49 Wash. 612 | Wash. | 1908
This is an action by the appellant against the respondent, to enforce specific performance of a contract for the sale of real estate. The contract of sale upon which the complaint was based was made and entered into on the 8th day of September, 1903, and was, in substance, to the
The complaint set forth in substance the terms of the contract, and alleged that plaintiff had expended more than $200 upon the land described, that he notified the defendant that he was ready, able, and Avilling to comply with the terms of the contract on his part, and that the defendant failed and refused to comply with the contract. Plaintiff demanded that the defendant be required to deed to plaintiff the land in dispute, and that on its failure to do so, he have judgment against it for $500 profit Avhich he claimed, and for $200 expenses and interest, and for the $100 paid, with interest from time of payment. The ansAver admitted the execution of the contract, alleged that the plaintiff had wholly failed and refused to make the payments specified in the contract, or to pay the taxes .specified therein, and denied many of the matters set up in the complaint. It also alleged the abandonment of the premises and of the contract by the plaintiff. The reply put in issue the affirmative matters of the answer. Upon the trial of the cause by the court, and upon the completion of the introduction of testimony by the
The appellant relies upon the case of Stein v. Waddell, 37 Wash. 634, 80 Pac. 184, where it was held that the covenants in a contract of sale of real estate on the part of the vendors to convey the property and take back a mortgage upon the payment of the second installment, and on the part of the vendees to make such payment, are mutual, concurrent, and dependent, although the contract provides that the vendees shall first pay; and that no action to declare a forfeiture of the contract for nonpayment of the installment can be maintained by the vendors without executing and tendering a deed. But in this case the respondent was under no obligation to tender or execute a deed until all the payments had been made, and the last of the deferred payments was not due until March, 1908, a period of two years after the commencement of this action. Consequently the covenant to convey and the covenant to pay the first installments could not be concurrent. In addition to this, the decision of controversies of this character must of necessity depend largely upon the circumstances surrounding each particular case. The cases are of equitable cognizance and the rules governing them must be more or less flexible. In Stein v. Waddell, supra, the action was brought to declare a forfeiture. The defendants had paid $5,000 down on a $20,000 contract. The contract was entered into on February 3, 1902, when the first payment of $5,000 was made, and the next payment of $5,000 was to be made on or before August 3, 1903, the remaining $10,000 on or before February 3, 1904, or one year from the date of the contract; and upon the payment to the grantor of the second installment, the grantor agreed to execute a deed to the grantees and take a mortgage back for the remaining $10,000. The defendants, it is true,, did not make the second payment according to the strict terms of the contract, but
“The respondents in this case did not insist on a strict performance by the appellants. They accepted a partial payment on the contract some six weeks after the cause of forfeiture accrued, and within three weeks thereafter this action was brought. Under such circumstances, a court of equity should insist upon a strict compliance with the terms of the contract, on the part of one invoking its aid to declare a forfeiture.’’
But in this case it is easily determined from the appellant’s own testimony that there was an actual abandonment of the contract, and while there was some little misunderstanding as to the description of the land at first, this cannot be urged by the appellant, for the contract that he was then objecting to is the contract which he is now seeking to compel a performance of; and it can also readily be gathered from his testimony that, by reason of changing his residence, it would have been difficult after the first few months for the respondent to have served notice of the declaration of forfeiture upon him. We think, when it was shown that the appellant had made no payments whatever which were provided for in the contract, had not paid the taxes which he had contracted to pay, and had quit the possession of the land, all for nearly three years, that the court was justified in concluding that there had been an actual abandonment of the contract on the part of the appellant, and in granting the nonsuit prayed for. In this western country, where real estate values are fluctuating, owing to the rise and fall of what are provincially termed “booms,” to allow a party to contract for the purchase of land, making thereon a small payment and contract
The judgment is affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Rudkin, Fullerton, and Crow, JJ., concur.