The only questions on this appeal arise on the construction and application of provisions in a contract for the sale of land, whereby it is agreed that in the event of the purchaser becoming dissatisfied with the investment the seller shall buy back the land.
*687 The complaint contained two causes of action, based on agreements to repurchase, under separate contracts for the sale of separate tracts, and judgment was against the defendants, appellants here. The repurchase clause in the first contract is as follows: “Art. 10. If after completion of payments the buyer should be dissatisfied with the investment, the association stands ready at any time between the fifth and sixth year from date of planting to buy back the land by paying the buyer the amount of the purchase price.” The second provides: “Art. 6. If after completion of purchase the buyer should be dissatisfied with the investment, the association guarantees at any time during the sixth year following date of this contract ... to buy back the land.” It will only be necessary to incidentally refer to any other subject matter of these contracts, as no dispute exists on any other of the conditions pleaded.
The complaint also contains an . allegation that within the period specified in the contracts plaintiff became dissatisfied with his investments, and so notified the defendant corporation, and demanded that the agreement to repurchase be fulfilled. No facts are stated as to reasons or grounds for dissatisfaction with the investment. Defendants urged on demurrer that without some showing of reasonable grounds for dissatisfaction the complaint does not state a cause of action, and the overruling of this demurrer is one of the alleged errors on appeal. It is claimed by respondent that certain facts set up in the answer gave substantial reasons for dissatisfaction with the investment, thus supplementing the complaint, and there was evidence introduced on this point; but the court found that the matters pleaded in the answer were not true, and as no error is claimed as to such finding, the question is purely one of law as to whether under the terms of this agreement it was incumbent on the plaintiff to plead and prove facts constituting reasonable grounds for dissatisfaction with his investment.
The contracts considered under the decisions cited by appellant are for the most part clearly distinguishable from the contract under consideration here. They involve the quality or value of things in common use which have a fixed and recognized standard of fitness and worth, and concerning which it is fair and equitable to require a purchaser to be satisfied with the commonly accepted standard of excellence. And sometimes, too, the courts have been controlled in their rulings on this question by the equities involved in cases where the exercise of a captious and unreasonable feeling of dissatisfaction would involve the other party to the contract in serious loss or damage.
(Hawkins
v.
Graham,
The contention that the demand on the second contract was premature is even more untenable. It was there provided that the defendant corporation “guarantees at any time during the sixth year following the date of this contract to buy back the land.” The date of the contract was February 7, 1910. It is not the sixth year after 1910, but the sixth year after February 7, 1910, that was specified. The first year after or following the date of the contract expired February 7, 1911; and the fifth year expired February 7, 1915. The declaration and demand by plaintiff was made on the 12th of August, 1915, which was during the sixth year.
Appellants’ own guns may properly be turned against them in this connection by quoting their argument and citation on another point of construction, from another part of their brief: “There is no better rule of construction than that laid down by this [supreme] court in the case of
Stein
v.
Archibald,
The rulings and judgment of the court are supported by the pleadings, evidence, and findings.
The judgment is affirmed.
Finlayson, P. J., and Thomas, J., concurred.
