142 P. 321 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit in equity to obtain a decree for the specific performance of a contract. The pleadings are too lengthy to be set out. No questions are raised as to their sufficiency. The plaintiff on May 6, 1911, purchased from the defendant about 138 acres of unimproved land, lying on the south side of Wallowa Lake in Wallowa County. This land is described in the second amended complaint, which will be referred to infra, as “the complaint.” The plaintiff was to
“It is hereby agreed between the grantor and the grantee herein, that the grantee agrees to release, from time to time, from the lien and operation of this mortgage, portions of the land herein described in quantities of not less than one-half acre each, upon the request of the grantor herein, its successors or assigns, and upon the payment by said grantor, its successors, or assigns, of the sum of $30, for each and every half acre desired to be released. * # It is also agreed that all payments made by grantor, its successors, or assigns, upon this mortgage and the notes secured hereby arelo be applied at the time of payment, first to interest, and then to first next maturing notes.”
This suit was brought upon the covenant set out supra to obtain a decree compelling the defendant to release from the lien and effect of said mortgage 13 acres of said land, described in the complaint.
The sixth, seventh, and eighth paragraphs of the complaint are as follows, omitting the description of the 13-acre tract that the plaintiff desired released:
“ (6) That plaintiff has duly kept and performed all the conditions of said covenant on its part to be kept*436 and performed, and that, On or about the 21st day of August, 1912, in Wallowa County, Or., plaintiff tendered to defendant, Joseph L. Hamilton, in person the sum of $780, the sum necessary to secure the release of 13 acres of land included in said mortgage, according to the covenants thereof, and requested that defendant release from said mortgage 13 acres of the land described therein, and designated the same to defendant, and that said defendant refused to release said 13 acres, or any part thereof, or any of said land at all, and that at the same time and place plaintiff tendered to defendant in person the further sum of $245.50, making a total of $1,025.50, so tendered by plaintiff to defendant, being the amount, in full, necessary to pay in full the note mentioned and described in said mortgage for the sum of $1,000, and to become due September 1, 1912, and requested and insisted that defendant release to plaintiff 13 acres of said land, and that defendant refused to make such release.
“(7) That after said offer and request, upon the aforesaid date, plaintiff demanded from defendant a release of said 13 acres hereinbefore described, according to the provisions of said covenant, and still is ready, able, and willing to pay to defendant the sum of $60 per acre, and now brings the same into court for said purpose.
“(8) That the first note for $1,000 is due on the 1st day of September, 1912, with interest from the 6th' day of May, 1912, to the 1st day of September, 1912, amounting to $25.50, and plaintiff now brings the sum of $245.50, together with the sum of $780, and places the same into the court according to the terms of said mortgage, and covenants.”
The answer denies the tender and some other parts of the complaint, and admits some portions thereof, and sets up said mortgage, and asks for a foreclosure thereof, etc. The reply denies much of the answer, but admits portions thereof.
The court below rendered a decree in favor of the plaintiff, for a release from the lien and effect of said
The plaintiff alleges that on August 21, 1912, it requested the defendant to release said 13 acres of said land, and at the same time tendered to him therefor $780, and also $245.50, to apply on the $1,000 note, and interest that the plaintiff owed the defendant on said mortgage, making in all $1,025.50 so tendered, and that the defendant refused to execute said release. The defendant did not accept said tender, and the plaintiff, when it commenced this suit, deposited the sum of $1,000 in court for the defendant as a continuing tender. The evidence is conflicting as to whether said tender was made on August 21, 1912. This suit was begun only five days later, and said money was then deposited in court for the defendant as a continuing tender.
James F. Egensperger was president and general manager of the plaintiff at the dates mentioned in the complaint. He testifies, inter alia, that about two weeks prior to August 21, 1912, he informed the defendant that the plaintiff desired 13 acres of the land covered by the mortgage released from the lien thereof, and that on August 21, 1912, he called the defendant into the plaintiff’s office, and told him that he had the papers and the money ready, and would turn the money over to him when he signed the release of the land. He says, also, that the defendant told him at that time that, since he mentioned the matter of the
The president and general manager of the plaintiff testifies that he tendered the defendant by check, the $780, and $245.50 more to pay the $1,000 note 'and interest; but the defendant denies that he offered him any money or check, and says that he does not think that anything was said about paying him. The defendant admits, however, that he refused to execute the release because to execute it would release from the mortgage the land upon which the improvements had been erected and weaken his security. He said that the failure to produce the money or currency had
“On the 21st day of August, having had all things in readiness, I called Mr. Hamilton into the office, and told him that I had the papers ready and the money, and would turn it over to Mm when he signed the release.”
On page 8 of the evidence he was ashed what he said to Hamilton when he wanted the release signed, and he answered:
“As soon as the release was made, I would turn the check over to him [Hamilton].”
These extracts contain a fair statement of what said witness said in regard to turning the check over to the defendant. The substance of his offer was to give him the check as soon as he should execute the release. He did not offer him the check absolutely. He was to be paid on his executing the release. The $780 was to be paid for the release. When a person is to perform an act, the obligation to perform which is independent of any precedent or concurrent act to be .performed by the other party, as where money is to be paid in liquidation of a debt, the money or thing to be delivered must be tendered unconditionally, and a tender, under such circumstances, accompanied with some condition which the tenderer has no right to make, as where the sum is offered “as a settlement,” or “in full payment,” is invalid: 38 Cyc. 152; 1 Jones, Mort. (6 ed.), § 893; Tuthill v. Morris, 81 N. Y. 94.
Discussing this subject, 38 Cyc. p. 153, inter alia, says:
“ * * And a tender of performance may be accompanied by such conditions, as to acceptance as are, by the contract, conditions precedent to be performed by the party to whom the tender is made, and which, therefore, the tenderer has a clear right to exact; and, ivhere mutual concurrent acts are to be performed, the word ‘tender,’ as used in such connection, does not mean the same kind of offer as where it is used with reference to an offer to pay an ordinary debt in money; but it only means readiness and willingness, accompanied with ability to do the thing required, and notice of a readiness to perform, providing the other party will concurrently do the thing that he is requested to do, and it has been held that a tender may be made conditional upon proof being produced that the party holding the claim has a right to receive payment, if circumstances exist which reasonably induce a belief in the tenderer that the tenderee has not such right. ’ ’
28 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 ed.), page 31, says:
“It is often broadly stated that a tender must be absolute and without condition. The rule may be more accurately stated as follows: A tender, to be good, must not be accompanied by any condition to*443 which the creditor has a right to object; but it is not invalidated by being coupled with a condition upon which the debtor has the right to insist, and to which the creditor cannot reasonably object.”
The same volume, page 33, says:
“A tender is not invalidated because it is coupled with a demand for the performance of a reciprocal duty enjoined by law upon the person to whom the tender is made. # * It has frequently been held that a tender of the amount of a mortgage debt is not invalid because coupled with a demand for a cancellation or release, or a reconveyance. ’ ’
In Smith v. Lewis, 26 Conn. 119, the court says:
“Some misapprehension or confusion appears to have arisen from the mode of expression used in the books in treating of the necessity of a tender or offer by the parties, as applicable to the case of mutual and concurrent promises. The word ‘tender,’ as used in such a connection, does not mean the same kind of offer as when it is used with reference to the payment or offer to pay an ordinary debt due in money, where the money is offered to a creditor who is entitled to receive it and nothing further remains to be done, but the transaction is completed and ended; but it only means a readiness and willingness, accompanied with an ability on the part of one of the parties to do the acts which the agreement requires him to perform, provided the other will concurrently do the things which he is required by it to do, and a notice by the former to the latter of such readiness. * * It is not an absolute, unconditional offer to do or transfer anything at all events, but it is in its nature conditional only, and dependent on, and to be performed only in case of, the readiness of the other party to perform his part of the agreement.”
In Shouse v. Doane, 39 Fla. 108 (21 South. 811), the court says:
“The complainant was not required to make an unconditional tender. His tender must be, in its nature,*444 conditional only, and dependent on and to be performed only in case of the readiness of tbe other party to perform Ms part of the agreement. The requirement of a ‘tender of purchase money,’ used in this connection, does not mean a tender strictly valid at law, but means a present readiness, willingness, and ability in good faith to perform the acts required of one by the agreement, provided the other party will concurrently do the things which he is required by the contract to do, and notice by the former to the latter of such readiness, willingness, and ability.”
In Halpin v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 118 N. Y. 176, 177 (23 N. E. 485), the court says:
“But where there is no dispute as to the amount of the debt, a tender may always be restricted by such conditions as by the terms of the contract are conditions precedent or simultaneous to the payment of the debt or proper to be performed by the party to whom the tender is made. * * In all these cases the party making the tender had a legal right to insist, as a condition of payment, that the party to whom the tender was made do the things demanded, and for that reason coupling such conditions to the acceptance of the tender did not destroy its effect. A debtor who has transferred securities as collateral to the debt, has a legal right, upon payment of the debt, to have such collaterals reassigned to him, and a tender of the debt is not destroyed by making it a condition of its acceptance, that the creditor transfer the collaterals to him, because that condition is one the debtor has a right to insist upon and the creditor no right to refuse; so a mortgagor who pays a bond and mortgage, has a legal right to have the mortgage satisfied on the record. In no way, except by a certificate of the holder of the mortgage, can that result be accomplished. It is within the terms of the contract between the parties, and is a thing which, on payment of the debt, the mortgagee is under an obligation to do and one which a court of equity would compel him to do. It is a condition, therefore, which the mortgagor*445 has a right to attach to the tender of the debt, and does not destroy its effect.”
In Johnson v. Cranage, 45 Mich. 18 (7 N. W. 190), the court says:
“A tender may very properly be coupled with conditions snch as the party has a right to make, and is entitled to as resulting from a payment or tender legally made. * * The plaintiffs could not obtain possession of their logs from the Boom Company even had they paid in full all that was demanded, without an order from Johnson, and they on making a tender to him had a right to couple it with a demand for their logs, or what would entitle them to a delivery of the logs. ’ ’
In Mankel v. Belscamper, 84 Wis. 223 (54 N. W. 502), the court says:
“The tender of the entire amount was made to the plaintiff at her residence, and it is plain from the testimony that she had no intention of taking it, but was rather actuated by a disposition to subject the defendant to difficulty and embarrassment. It was her duty at that time to have received the money, and to have executed to the defendant the deed of conveyance of the premises in question. * * The tender was not impaired by the fact that he (when he made the tender) demanded a deed, for he did not insist upon any condition except such as the plaintiff was clearly in duty hound to perform at the time of payment, by the contract. ’ ’
See on this point, also, Kennedy v. Moore, 91 Iowa, 39 (58 N. W. 1065); Taylor v. Mathews, 53 Fla. 776 (44 South. 146); Harding v. Ciddings, 73 Fed. 335 (19 C. C. A. 508).
If the plaintiff offered to pay the defendant the $60 per acre for releasing the 13 acres of land, on his executing the release, and requested him to execute the release, that constituted a valid tender. The
As stated supra, the plaintiff was obliged to pay, or offer no more than the $780, in order to entitle it to the release. No part of the mortgage debt was due at the time that the tender was made or when the suit was commenced.
Pomeroy, Contracts, Section 326, says:
“Although the plaintiff must in general show an actual performance on his part, or else a tender or offer of performance, yet such tender or offer is sometimes unnecessary, and a readiness and willingness to perform is sufficient. The necessity of a tender is obviated, and the readiness and willingness supply its place whenever the case shows, either in the allegations or the evidence, that if a tender had been made it would have been refused by the defendant, or shows that the defendant had, by his own acts or omissions, made it impossible for him to accept the plaintiff’s offer, and fulfill his own part of the agreement. Under such circumstances, equity does not require the empty show of a tender.”
"Waterman, Specific Performance, Section 446, says, inter alia:
“A tender of performance need not be made when it would be wholly nugatory. * * When the facts alleged in the bill, or given in evidence, show that an offer of performance, by the plaintiff would not have been accepted, such offer is therefore rendered unnecessary. If the vendor denies the obligation of the contract, resumes possession of the land, and receives the rents and profits, a tender by the vendee of the purchase money is not necessary to entitle him to a decree for specific performance.”
“When a vendor places himself in such a position as to make it appear that if a tender of the purchase price were made its acceptance would be refused,*448 the purchaser need not make a tender in order to maintain his bill. In such case, an offer to bring the money into court when the amount is liquidated and his decree granted is sufficient. ’ ’
See on this point, also, Guillaume v. K. S. D. Land Co., 48 Or. 400 (86 Pac. 883, 88 Pac. 586); Merrill v. Hexter, 52 Or. 144 (94 Pac. 972, 96 Pac. 865); West v. Washington Ry. Co., 49 Or. 436 (90 Pac. 666); Whitney Co. v. Smith, 63 Or. 190, 191 (126 Pac. 1000); Woods v. Wichstrom, 67 Or. 581 (135 Pac. 192).
The evidence of the defendant shows that if the $780 had been tendered to him in gold on condition that he execute the release, he would have refused to accept it or to execute the release. He had made up his mind not to execute a release of the 13 acres, and hence no tender was necessary.
The plaintiff claims to have made the tender on August 21, 1912, and this suit was commenced on August 26th, only five days after the making of said tender. When this suit was commenced the money was deposited in court as a continuing tender to the defendant. We affirm the findings of Judge Knowles in regard to the tender.
We have examined all the questions at issue, and we find no error in the proceedings of the trial court. The decree of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.