75 Wash. 490 | Wash. | 1913
This is an action in equity by the plaintiff against the defendants to quiet title to a tract of 1,308 acres of land, in Klicldtat county. The following facts appeared from the plaintiff’s evidence:
In 1890 the plaintiff and her then husband, O. D. Taylor, since deceased, sold to the defendant Interstate Investment Company a tract of 2,028 acres of land, including the land here in controversy. The price was $150,000, $50,000 of which was paid down and the other $100,000 was represented by two promissory notes of $50,000 each, drawing interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, one payable in July, 1895, and the other in July, 1900. The Taylors retained the legal title to the property, executing a bond for deed to the investment company, which provided for a conveyance of the land upon payment of the notes and for the delivery of immediate possession and full use of the property to the investment company, saving certain immaterial exceptions. Afterwards an arrangement was made between the investment company and the plaintiff’s husband by which he was em
In 1891, the defendant Interstate Improvement Company was organized, and purchased all of the interest of the Interstate Investment Company in this land and in the bond for a deed therefor, thus succeeding to all of the rights of the investment company growing out of the bond and contract with Taylor. In 1893, the defendant Interstate Improvement Company commenced an action in the circuit court of Oregon for Multnomah county, against the plaintiff’s husband, for an accounting as to the moneys received for stock and lot sales. That suit remained in the court until 1902 and it was finally adjudicated therein that the amounts received by the plaintiff’s husband for such sales aggregated over $81,000, which sum it was decreed should be credited upon the notes given for the balance of the purchase price, and that the credit should be made, $40,000 as of June 1st, 1892, and $41,-000 as of June 1st, 1893. From this final decree, no appeal was prosecuted by either party.
In the meantime, the defendant companies apparently remained in the possession of the land, through their agents, until early in 1906, when both companies were dissolved by proclamation of the governor of Oregon, in which state both companies were organized and had their situs. Since that time, the defendant Rorick has been in possession, save as to certain lands sold under judicial sale for debts of the cor-
The foregoing facts were sufficiently pleaded in the complaint, which is too voluminous to quote, and the prayer was for possession and for quieting title. There was also a prayer for general relief.
When the plaintiff had rested her case, the defendants moved for a dismissal, which was granted. From the judgment dismissing the action and awarding costs to the defendants, the plaintiff has appealed.
The appellant’s theory of the action, as shown by her complaint and argument, is that the transaction evidenced by the bond for deed, the admitted first payment, and the two notes, was an agreement to sell but not a presently operative sale. On the other hand, the respondents claim that the transaction was a sale, and that the legal title was retained by the vendors merely as a security for the payment of the notes. The bond itself covenanted for an immediate and unqualified delivery of possession by the vendors to the vendee, authorized sales of the property, or any part of it, by the vendee, contained no provision for a forfeiture in case of nonpayment of the balance of the purchase price, and did not declare time of the essence of the contract. Clearly the transaction was a sale, with a retention of title by the vendors as a security. The relation of the parties was in equity analogous to
“The vendee is looked upon and treated as the owner of the land; an equitable estate has vested in him commensurate with that provided for by the contract, whether in fee, for life, or for years; although the vendor remains owner of the legal estate, he holds it as a trustee for the vendee, to whom all the beneficial interest has passed, having a lien on the land, even if in possession of the vendee, as security for any unpaid portion of the purchase money. . . . The equitable interest of the vendor is correlative with that of the vendee; his beneficial interest in the land is gone, and only the naked legal title remains, which he holds in trust for the vendee, accompanied, however, by a lien upon the land as security when any of the purchase price remains unpaid. This lien, like every other equitable lien, is not an interest in the land, is neither a jus ad rem nor a jus in re, but merely an encumbrance. The vendor is regarded as owner of the purchase price, and the vendee, before actual payment, is simply a trustee of the purchase-money for him. Equity carries out this doctrine to its consequences.” 1 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (2d ed.), § 368.
“The legal effect of a title bond, or agreement for a deed, is sometimes said to be like a deed by the vendor and a mortgage back by the vendee. There can be no sensible distinction between the case of a legal title conveyed to secure the payment of a debt, and a legal title retained to secure payment.” 2 Jones, Liens (2d ed.), § 1108.
See, also, Baker v. Sinclaire, 22 Wash. 462, 61 Pac. 170; Hester v. Hunnicutt, 104 Ala. 282, 16 South. 162; Bankhead v. Owen, 60 Ala. 457; Gilmore v. Gilmore, 60 Kan. 606, 57 Pac. 505; Manning v. North British & Mercantile Ins. Co., 123 Mo. App. 456, 99 N. W. 1095; Graham v. McCampbell (Meigs), 19 Tenn. 52, 33 Am. Dec. 126; Bowen v. Lansing, 129 Mich. 117, 88 N. W. 384, 95 Am. St. 427, 57 L. R. A. 643; Holman v. Patterson’s Heirs, 29 Ark. 357; Strickland v. Kirk, 51 Miss. 795.
It is plain that the appellant has mistaken her remedy; but it does not follow that she is, for that reason alone, out of court. The complaint, though asking an impossible relief, states all the facts necessary to a relief which might be possible. It states the same facts which would be required in an action to foreclose the equitable lien created by the bond and for a sale of the land to pay any balance of the purchase price which may be found due. It may be urged that the complaint is insufficient for that purpose in that it makes no offer to convey the land and contains no allegation of a tender of deed, but such an offer or allegation is not always necessary. In this case it is not an essential, since the respondents still retain the land, do not seek to rescind on their part, and claim that the purchase price has been fully paid. Any decree which might be rendered for a payment of an unpaid balance of the purchase price, if any, would of course require a conveyance of the land upon such payment. Where the decree itself will give ample protection, the antecedent formality
The appellant’s contention that the two corporations, Interstate Investment Company and Interstate Improvement Company, being now dissolved in the state of their situs, that fact shows an abandonment of the contract, and that, on that theory, she can maintain an action for possession and to quiet title. The Oregon law is neither pleaded nor proved. No decree of dissolution and distribution of the assets of the corporation is claimed by either side. The dissolution of these corporations is immaterial, since whatever property rights they had would pass on such dissolution to their stockholders, subject to corporation liabilities. 3 Purdy’s Beach, Private Corporations, § 1323. The appellant would have the right to treat them as still existent as to matters relating to this antecedent contract and enforce her claim against the corporate property by an action in equity. Her rights under the contract, if she now has any, are superior to those of the stockholders. The corporations have appeared and answered in this action, presumably with the consent of and as representing the stockholders. If it be true that the purchase price of the land has not been fully paid, the stockholders, who, by their failure to take any action on their own part to fully perform the contract, would hardly hereafter be permitted to question the binding force of any decree which might be rendered against the corporation with reference to this land. In addition to this, the respondent Rorick, who was placed in possession as the agent of the corporations, is still in possession, a fact which must be presumed to be
On the other hand, the respondents claim that the appellant’s evidence shows that the whole of the purchase price has been paid, and hence the action cannot be maintained on any theory. The evidence shows that, of the $150,000 agreed purchase price, $50,000 was paid when the bond was given, and $81,000 was paid by the credits made through the decree of the Oregon court in the suit for an accounting. The evidence also shows that 720 acres of .the land was lost to both parties by the foreclosure of the mortgage for $3,500 held by the Oregon Mortgage Company, which mortgage the appellant and her husband should have paid. The respondents claim that this land, being over one-third of the entire 2,028 acres covered by the bond for deed, and there being no evidence that the land lost was not as valuable acre for acre as the rest of the land, its value, measured by the contract price, should be set off and credited on that price as of the date of the mortgage foreclosure; that this would give an additional credit of $53,000 and more than discharge the balance of the debt then remaining after the admitted credits. The appellant claims that, when the $3,500 mortgage was due and unpaid, there was a duty resting upon the respondents to minimize the loss, resulting from the vendors’ breach of contract, by paying the mortgage or redeeming from the foreclosure sale and charging only that amount against the purchase price; that not having done so, the measure of damages by reason of the breach is not the value of the land lost, but the amount which would have been required to redeem from the mortgage sale, and that this measures the respondents’ right of set-off.
If the respondents had actually redeemed from the mortgage sale, it is certain that the amount paid for such redemption would be the measure of their right of set-off. 2 Jones, Mortgages (5th ed.), § 1504; 2 Devlin, Deeds (2d ed.), § 916. If, at the time the mortgage was foreclosed
■ “In cases where the defect of title or the incumbrance has been (or could be) obtained or removed by purchase it is considered that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount which he has fairly and reasonably paid for that purpose, the burden of proof being upon him to show what the outstanding incumbrance or title was really worth.”
We have no access to the edition cited, but a later edition of the same work omits the words which we have parenthesized, thus limiting the rule of the recovery there stated to cases of actual payment or removal of the prior incumbrance by the vendee. Rawle, Covenants for Title (5th ed.), page
We find no error in the judgment dismissing the action. It is affirmed.
Mount, Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur-