Citation Numbers: 47 A. 387, 22 R.I. 251, 1900 R.I. LEXIS 96
Judges: Douglas, Stiness, Tillinghast
Filed Date: 11/10/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This case was tried in the Common Pleas Division on the 15th day of June, 1898, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs for $650.00. The defendants then petitioned for a new trial, and the Appellate Division granted said petition and awarded a new trial upon the ground that the jury appeared to have found for the plaintiffs on the charges of fraud, which were not sustained by the evidence,
The case was again tried in the Common Pleas Division on the 28th day of February, 1900, and the plaintiffs recovered a verdict for $885.50.
The defendants have again petitioned for a new trial upon the grounds:
1. That the verdict is against the law and the evidence and the weight thereof.
2. That the damages awarded are excessive.
3. That the court erred in matters of law in its rulings and charge.
We do not find that the facts shown upon the second jury trial differ materially from those recited by the court in its former opinion. The plaintiffs bought the store for $900 cash and $1,100 to be paid some time in the future to be fixed by a note which was to be secured by mortgage. The parties never agreed upon the time for which the mortgage and note were to run, nor upon the rate of interest, and so the terms of their bargain were incomplete. Mr. Hoye testifies that the understanding was thathe should prepare the mortgage and note for the plaintiffs to execute. It may be that in these circumstances the plaintiffs could have tendered a note and mortgage conditioned for a reasonable time of *Page 253 payment, and that the defendants would have been bound to receive them as a completion of the purchase; but with the understanding as stated by Hoye, the plaintiffs were not bound to do so but might require the defendants to draw the papers in satisfactory form. This state of affairs continued for two months, and then the defendants entered by show of force and the plaintiffs, yielding to their apparent right, withdrew and brought this suit. We have no doubt that this action of the defendants was an attempt to rescind the contract of sale, or so much of it as the minds of the parties had met upon. Doubtless, if the sale had been complete, the plaintiffs could have sued them in trespass for their entry, and the legality of the title under which that act was done could have been contested; but by removing and bringing this suit they acquiesced in the rescission and, not being previously in default, are entitled to be placed in statuquo as far as possible. We think the jury rightly found that the parties mutually rescinded the contract.
We think that the court properly instructed the jury upon this point, taking into account all the circumstances of the case. The cases cited by defendants' counsel differ in one essential particular from this one. Stephens v. Wilkinson, 2 Barn. Ad. 320, was an action upon a bill of exchange given as part payment for articles bought by the drawer which the vendor afterwards forcibly took possession of. It was held that the vendee could not treat this act of the vendor's as a rescission of the contract, but must resort to his action of trespass. At first sight this case seems almost identical with the case at bar, but we think they may be clearly distinguished. In the case cited the terms of the sale were agreed upon and the sale was complete. In this case the material elements of the sale were never agreed upon. It lay in the power of either party to say "we have tried to come to an agreement and have failed; we will retrace our steps and consider the bargain off," and the act of the defendants in taking possession of the property could mean nothing else. If, as they contend, it was consistent with an affirmance of the bargain, the question arises: What *Page 254
was that bargain? And the answer must be: Its terms were never fully agreed upon. In Lee v. Stone,
It is said in Page v. Eduljee, 14 L.T.R.N.S. 176: "The authorities are uniform upon this point, that if before actual deliver the vendor resells the property while the purchaser is in default, the resale will not authorize the purchaser to consider the contract rescinded so as to entitle him to recover back any deposit of the price or to resist paying any balance of it which may be still due. If this is the case where the possession of property sold remains with the vendor a fortiori must it be so where there has been a delivery, and the vendor takes it out of the possession of the purchaser and resells it."
Ashbrook v. Hite,
With reference to the amount of the verdict, we find that the jury gave the plaintiffs the $900 they had paid, less $200 which they allowed for the use of the premises and such stock as was on hand when the plaintiffs took possession, and added interest to the balance. We find nothing excessive in the verdict, or any indication that it was improperly arrived at.
A new trial is denied, and the case must be remanded to the Common Pleas Division for judgment upon the verdict.