4 Alaska 154 | D. Alaska | 1910
The first serious question to be considered is: For whom did Renza purchase the property? Did he purchase the same for himself or as agent for Williams, and, if he purchased it for Williams, is his oral contract with Williams such a contract as the court can enforce, or is it void or nonenforceable under the statute of frauds? Second. If such a contract were enforceable, is the evidence such as to warrant the court in finding that such an agreement was entered into between Williams and Renza?
The plaintiff contends that the contract upon which he seeks to recover is not within the statute of frauds for the reason that Renza while advancing money which theretofore belonged to him, yet, under his agreement with the plaintiff, the money became the plaintiff’s immediately upon its advancement as the purchase price of the property (that is, Renza loaned the purchase money to Williams, not delivering the same to Williams, but agreeing that the same should be a loan and should be charged against Williams immediately upon its appropriation for the purposes provided for by the contract); and the plaintiff contends that under such circumstances, if the title is taken in the name of the person who actually advances the money a trust results in favor of the person to whom the loan is made and to whose account the purchase price is charged.
If the testimony of the plaintiff supports or fully sustains the contention that such was the contract, then, under the law, a trust would result in favor of the person who actually assumed and became responsible for the purchase price. Our statute (section 1046, p. 355, Carter’s Annotated Alaska Codes) provides:
“No estate or interest in real property, other than a lease for a term not exceeding one year, nor any trust or power concerning such property, can be created, transferred, or declared otherwise than by operation of law, or by a conveyance or other instrument in writing subscribed by the party creating, transferring, or declaring the same, or by his lawful agent under written authority, and executed with such formalities as are required by law.”
But does the testimony of the plaintiff fully and fairly and definitely support his claim? When a court of equity is
“A contract for the exchange of lands is as much within the statute of frauds as a contract for their sale, and a party seeking to enforce a specific execution of a parol contract for that purpose must bring himself within the same conditions before he can invoke the aid of a court of equity. The statute, which requires such contracts to be in writing, is equally binding on courts of equity as courts of law. Every day’s experience more fully demonstrates that' this statute was founded in wisdom, and absolutely necessary to preserve the title to real property from the chances, the uncertainty, and the fraud attending the admission of parol testimony. It has been often regretted by judges that courts of equity have not required as rigid an execution of the statutes as courts of law. Nevertheless, courts of equity have, in many instances, relaxed the rigid requirements, of the statute; but it has always been done for the purpose of hindering the statute made to prevent frauds from becoming the instrument of fraud. A mere breach of a parol promise will not make a ease for the interference of a chancellor. It is plain that a party who claims such interference has the burden of proof thrown on him. He knows that the law requires written evidence of such contracts, in order to their validity. He has acted with great negligence and folly who has paid his money without getting his deed. When he requests a court to interfere for him, and save him from the consequences of his own disregard of the law, he should be held rigidly to full, satisfactory, and indubitable proof, first, of the contract and of its terms. Such proof must be clear, definite, and conclusive, and must show a contract, leaving no jus deliberandi or locus pcenitenthe. It cannot be made out by mere hearsay, or evidence of the declarations of a party to mere strangers to the transaction, in chance conversation, which the witness had no reason to recollect from interest in the subject-matter, which may have been imperfectly heard, or inaccurately remembered, perverted, or altogether fabricated; testimony, therefore, impossible to be contradicted.”
Counsel for the plaintiff contend that the contract upon which the plaintiff relies is not within that statute for the reason that, when one party advances the purchase price for land which is taken in the name of another, the law declares a trust in favor of the person whose money procured the title, not that the courts will enforce the specific performance of oral
“A trust may result to him who pays the consideration for real estate, where the title is taken out in the name of another which is not within the statute of frauds, and it may be shown by parol testimony whose money was actually paid for it; but such trust must have arisen at the time the purchase was made, and the whole consideration must have been paid or secured at the time of, or prior to, the purchase price; and a bill in equity to enforce it must show without ambiguity or equivocation that the whole consideration appropriated to that share of land which the plaintiff claims by virtue of such payment was paid before the deed was taken.” Ducie v. Ford, 138 U. S. 587, 11 Sup. Ct. 417, 34 L. Ed. 1091; Taylor v. Miles, 19 Or. 550, 25 Pac. 143; Snider v. Johnson, 25 Or. 328, 35 Pac. 846.
Second, before a court will declare a resulting trust in favor of the person who claims to have advanced or become responsible for the purchase price of real estate, it is necessary for such person to show that he did advance such purchase price or entered into a binding obligation at the time of the agreement to become responsible for the payment of the purchase price.
“A trust arising by operation of law must arise at the time of the transaction, and cannot be created afterwards.” Taylor v. Miles, 19 Or. 550, 25 Pac. 143.
As was said by the Supreme Court of Arizona in Re Scribner v. Meade, 10 Ariz. 143, 85 Pac. 477:
“It is clear, from the evidence and the findings of the court, that there can be no recovery upon the theory of an express trust. It is also clear that there can be no recovery upon the theory of a resulting trust, for, in order for such a trust to arise upon a purchase, it is indispensable that the payment should have been made by the beneficiary, or that an absolute obligation to pay should have been incurred by him as a part of the original transaction of purchase, at or before the time of the conveyance.”
Under the authorities, it therefore becomes necessary for the plaintiff to show, by clear and convincing proof, the terms
Does the evidence of the plaintiff, concerning the terms of the contract, comply with the requirements of the law as interpreted by the foregoing authorities? I think the question must be answered in the negative. In no one part of his testimony does the plaintiff state fully and clearly the terms of the alleged oral contract. It becomes necessary to search the record through nearly all of his testimony in order to ascertain what are the terms of the contract as viewed by the plaintiff; but a careful review of his testimony, even if the same is accepted as true, will not warrant the impartial reader in concluding that the plaintiff is claiming under a valid and enforceable contract. A fair interpretation of the plaintiff’s testimony justifies substantially the following conclusions:
The plaintiff directed the defendant Renza to purchase the interest in the mine in controversy for the plaintiff, instructed Renza to advance the latter’s own money, and agreed to reimburse Renza for the advances made seven or eight months thereafter; that Renza accepted said offer; and it was further agreed between them that Renza should take the title in his own name. What the purchase price should be was not agreed upon. No consideration for such advancement by Renza was agreed upon, except that Renza might retain whatever royalties the interest in the claim should yield during the time that Renza was to hold the legal title thereof. There was no loan made at the date of the agreement; in fact, under the terms of the contract, as recited by the plaintiff, there would have been no loan made, had Renza not been able to agree with the vendors concerning the purchase price. It must be apparent under the plaintiff’s testimony, to any one that the money which procured the title to the property was Renza’s money, until the purchase was completed and the purchase money delivered to the vendors. The alleged contract, therefore, amounts to no more than a contract on the part of Renza to purchase the property and reconvey it to the plaintiff. The
“That in February, 1879, the appellant was negotiating for the purchase of certain placer mining ground, with the water rights, flumes, and appurtenances owned by and in the possession of certain persons, Rumsey and Embry; that about this time, at the request of the respondent, it was (in substance) agreed between the appellant and the respondent that the appellant was to effect the purchase of the above property upon the best terms possible, using his best judgment for the benefit of both parties; that the title thereto was to be taken in the name of the appellant, and that the respondent was not to be known in the transaction till the purchase was completed and the conveyances executed; that, when the appellant obtained a title to said property, he was to make to respondent a deed for the undivided one-third thereof, upon the execution and delivery of which the respondent was to pay to appellant the one-third of all moneys paid by him for such conveyances, and the one-half of all expenses paid out in and about the purchase; that on the 24th of February, 1879, the appellant obtained a deed from Embry for his interest in the property, the consideration therefor. being $2,600; that on the 26th of July, 1879, the title from Rumsey for one-half of the property to the appellant also became perfected, and upon this day the appellant and wife executed a deed to respondent for an undivided one-third of said property, and the same was tendered to respondent, and demand made for the payment of $1,935.61, being the amount claimed by respondent on account of the purchase and expenses in relation thereto.”
In passing upon the question involved in that case, the Supreme Court of Montana used the following language:
“It will be observed in relation to the agreement set forth in the answer, and which was sought to be proved by the question propounded, that the property, which was the subject thereof, was real estate; that the appellant was to obtain it in his own name and make the payment of the consideration therefor; that, when the purchase was completed, the respondent was to pay the appellant one-half the amount of the purchase money, who thereupon was to convey one-third of the property to respondent. The money so paid by appellant was his own money, and it cannot be considered as a loan or advance to the respondent. To take an agreement from the operation of the statute of frauds and establish a result*164 ing trust, the purchase money must be the property of the party paying it at the time of the payment. The same rule prevails ‘when the party taking the deed pays his own money therefor with the understanding * ' * * that it may afterwards be repaid and the land retained by him who sets up the trust.’ The agreement was therefore a contract within the statute of frauds.”
The Supreme Court of the United States, in passing on the question in the case last cited, used the following language:
“We cannot doubt that the contract which the defendant seeks to enforce is a contract for the sale of lands. According to the averments of the answer, it was this: The plaintiff, being in treaty for the purchase of the lands, agreed with the defendant to acquire title to the undivided two-thirds thereof in his own name upon the best terms possible, and, when he had acquired the title, to convey to the plaintiff, by a good and sufficient deed, an undivided third of the premises, for which the plaintiff promised to pay the defendant one-third of the purchase money and one-half the expenses incurred in obtaining the title. This is simply an agreement of the defendant to convey to the plaintiff a tract of land for a certain consideration. It therefore falls precisely within the terms of section 162, above quoted. It is a contract for the sale of lands, and not being in writing, signed by the vendor, is void.”
The contract upon which the plaintiff relies in this case is analogous in principal to the one relied upon by the defendant in Re Dunphy v. Ryan. In this case there was no binding obligation incurred by Williams at the time of his alleged agreement with Renza. No amount was stipulated; neither had he any assurance that the said alleged contract would be consummated, and, if not consummated, there would be no loan. It is therefore apparent that, at the time of the making of the •contract, no binding obligation on the part of Williams to pay the purchase price of the land had been incurred. Nor can it be considered that the terms of the contract were definite. Renza might have paid more for the property than Williams would consider the same worth. It is true Williams testifies that he advised with Renza from time to time, during the negotiations between Renza and the owners of the interest, concerning what purchase price should be paid, but according to their original contract there was no understanding as to what amount should be paid or as to what course Renza should pursue in securing the title to the property. So far as the
But the court is unable to accept the version of the plaintiff as to the understanding between himself and Renza, which he claims amounted to an enforceable contract. In the light of the testimony which exposes the characteristics and business tendencies of the plaintiff and the defendant Renza, the alleged contract between two such parties is, to say the least, unreasonable. Neither party has any written evidence whatever of the existence of such contract. No attempt was made by either party to procure a written acknowledgment in any form of the existence of such contract. No definite sum was fixed as the maximum of the purchase price, and even after the consummation of the three purchases by Renza, which occurred some time in March, 1909, no effort was made by either party to procure from the other any written evidence of the existence of such an agreement. After each purchase Renza handled the interests as though he was the absolute owner; he executed several leases as a co-owner of the property between the time of his purchase and the date of his sale to McDonald. When the owners of the Owl claim became involved in litigation with others, Renza was called upon by the attorneys of Williams to contribute his share of the expenses of such litigation. If Renza is the parsimonious man which the plaintiff claims, is it reasonable to suppose that he would be willing to contribute whatever was necessary toward the defense of a title in which he had no interest? Would not he have at least called upon Williams to reimburse him for such expenditures ? Williams’ counsel evidently believed, when they called upon
The plaintiff indicates that during the month of May, 1909, he offered Renza $10,000 for the interest in the claim in controversy. Why should he make such an offer if the property already belonged to him ? When he first heard of the negotiations between Renza and McDonald for the sale of the interest to McDonald, why did not Williams then demand his deed from Renza? It is true that he does state that he told Renza that the latter could not sell the same to McDonald, but in no place does he say that he demanded his deed from Renza, or demanded any acknowledgment from Renza that the property belonged to the plaintiff, and that Renza merely held the naked legal title in trust for the plaintiff. Plaintiff is a man of wide experience, whom the evidence shows has had considerable litigation during the past few years, and has frequently employed one of his present counsel as an advisor. It would seem
The plaintiff has called witnesses who have testified that, in .conversations with them, Renza asknowledged that he purchased the property for Williams. Renza states that he had conversations with such parties, but never stated to them that
-The next serious question to be considered in this case is: What are the rights of the defendant Renza as against the defendant McDonald ? Renza claims that his contract with McDonald is merely a contract of option, and that McDonald forfeited all his rights under that contract by reason of his failure to pay the remainder of the purchase price on or before the 1st day of August, 1909. The defendant McDonald contends that the contract between himself and Renza is not a mere contract of option but is a contract for the sale of real estate, which contract obligated him to purchase the property and to pay the full price thereof, providing Renza was able to convey a good title to the same. Renza claims that he, under the contract, has a right to retain the $12,000 already paid, and also to hold the property and all the royalties derived therefrom, since his contract of sale with McDonald. It is true that the contract is styled an “option agreement,” and the con
“The full purchase price of said property is eighteen thousand ($18,000.00) dollars, twelve thousand ($12,000.00) dollars of which said sum has this day been paid as above stated; the remainder, or six thousand ($6,000.00) dollars, the said party of the second part hereby binds himself and agrees to pay on or before the first day of August, 1910, to the party of the first part, his heirs, assigns or legal representatives at the office of the Fairbanks Banking Company at Fairbanks, Alaska, in lawful money of the United States.”
An option contract» is a contract which gives a party the right to purchase the thing to which the contract pertains.' Usually, when applied to real estate, the party securing the option forfeits whatever he pays for the option in case he elects not to purchase the property, but does not incur any liability for breach of contract, for he has merely secured an option to purchase.
A contract for the sale of land is one where one party agrees to buy and the other agrees to sell, and each one would be held responsible in damages for a breach of the contract.
It is obvious that the $12,000 paid by McDonald to Renza was not paid for the option or the right to purchase, but it was part payment of the purchase price, and the defendant McDonald obligated himself tO' pay the remainder of the purchase price on or before a fixed date. Consequently it would seem, therefore, that the contract should be more properly styled a contract for the, sale of land and not a mere option contract. But, in the view taken of the question involved by the court, it becomes immaterial whether it is considered an option agreement or a contract for the sale of land. The question which interests the court is: Will a court of equity, under the circumstances and the testimony, hold that McDonald, by failure to pay the remainder of the purchase price on the day stipulated, forfeited all of his rights under the contract? The bringing of this action by Williams certainly clouded Renza’s title, and the amended complaint of the plaintiff states a cause of action. The defendant McDonald had no means of deter
In Taylor v. Longworth, 39 U. S. (14 Pet.) 175, 10 L. Ed. 405, the court said:
“The present bill was brought in the succeeding year; and tbe question is whether, under all the circumstances of the case, Long-*171 worth is now entitled to a specific performance of the contract, upon his paying all the arrears of the purchase-money. Undoubtedly, if there were no grounds of excuse shown, accounting for the delay on his part to fulfill the contract, between September, 1822, when the ejectment was brought, and June, 1825, when the present bill was filed, there might be strong reason to contend that he was not entitled to a specific performance of the contract, even if some other relief, on account of his improvements, might be deemed equitable. But, in point of fact, the adverse claim of. Chambers and wife to the property was made known as early as the year 1820, and was asserted by counsel, who were consulted on that occasion, to be valid. The claim was prosecuted (as has been already stated) by a suit in equity, brought in 1823, against Taylor, Long-worth, and others, and remained undecided until the close of the year 1829. There is no pretense to say that this claim was not bona fide asserted, or that Longworth brought it forward to cover his own default. While it was known and pending, there is as little pretense to say that Longworth could be compelled to complete the contract on his side, or that he had not a right to lie by and await the decision of the title, which thus hung, as a cloud, upon that of Taylor. It is one thing to say that he might waive the objection and require a conveyance on the part of Taylor, and quite another thing to say that he was compellable, at once, to elect, at his peril, either to proceed on the contract or to surrender it. There is no ground to assert that, from the commencement of the present suit, Longworth has not always been ready and willing to pay up the arrears of the purchase money and to complete the contract. The proofs in the case are entirely satisfactory on this head. In our opinion, the lapse of time is fairly accounted for by the state of the title; and therefore Longworth has not been guilty of any delay, which is unreasonable or inexcusable. If an action has been commenced and a notice thereof filed apparently affecting the title of real property, and the complaint states a good cause of action, the title is not marketable, and the purchaser will not be compelled to accept it. He is not required to go outside and look up the evidence on which the action is based, and to determine whether or not it can be maintained.” Simon v. Vandeveer, 155 N. Y. 377, 49 N. E. 1043, 63 Am. St. Rep. 683.
See Meyer v. Madreperla, 68 N. J. Law, 258, 53 Atl. 477, 96 Am. St. Rep. 536, wherein the court says:
“Mr. Pomeroy states the practice in such cases thus: ‘In suits by a vendor the purchaser will not be forced to complete the contract unless the title is free from reasonable doubt. This requirement should be carefully distinguished from the objection that, as a matter of fact established by the proofs, the vendor has no title at all, or has only a partial or defective one — an objection which, if well founded, will, as a matter of law, either totally defeat a specific performance or render its performance partial. * * * The rule now to be discussed differs in every respect from this.*172 It assumes that the question whether the vendor’s title is valid or imperfect is not definitely passed on by the court. If, however, there arises a reasonable doubt concerning the title, the court, without deciding the question, regards its existence as a sufficient reason for not compelling the purchaser to carry out the agreement.’ ”
“The vendor, in a contract to convey on payment of the purchase price, cannot declare a forfeiture for failure of the purchaser to pay, so long as he is himself unable to perform by tendering such a title as the contract requires,” Higinbotham v. Frock, 48 Or. 129, 83 Pac. 536, 120 Am. St. Rep. 796.
Renza cannot give a good title to McDonald until the determination of this action. In Collins v. Delashmutt, 6 Or. 51, the Supreme Court of the state of Oregon, among other things, says:
“This theory is in accordance with the strict literal construction of the agreement; but the law requires something more than a bare literal compliance. It is now a settled principle of law, governing all executory contracts for the sale of real property, that there is an implied warranty on the part of the vendor that he will convey a good title. A contract to make a good and sufficient deed is not satisfied by the execution of a merely formal conveyance, which, on account of defects in the vendor’s title, fails to pass a good title to the vendee.”
Renza by his contract agreed with McDonald to- make and execute a good and sufficient deed, conveying the premises to McDonald. He certainly was not in a position to deliver an unquestioned title until the determination of this action.
“He who seeks the aid of a court of equity must himself do equity. If plaintiff had tendered a deed such as the contract required, he should in addition have returned the notes given by defendant for the purchase money, and the amount paid him by defendant with legal interest, or at least have offered to pay and return them before he could be permitted to rescind. This seems to be the universal rule. The party against whom its rescission is sought must be placed in statu quo.” Murphy v. Lockwood, 21 Ill. 611; Frink v. Thomas, 20 Or. 265, 25 Pac. 717, 12 L. R. A. 239; Howe v. Coates, 97 Minn. 385, 107 N. W. 397, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1110, 114 Am. St. Rep. 723.
“It is a universal rule in equity never to enforce either a penalty or forfeiture. In the view of a court of equity, in the case of an agreement to sell land, the title being retained by the vendólas security for the balance of the purchase money, if the vendor obtains his money and interest, he gets all he expected when he entered into the contract. The remedy of the vendor in equity for*173 the persistent default of the vendee is to institute proceedings to foreclose the right of the vendee to purchase; the decree usually giving the latter a definite time within which to perform.” Keller v. Lewis, 53 Cal. 113.
It is doubtful whether the defendant Renza is in a position to claim that McDonald has forfeited his rights under the contract, for the reason that Renza never notified McDonald of his intention to claim a forfeiture. He did frequently, so he testifies, demand payment of the remainder of the purchase price. If, under the circumstances, he was entitled to claim a forfeiture, he should, have given McDonald notice that within a certain time he would claim a forfeiture, providing the purchase money was not paid.
“Under a bond for a deed providing that, in ease of default in any stipulated payment, the vendor may declare the bond void and repossess himself of the premises, the vendor may cancel the contract upon reasonable notice, because of the cause of vendee’s default, but such a contract is not self-executing, and cannot be summarily terminated by the vendor.” Higinbotham v. Frock, 48 Or. 129, 83 Pac. 536, 120 Am. St. Rep. 796.
But even if it be conceded that Renza gave whatever notice the law requires, in order to forfeit McDonald’s rights under the contract, still he was not in a position himself to comply with the contract in that he was unable to give such title as is contemplated by his agreement with McDonald, and McDonald was justified in refusing to pay the final installment on the purchase price until the final determination of this action.
The plaintiff should therefore take nothing by this action, and the defendant Renza should be compelled to specifically perform his contract with McDonald, and the defendant Fairbanks Banking Company directed to deliver the deed from Renza to McDonald, held by it in escrow, upon the payment by McDonald of the remainder of the purchase price, to wit, $6,000.
Let findings of fact, conclusions of law, and decree be entered in accordance with this opinion.