Citation Numbers: 182 Iowa 89
Judges: Evans, Gaynor, Ladd, Salinger
Filed Date: 12/18/1917
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
— The written contract upon which the action purports to be based was one whereby the plaintiff purported to sell and the defendant to buy 60 acres of land in Benton County, Missouri, for a consideration of $1,200, a part of' which was payable and paid at the time of the execution of thevcontract, and the balance thereof was payable in five annual installments, beginning on December 1-, 1915, and including December 1, 1919. This action was brought in February, 191G, aided by attachment. Only the first installment was due at such date. It was alleged, however, in aid of the attachment, that only time was wanting to render the other installments due.
The contract further provided that the grantee, defendant herein, was to receive possession December 3, 1913. He was to receive a warranty deed from the plaintiff when full payment of the purchase money should be made. The contract contained the following proviso:
“Either party failing to perform the conditions of this agreement shall forfeit to the other the sum of ($1.00) one dollar in addition to the amount already paid;” also the following:
“Party of the second part hereby agrees to purchase said premises above described and to pay therefor the sum of ($1,200.00) at the times and in the manner above set forth.”
In purported pursuance of the proviso first above quoted, the defendant paid into court $1.00 and costs, and pleaded the same as a tender in full satisfaction of the contract, and predicated his motion for judgment thereon.
Defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings was based on two grounds: (1) That the “petition shows on its face that there is but $1.00 due on said contract, and this defendant has filed an answer admitting the execution of said contract and pleading a tender of said sum of $1.00, together with costs to date.” (2) “That under the pleadings the plaintiff is entitled to no relief whatever.”
This motion was sustained by the court, and a judgment entered dismissing the petition. It will be noted that the defendant’s motion was predicated upon the provision of the contract first above quoted. The theory of the defendant appears to be that, though he promised to pay $1,200 for the land, he had the option, under the contract, to satisfy the demand for $1,200 by the payment of $1.00. It goes without saying that, if the contract gave him such an option, it was to his interest to exercise it.
A little closer attention to the ordinary rules of pleading and procedure would have avoided some of the confusion which has involved this case, notwithstanding the brevity of the record.
It is pointed out by counsel for appellee that the description of this land appearing in the contract is as follows:
“The following described premises situated in Benton County, State of Missouri, to wit: NW frl. 14 of SE14 of SW14, NE%> Section 26, Township 41, sixty acres more or less all lying east of the public highway and containing sixty acres more or less according to the government survey.'”
It is further urged in argument by appellee that this land is in the Ozark mountains, in a “God-forsaken country,” and that the defendant has never found it, and that he never learned just where it was until the petition in this case was filed. If these facts be true and material, they do not appear from the pleadings. They therefore furnish no basis for the defendant’s, motion. The argument itself illustrates the impropriety of the motion as a method of disposition of the case. If there are facts which would render inequitable the enforcement of this contract against the defendant, they should have been pleaded, thereby tendering an issue thereon. It is enough to say that the motion for judgment on the pleadings should not have been sustained. The judgment below is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded. — Reversed and remanded.