Suit by Dean Toland, a licensed real estate broker, plaintiff below, against Mendel S. Kaliff, defendant below, for recovery of a part of earnest money deposited by Kaliff in connection with an earnest money contract of purchase and sale by Acme Home Builders & Loan, Inc., as seller and Kaliff as purchaser, in which Toland was the broker. Toland instituted suit against Kaliff alleging that all of the conditions precedent to said contract had been complied with, that Kaliff refused to purchase the property involved, and that Toland was entitled to $5,000, one-half of the earnest money, as liquidated damages. Trial was to the court without a jury and judgment was rendered by the court that Toland take nothing. Findings of fact made by the trial court, which are undisputed in the record, may be summarized as follows: Acme, Kaliff, and Toland executed an earnest money agreement on October 13, 1967 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1), which instrument provides: “Contract subject to Buyer obtaining an engineering inspection and approval of property.” Kaliff did not inspect the property prior to the execution of such instrument. After execution of such instrument Kaliff did not obtain an engineering inspection and approval of the property. After execution of such instrument Kaliff and an engineer did inspect the property. Upon inspection of the property the engineer and Kaliff disapproved of the property. The other parties to such instrument were notified by Kaliff of such disapproval, and no sale or conveyance of the property was made to Kaliff.
The following conclusions of law were made by the trial court:
“1. A condition precedent to formation of a contract between the parties was not performed.
“2. No contract between the parties has been formed.”
On October 13, 1967, Acme, the seller, Kaliff, the buyer, and Toland, the agent, executed an earnest money contract wherein Acme agreed to sell and Kaliff agreed to purchase certain apartment units in Universal City, Bexar County, Texas. Part of the consideration for the property provided for in such contract was the execution of a third lien note by Kaliff to Toland in the amount of $50,000, and the regular commission clause provided for in said contract was deleted. The agreement contained a provision that upon failure of the purchaser to comply with the terms of the contract “for any reason except title defects, the seller may, and at the option of the agent herein, shall retain this earnest mon *262 ey as liquidated damages for breach of contract, one-half to be retained by the seller and one-half (but not exceeding agent’s regular commission) to be paid to the agent herein, or specific performance may be enforced.” The instrument, which was a printed form, provided at the bottom of page 1: “This contract is also subject to the terms on the next page marked ‘Exhibit A’ which is hereby made a part of this contract.” One of the conditions provided for in said Exhibit A was: “1. Contract subject to Buyer obtaining an engineering inspection and approval of property.”
Subsequent to the execution of such instrument, Kaliff along with George Ozuna, Jr., a consultant engineer, inspected the property. Ozuna. submitted a written report to Kaliff in which he pointed out structural defects and existing discrepancies, and upon Ozuna’s report and disapproval of the property Kaliff notified the seller and Toland that he disapproved of the property and desired the return of the $10,000 earnest money deposited by him. Thereafter Kaliff and Acme executed an agreement of mutual release, wherein it was agreed that said earnest money contract was null and void and cancelled, and that Kaliff was entitled to the return of the earnest money put up, and further provided that “This instrument does not effect or release the rights, if any, of Dean Toland or Security Title Co.,” the escrow agent and title company involved. Kaliff testified that Acme advised him that it had been out about $700.00 costs in connection with said transaction, and that he reimbursed Acme in that amount for such costs.
Toland asserts two points of error: (1) The evidence conclusively establishes that all conditions of the earnest money contract had been satisfied and that Mendel S. Kaliff was in default of the contract when he failed to tender the real estate commission as provided for in the contract. (2) The evidence conclusively establishes that by his acts and conduct, Kaliff was satisfied that all conditions of the contract had been satisfied.
A condition precedent in the law of contracts is such as must happen or be performed before a right can accrue to enforce an obligation dependent upon the happening or performance thereof against another in favor of one claiming such right. Burns v. American Nat. Ins. Co.,
Toland makes no contention that there were no conditions precedent under such contract to be performed, nor does he contend that the condition precedent providing for inspection of the property by an engineer and approval of such property
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was ever obtained. It is his contention, however, that the settlement and release agreement executed by Acme and Kaliff, and the payment by Kaliff to Acme of the sum of $700.00, constituted a waiver on the part of Kaliff of such condition precedent and that Kaliff’s conduct constituted a ratification and affirmance of the contract. We find no merit in such contention. A waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known right, or such conduct as warrants an inference of the relinquishment of such right. Ford v. Culbertson,
The agreement of mutual release of the earnest money contract was not a relinquishment of the right to have all the conditions to the formation of the contract completed and complied with, and did not constitute a waiver of the condition precedent or a ratification of the contract. The trial court’s finding that a condition precedent to the formation of the contract between the parties was not performed and that no contract between the parties had been formed is sufficiently supported by the record. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
