With respect to the larger item of interest, that, in the absence of contract, is only awarded as damages upon the default of a party to meet his obligations. Generally speaking, “ interest is allowable as damages for default in the performance of a contract to pay money.” (11 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, tit. “ Interest,” 383, 389; Cutter v. The Mayor, 92 N. Y. 171.) In Fi-y on Specific Performance (3d ed., p. 620, § 1399) it is said: “Now it is obviously inequitable, in the absence of express and distinct stipulation, that either party to the contract should at one and the same time enjoy the benefits flowing from possession of the property and those flowing from possession of the purchase money. The estate and the purchase money are things mutually exclusive. ‘You cannot,’ said Knight Bruce, in a case arising out of the sale of some slob lands in Chichester harbour, ‘ have both money and mud.’ And so, neither party can at the same time be entitled both to interest and to rents.” (See, also, id. § 1404.)
The question, therefore, as to whether there was an. agreement that the payment made by Steiner was not to be voluntary, but was to be received by the church subject to determination by the court as to whether it had the right legally to exact it, was, upon conflicting evidence, properly submitted as a question of fact to the jury, and the learned trial judge was right in holding that if the plaintiff established the existence of such an agreement, then, as a matter of law, in closing the contract, the church having remained in possession of the property, and being in default and unable to tender the deed contracted for, it had no right, standing upon the contract which it had entered into, to exact the payment of the expenses incident to the delay between the original date and the time when the title was finally closed.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Rumsbt and Patterson, JJ., concurred; Ingraham and Parker, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
When the parties met on the 12th day of October, 1894, to .carry ont the contract, the defendant insisted that if the contract was to be completed the plaintiff must pay the Consideration therein named,' and must also pay the amount that the church had been compelled to pay in carrying the property from 'March 1, 1894, to October 12, 1894, and this sum was fix ;d at $3,601.36. . Subsequently, the plaintiff complied with this demand of the church, and paid in addition to the sum of $190,000 this sum of $3,601.36, and it is to recover the amount thus paid- that .this action is brought.
The terms of the agreement between the parties under which this payment was made were disputed. The court submitted this question to the.jury, stating that the question to be determined was “ whether, when this demand for interest and other expenses was made on the 12th of October, that it was made upon an agreement-that it was so' paid, with a view to the submission to a court subsequently of the right to exact it, .and whether there was an understanding among the parties that it was tó be retained by the church only in case it should be ultimately decided they had a right to it.” There was evidence to sustain a finding that there was such an agreement, and the jury, by their verdict, have found that such-an agreement was in fact made, and that the money was paid under it. The court charged the jury: “In order to entitle- the plaintiff to recover it back he must establish to your satisfaction it' was received under an -agreement that it should' be repaid in case the court decided the church was not entitled to it. If you find in favor of the plaintiff upon that dispute as to the agreement, then the question, of course, will arise, 6Was the church- entitled to it?’”
Upon that question the court charged, as a matter of law', that the defendant was not entitled to demand from the -plaintiff at that -time the amount expended by the church in carrying the property from the first of March to the twelfth of October, and the correctness of this decision is the only question presented upon the record in this case. ' . . ' • - -
- When the parties met to complete the'' contract, on the first' of March,- the purchaser- objected to the title on the ground that these restrictions were incumbrances upon the property. The parties agreed to submit that question to the General Term- of the Supreme
I think, therefore, that the defendant was entitled to insist upon the payment of this sum of money as a condition for its delivery of the deed on the twelfth of October, and that by the agreement under which the money was paid, the jfiaintiff had no right to have it returned to him.
I think that the complaint should have been dismissed and the judgment reversed and a new trial ordered.
Parker, J., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.