100 Wash. 306 | Wash. | 1918
In November, 1911, the Vera Land Coup pany, contracting as owner, entered into a contract with defendant Eidgway for the sale of lands near Spokane. The price of the land was fixed and Eidgway was given ten years in which to complete his payments, paying interest at six per cent per annum upon the purchase price, commencing at a date eighteen months subsequent to the date of the contract. Eidgway was
Ridgway thereupon organized a corporation, known as the Spokane Orchard Homes Company, and assigned to it the contract of sale. The land company assented to this assignment and acquiesced in certain modifications of the terms of the contract as to amount
No attempt has been made, except in a general way, to state the provisions of the contract or the undertakings of Eidgway or of the two corporations organized by him, such detailed statement hot being material to the conclusions we have reached.
The land company brought this action in May, 1915, making Eidgway and the'two corporations defendants, alleging the default of the original contract in several particulars, and praying for a forfeiture and the quieting of its title against defendant. Subsequently an amended complaint was filed in which some sixty purchasers who had acquired an interest in the land through Eidgway or through the Spokane Orchard Homes Company, were made defendants, with a prayer for the same relief as to them. Many of these last named defendants answered and set up their contracts with Eidgway or the Spokane Orchard Homes Company and, by way of cross-complaint, prayed that their contracts be enforced against the land company and that it be held to the undertaking of Eidgway and the two corporations organized by him. The result of the action was in favor of respondent, and cross-complainants appealed.
The evidence is voluminous, and no attempt will be made to review it here. There is only one question in the ease, and that is the liability of the land company
The lower court found that the contract between Eidgway and respondent was a contract of sale, and that, by reason of several defaults, Eidgway and the two corporations organized by him had forfeited all rights thereunder; that the respondent was in no particular responsible for the default in the contracts of the several cross-complainants, and that neither the land company nor any of its officers were interested in the corporations organized by Eidgway. These and like findings must be sustained. We can find nothing in this record to charge the respondent with liability for the fulfillment of the contracts of appellants, or charge it with the default of Eidgway or of the Spokane Orchard Homes Company. The land company is neither party nor privy to these contracts and never, so far as we can ascertain, authorized or adopted them, nor held itself out in any way as bound by them.
The liability is sought to be fastened upon the land' company upon two theories: (1) That the original contract was one of agency, and (2) that the land company, its officers and Eidgway and his two corporations and their officers conspired together to formulate and carry out a scheme for the sale of these lands that would exempt the land company from liability in case the scheme failed.
We can find no evidence to sustain either theory. The contract between the land company and Eidgway is a contract of sale and purchase; and while it is true that the land company and its officers knew what Eidgway and his two corporations were doing in their efforts to sell the land to the appellants and others, there is no evidence that would link them all into a conspiracy to defraud. The scheme failed for the same reason that many other such projects have failed, but
Appellants make much in their brief of what they term the fraud of the respondent in receiving its share of the money paid by these appellants upon their contracts and then seeking the aid of a court of equity to deprive appellants of any interest in the land. The forfeiture of the Eidgway contract must depend upon whether or not its conditions have been broken. Eidgway must first perform his undertaking with respondent before he can obtain any rights he could pass on to appellants. That they contracted with him or with his corporations under the belief that he or they would be able to fully perform what they undertook is, in the light of their failure, a misfortune, but it is not a misfortune that can be visited upon respondent. The law must be as rigid in giving to respondent all its rights under its contract as appellants ask in the enforcement of their contracts, and whatever misfortune results must rest where it properly belongs—upon the one who • dealt with one who could not perform. It is not a fraud in law or equity for respondent to insist upon its rights, even though the decreeing of those rights means the undoing of appellants.
The judgment is affirmed.