Citation Numbers: 156 S.W. 606, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 4
Judges: Hendricks
Filed Date: 3/22/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This was a controversy in the district court of Lubbock county, Tex., between the defendants in error (plaintiffs in the trial court), M. E. Merrill, J. C. Rob-erds, and F. C. Hudgins, and the plhintiffs in error (the defendants in the trial court), W. T. Bush, R. Harkrider, and the Western Realty Company. The Western Realty Company became a party defendant to this cause of action by virtue of an assignment to it by Bush and Harkrider of the contract, which in the main measures the rights of the parties, and out of which this controversy grew, and omitting certain descriptions of property, which are immaterial to the decision, is as follows:
“The State of Texas, County of Lubbock.
“This contract of bargain and sale made and entered into this the 15th day of July, A. D. 1909, by and between J. C. Roberds, M. E. Merrill and F. C. Hudgins, all of Lubbock county, Texas, hereinafter referred to as parties of the first part, and W. T. Bush, of Tarrant county, Texas, and R. Harkrider, of Howard county, Texas, hereinafter referred to as parties of the second part, wit-nesseth:
“(1) That the parties of the first part have this day sold and by these presents do hereby sell and obligate themselves to convey or cause to be conveyed in manner and time as hereinafter stated unto the said parties of the second part or their vendees all and singular the following described real es
“(2) The consideration paid and to be paid to said parties of the first part by said parties of the second part for the property above described and conveyed is the agreed sum of $43,945, as follows: $500 cash in hand paid,receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and a further sum of $7,500 to be paid in cash on or before the 1st day of August, A. D. 1909. making total cash payment on said date $8,000 and leaving a balance of $35,945, whicn said balance is to be paid in manner and time as hereinafter stipulated.
“(3) It is mutually agreed and understood oy and between the parties to this contract that the legal title to said above described property shall remain vested in the parties of the first part until the entire purchase money as above specified has been paid, and said first parties agree and bind themselves that, whenever said entire purchase money shall have been paid, they will immediately thereafter execute and deliver to the parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns, a good and sufficient warranty deed, conveying all of the above described property which had not at that time been previously conveyed under and by virtue of the terms of this contract.
“(4) It is further agreed and stipulated that parties of the second part shall be entitled to the immediate possession of all of said property conveyed by this contract upon payment of the said sum of $8,000,- as herein-before provided, and that after the payment of said $8,000, said second parties shall be authorized and empowered to contract and sell the above described property, either as a whole or in single lots, or in any number of lots, at 'such price and on such terms as they may desire, and that in all cases where said second parties shall have sold said lots, or any number of them, singly or in bulk, parties of the first part will, on payment, execute and deliver to the buyer of such lot or lots, a good and sufficient general warranty deed, conveying same to him for the consideration agreed to be paid by them: Provided, however,, that in no ease shall such deed be executed and delivered where the amount of cash paid is less than one-fourth of the total consideration, and in all cases where deeds are demanded by parties of the second part, they shall turn over and deliver to parties of the first part the total consideration for which such sale or sales have been made, including all of the cash payment, which must not be less than one-fourth of the total purchase price and the purchase-money notes for balance, which said notes shall mature not later than eighteen months from and after the date of deed, and shall bear interest from date at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, shall retain an express vendor’s lien on the lot or lots conveyed, and shall be the usual and regular form of vendor’s lien notes. In this connection, it is agreed, however, that said second parties shall be allowed to retain from the cash payment a sum not to exceed $10 for each lot sold to cover expense of making such sale, and it is further understood and agreed that said second parties shall not sell any of said lots for a less sum than $100 per lot, and it is further understood and agreed that all expense incident to the execution of such deed or deeds shall be paid for by parties of the second part. It is the intent and purpose of the above agreement that whenever a sale of lot or lots shall have been made by parties of the second part on terms of not less than one-fourth cash and balance to be evidenced by note or notes maturing within eighteen months from date of such sale, and to bear interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, then said first parties will make and execute a deed of conveyance to the purchaser of such lot or lots expressing therein the consideration for which such sale is made, acknowledging receipt of the cash payment, which shall not be less ’than one-fourth of the purchase price, and take note or notes in their own names for the unpaid balance as above provided, which notes shall be secured by vendor’s lien, and that such sum, less the $10 retained by the parties of the second part, as above provided, shall be applied as a credit on the unpaid balance owing to said parties of the first part by said parties of the second part, as hereinbefore provided, and that whenever the proceeds of sales and deeds made in pursuance of this agreement shall aggregate the amount sufficient to pay all of said balance of $35,945, then said first parties will execute and deliver to parties of the second part a general warranty deed, conveying to them all of remainder of said property embraced in this contract by proper and legal description, free and clear from any and all incumbrances.
“(5) It is a further agreement in the event said parties of the second part shall fail to make such additional cash payment of $7,500 within the time hereinbefore stipulated, then and in that event this contract shall become and remain null and void to all rights of said parties by reason thereof, shall cease
“This contract is executed in duplicate this 15th day of July, A. D. 1909.”
First. The insistence of the plaintiffs, in error is that the contract testing the rights of the parties is conditional, and that, “where the promise to pay money is contingent upon the happening of an event in the future, such promise cannot be enforced until the occurrence of such event, and the burden is upon the party relying upon such promise to prove the occurrence of the event upon which the promise to pay matures” — citing the following authorities: Salinas v. Wright, 11 Tex. 576; Mitchell v. Clay, 8 Tex. 445; Hutchins v. Wade, 20 Tex. 7; Martin v. Shumatte & Matthews, 62 Tex. 189; Rowlett v. Lane, 43 Tex. 275; Carlisle v. Hooks, 58 Tex. 421; Lang v. Caruthers, 70 Tex. 722, 8 S. W. 604; Wright v. Farmers’ Nat. Bank, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 406, 72 S. W. 103; Johnson v. Clements, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 112, 54 S. W. 275.
Of course the Supreme Court of this state, under the character of pleadings in those cases addressed to the matters in controversy, and the conditional contracts involved, have thoroughly established the doctrine that where a conditional contract is the measure of the liability,. or rather where the happening of the condition is the test of the creation of the liability, and about which they have contracted, the cause is not established without proof of the happening of the extrinsic fact upon the existence of which the liability depends. It is true this contract says that the balance (that is, the $35,-945) is to be “paid in manner and time as hereinafter stipulated,” and that, “whenever the proceeds of sales and deeds made in pursuance of this agreement shall aggregate the amount sufficient to pay all of said balance,” the defendants in error will execute a general warranty deed for the balance of the land. It is also true that the contract provides that: “It is the intent and purpose of the above agreement that whenever a sale of lots shall have been made by parties of the second part,” upon the terms named, “then said parties will make and execute a deed of conveyance to the purchaser of such lot or lots,” etc. But in interpreting the manner and time of the payment ■of the balance, the contract must be construed as a whole, and to construe that it continues until the plaintiffs in error pay the debt by the sale of the lots may amount to a practical forfeiture of an estate, as such a sale may never occur, this record is at least suggestive that it may be years before the land could be sold to meet the debt. It is true it may be said that defendants in error placed the price high; but it is also suggestive that the plaintiffs in error thought they could sell it higher, and entered into the contract open-eyed, without any circumstance of imposition or fraud. If it is a hard contract and the slump came and the loss results, it is one of bad speculation. The payment of the balance in the time and manner hereinafter stipulated, of course, does mean, when you sell sufficient property, you must pay the debt; but it further means that if you do not sell, under the third provision, you may have the land at any time you pay the balance; and we think it is an unreasonable interpretation to say that it was in the minds of the parties that the contract expressed a condition that the buyers may hold the estate indefinitely if it cannot be sold. If, at the time of the institution of the suit, instead of an ebb, there had been a flow and the lots had gone to $500 per lot and could have been sold at that price at that time, and they had refused to sell, and further desired to wait several years longer until it went to $1,000 per lot, lots being on the rise, arguing that their profits would be greater and they had a rigid contract, would not such a consequence be grossly inequitable? And unless the contract clearly gave the right would be intolerable. It will not do to answer “that the terms of the contract import good faith to sell, and of course we would have to sell at some time.”
If this is a contract upon an exclusive condition which does not mature until the condition is created, and the parties have contracted solely upon the happening of the condition, the continuance of the contract is
The ease of Nunez v. Dautel, 19 Wall. 560, 22 L. Ed. 161, involved the following duebill declared upon in two courts: “Due Joseph Dautel, or order, $1,619.66, being balance of principle and interest for four years and six months’ services. This we will pay as soon as the crop can be sold or the money raised from any other source, payable with interest” — and that court said: “Payment was not conditional to the extent of depending wholly and finally upon the alternatives mentioned. The stipulations secured to the defendants a reasonable amount of time within which to procure in one mode or the other the means necessary to meet the liability. Upon the occurrence of either of the events named or the lapse of such time, the debt became due. It could not have been the intention of the parties that if the crop were destroyed, or from any other cause could never be sold, and the defendants could not procure the money from any other source, the debt should never be paid. Such a result would be a mockery of justice.”
The Supreme Court of Kentucky, in the case of Hicks v. Shouse, 56 Ky. (17 B. Mon.) 486, considered an obligation where a promise was made to pay for a negro “the sum of $500. * * * ” And a further promise “to pay said money so soon as I sell a house and lot in the city of Lexington, bought of C. J. Sanders and wife; and, until said sale is made, I promise to pay eight per cent, in
In the case of Randall v. Johnson, 59 Miss. 317, 42 Am. Rep. 366, where there was a promise to pay for the rigging of a vessel 90 days after its first return trip, Justice Campbell of the Supreme Court of Mississippi said: “It would be ‘a mockery of justice’ to hold that because the schooner was lost at sea, and therefore had not made her first return trip, the appellee lost his debt.”
In Sears v. Wright, 24 Me. 278, the condition was “from the avails of the logs bought of us, when there is a sale made,” and held payable in a reasonable time, and the court said: “By the terms of that contract it could not be inferred that the plaintiff had consented to subject himself to any such contingency (that is, that the logs could not be sold). I-Iis agreement was to wait until the logs could be sold; thus the defendants had a duty to perform. They were bound to sell the logs and to do it within a reasonable time.” The Maine Reports are not accessible to üs, and we extract the above from the case of Noland v. Bull, 24 Or. 479, 33 Pac. 983; the second syllabus announcing a principle involved in that case that: “Where a debtor delivers to his creditor an obligation to pay to the obligee the amount of the debt, ‘when’ certain property owned by the obligor is sold for not less than a certain specified sum, such obligation is an agreement to pay within a reasonable time, whether such property is sold or not.”
And in the ease of Crooker v. Holmes, 65 Me. 195, 20 Am. Rep. 687, the Maine Supreme Court again held, quoting the Sears-Wright Case, supra: “Where a promissory note was made, ‘payable when I sell my place where I now live,’ the maker , was bound to sell his place within a reasonable time, and failing in that the note was due.”
This evidence indicates that defendants in error expected to realize upon this deal in a few months and contemplated some system of rapid sale, condemned by . the . United States government, and thereafter abandoned by them on that account, which does not devitalize their equities, if they have any, but is suggestive of their avidity in buying the land. The provisions quoted and the other provisions of the contract are indicative of the desire upon the part of the landowners when they gave the power to plaintiffs in error to sell the land, to safeguard and secure it; necessarily" if the lots were worth $85 per lot, the owners of the land would not permit the property to be sold for $25 per lot, as they were required to take the notes and cash, as proceeds of the lots sold, in liquidation of the balance of the debt. It also evidences that all the parties clearly contemplated that the sale of the land would' be consummated within a few months and not at some unreasonable, indefinite period in the future; nor does it indicate, but negatives, the condition of an indeterminate holding of the land by Bush and Harkrider, and if this evidence is any aid whatever as a criterion in determining time, and we think that it is, the two years and three months holding of this land by plaintiffs in error is considerable in excess of the time contemplated when -the contract was made, as the prospects of an early sale of this property were discussed between the parties at the time of the execution of the contract, except the methods of sale to be pursued. The contract and its conditions and limitations we think bespeak a system by virtue of which the buyers could take the land at any time by paying the balance or sell the land for that purpose within a reasonable time, with the several provisions for the benefit of the landowners as security and safeguard to them in the event the land was sold.
“Where a party to a contract undertakes to do some particular act, the performance of which depends entirely on himself, and the contract is silent as to the time of performance, the law implies an engagement that it shall be executed within a reasonable time, without reference to extraordinary circumstances. See Chitty on Contracts, 11 Am. Ed. 1062.” Hamilton v. Scully, 118 Ill. 198, 8 N. E. 769.
“What is a reasonable time depends undoubtedly upon the nature and character of the thing to be done, the circumstances of the particular case, -and the difficulties surrounding and attending its accomplishment.” Hart v. Bullion, 48 Tex. 289. The difficulty of the performance may be a circumstance, of course, to postpone the time; but where the testimony shows it is .one practically in
Tbe town of Lubbock is upon a section of land, “and tbe courthouse is supposed to be in tbe center of tbe section,” and tbe town as almost surrounded by additions, some of tbe property out of which has been sold, but bow much for tbe purpose of resale or is vacant property, or has been improved, or what is tbe size of tbe town, is not disclosed. Tbe testimony indicates that tbe property was purchased at “tbe top of tbe boom” and in a very few months tbe recession began, and, while tbe 517 lots sold to Bush and Harkrider for $85 per lot, at the time of the trial it bad reduced in valid either to 50 per' cent, of its cost price, or to $50 per lot. Shortly after the execution of tbe contract, tbe plaintiffs in error, after certain preliminaries bad been effectuated in procuring agents, literature, and installment contracts in blank, the prices were fixed upon tbe lots for sale “at from $140 to $350 on a perfectly straight selling proposition,” but none of tbe lots were sold. At tbis time, as expressed by Bush, “there was a fearful boom with tbe Quanab, Acme & Pacific coming,” which, however, was not built, and some talk of the' Crosbyton road, which was afterwards constructed into Lubbock, from Crosbyton, a distance of about 40 miles. After tbe first attempts were made to sell tbe property at tbe prices above mentioned, there is testimony indicating that some attempt was thereafter made by tbe Western Realty Company, tbe assignee of tbe contract, of which Bush and Harkrider were also stockholders to sell some of tbe lots at $100 per lot, which also failed; when tbis effort was made is not disclosed.
Bush, who was tbe moving spirit in tbe purchase of tbe contract, said: “At tbe time we went into tbis contract, tbe conditions here in Lubbock looked pretty good. I think we paid more than tbe market value of tbe property in controversy in this ease when we bought it. I bad a faint idea of tbe market value of the property, and what induced me. to go into tbe proposition and pay more than tbe stuff was worth was that I though we could get on tbe outside and sell this property. I knew that tbe scheme propositions that were being worked for tbe sale of property in tbis town were pretty good, and I thought we could get out arid work a scheme” — and we are rather inclined to think be expresses tbe inefficiency and lack of equity of bis own defense when be simply says: “My position in tbis case is partially that I and my associate came here and bought tbis property, paying more than tbe market value for it, under a contract giving tbe right to sell it, and owing to tbe activities of tbe federal government our scheme fell down, and in the meantime tbe prices depreciated and we were unable to carry out tbe contract we made, and therefore we wanted our money back.” Even if they had intended to force people to purchase tbis property vi et armis, it would not denude plaintiffs in error of a single right cognizable in equity in this proceeding; but tbe record seems to ring with an undertone of complaint by plaintiffs in error against tbe contract as a hard one, and vitalize it into a seeming equity, not directly, but by implication. The evidence is that it was merely a bad speculation. Roberds, one of the defendants in error, said, “Real estate was very active in July, 1909. We were selling property quite lively I think; that is, tbe Merrill addition” (meaning tbis property), and “for quite a while after tbe 1st of August, 1909, these conditions prevailed, for I bought quite a lot of stuff after that at a pretty' good price compared with what I could get for it now. I mean, by quite a while, two or three months” — and testified that tbe reasonable market value of tbe property per lot in July, 1909, was from $80 to $100 per lot; and bad sold some of tbe lots, tbe closest ones, before they sold in bulk to Bush and Harkrider, at just what price is not stated, but said they did not get over $100 per lot for any of them; and further testified that either Bush or Harkrider (be was not certain which) said, “We will have all tbis thing closed out in less than six months, and we will have our money.”
We find that plaintiffs in error made a diligent effort to sell tbe property within tbe limitations of tbe contract, for several months after its execution, at tbe prices indicated above, until conditions and tbe depreciation in tbe value of tbe property made it impracticable to continue further efforts in pursuing any method of selling by lots, and that plaintiffs in error have expended something like $2,100 for the purpose of selling said lots, and tbe evidence discloses that at tbe time of trial there was an expectation of the construction of what is known as tbe Texas Out-Off by tbe Santa Fé from Lubbock to Texico, but nothing tangible is exhibited in tbe record as having been addresse'd to tbe
Third. We are unable to find from this record any tangible equity rebutting the right of rescission by defendants in error. The limitation placed upon the value of the' price of the lots by the contract is stressed by plaintiffs in error and italicized in the brief in the quotations from the testimony as an element entering into their inability to sell the land, and suggested, if not argued, as an ingredient of equity. As stated, defendants in error were required to take the proceeds in liquidation of the $35,945 balance, except $10 per lot to be retained by the sellers for expenses, and the property had been sold at $85 per lot, which left a margin of $5 per lot within the limitation. If the limitation of price had not been inserted, with the power to sell' by lot having been granted to Bush and Harkrider, complications would have ensued; it was as much a privilege to Bush and Harkrider as a protection to the others, and upon analysis is at best a cry of a bad bargain which defendants in error are not responsible for from the viewpoint of equity. How the $2,100 expended by plaintiffs in error can become a circumstance of an equitable right we are unable to see. If a man buys land from another and spends $2,100 trying to sell it for the purpose of paying the debt and reaping his profit, and fails to sell, it may be unfortunate ; but, as a circumstance for equitable consideration, it is intangible. Of course if successfully expended it would be a benefit to defendants in error in the payment of the debt; so would the successful expenditure of the same amount of money as a bonus to others to borrow the money to pay the debt. There was nothing added to the estate; plaintiffs in error merely took their Qhances.
It is true Chief Justice Brown, in the case of Lipscomb v. Fuqua, 103 Tex. 585, 131 S. W. 1064, mentioned the lack of allegations of expenditure of money and the lack of efforts to sell, the land (in a contract quite similar to the one here), but he evidently means that such efforts and expense would be such as had created a condition beneficial to him (Lipscomb) as an equity which Fuqua had inequitably destroyed, and, as he puts it, that on account of the lack of such allegations “there had not grown up any condition from which he [meaning Lipscomb] could expect to reap a benefit by the continuance of the contract beyond the time fixed for payment”; and in the case at bar we can see nothing whereby any condition has been created, either by plaintiffs in error, or otherwise, by virtue of which they could address it to a court of equity as a tangible benefit to be reaped by them by a continuance of the contract, and which the defendants in error have cut off, if a reasonable time applies to the sale of the land. In that case a time limit was set in which the money was to be paid, and the Supreme Court decided, construing the pleadings, upon a general demurrer which had been sustained by the lower court, that Lipscomb had done nothing and exhibited no countervailing equity, giving Fuqua a clear right to rescind; the Supreme Court said: “It was an execu-tory contract of sale to be consummated by the performance on Lipscomb’s part by making the sale and paying over the money to Fuqua. This he had not done within the time specified in the contract, nor up to the time Fuqua declared a rescission of the contract and took possession of the land.” Under the terms of that contract, it was agreed that Lipscomb had the right to sell the land in whole or in part, and that he would turn over the money received from the sales to Fuqua until the full amount of $63,744, balance, had been paid; also providing safeguards to Fuqua in the event the land was sold in portions. If no time had been set in that contract for the expiration of the same, and an unreasonable time had expired when Fuqua had rescinded the contract, from the logic of that case the result would have, been the same. In this case the defendants in error offered a deed to the land upon payment of the balance of the money which is refused. This, of course, plaintiffs in error could have demanded at any time by the payment of the money. Not quite one-fifth of the whole purchase money was paid, and, even if the obligation to pay were an unconditional one (which seems to be denied)-and defendants in error were remitted to a foreclosure, there is no equity in the land to be disposed of on account of its depreciation, and there would be every expectation of a deficiency judgment
Appropriate, we believe, to this matter, we quote the following from the case of Moore v. Giesecke, 76 Tex. 543, 13 S. W. 290: “We repeat what has already been said when we say that, when the vendor’s suit is predicated upon the mere refusal of the vendee to pay the whole consideration contracted for, the facts that the vendee has paid part of the consideration and made permanent and valuable improvements, coupled with possession of the property, unaided by some other sufficient equity, will not entitle him to recover for such purchase money or improvements. In such cases, when the vendor has neither waived his legal rights nor committed any default, he cannot be involuntarily taxed with improvements made upon his property without his consent, or
We do not think the language of Justice Henry, “when the vendee does not seek to perform the contract,” assists the plaintiffs in error, because the evidence shows they tried to sell the land and failed, which was optional upon their part to do. Of course a vendee may make every effort in his power to raise the money to pay the debt, where even it is his contract to do so, but, if he makes the effort and fails, it is not an equity because of failure. See, also, Banks v. McQuatters, 57 S. W. 335, and Bank v. Jackson, 40 S. W. 833.
We conclude, the cause should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.