Court Opinion

ID: 6278254
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:07:42.326254+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:07.773835
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Rice, P. J.,
This was an action of assumpsit brought by the purchaser against the vendors to recover back money paid on a contract for the sale of land. It is an admitted fact, under the pleadings, that after the time for the payment of the entire purchase money had passed without full payment being made, the defendants sold the land to another. This, it is claimed, was a rescission of the contract by the defendants, or gave the plaintiff the right to treat it as such and to recover back the part of the purchase money he had paid. And this would be true, if the defendants were still bound to convey to the plaintiff at the time they conveyed to another. See Durham v. Wick, 210 Pa. 128; Sanders v. Brock, 230 Pa. 609, at p. 617. The defendants do not deny the act from which, in the absence of qualifying facts, their *141rescission of the contract would be implied, but allege, in effect, their right to rescind, because the plaintiff had forfeited his rights under the contract, by operation of the clause which reads as follows:
“And it is hereby expressly understood and agreed, that the payment of the said installments, as the same severally fall due, is made material; and the failure to pay any one of them on the day on which the same falls due shall be an absolute forfeiture of this contract, and the said parties of the first part, théir heirs, executors, administrators, or assigns, shall thereupon have the right to re-enter and re-possess the said lots of land with the appurtenances. Time, therefore, in reference to each and every one of the payments as above stated being hereby expressly made material, a failure to pay in accordance with the dates as fixed and agreed upon above, shall work an absolute and unconditional forfeiture of this contract.”
No question is raised as to the validity of such a stipulation, and none can be raised: Becker v. Smith, 59 Pa. 469; Axford v. Thomas, 160 Pa. 8. The question is whether a forfeiture had taken place. The facts pertinent to this inquiry are these: By the terms of the contract $25.00 of the purchase money, which was $800, was payable on its execution and the balance in installments of $10.00 each on the seventh day of each month. Between March 5, 1910, the date of the contract, and June 10, 1912, the date of the last payment of $30.00, nine other payments were made at irregular intervals and varying in amount. None of them, excepting the first installment, was made on the date specified in the contract, and between the last payment and the one immediately preceding there was an interval of more than a year. The balance of the purchase money, which became due in the July following the $30.00 payment, was not paid or tendered either at that time or later.
Before discussing the effect of the acceptance of these payments out of time, it will be well to notice, that *142where by the terms of the contract time of payment is of the essence, and it does not appear in the contract or otherwise, that delivery of a deed and payment of the purchase money were intended to be mutual, concurrent and dependent covenants, tender of a deed is not a condition precedent to the right of the vendor to rescind the contract for nonpayment of the purchase money or an installment thereof at the time stipulated. The principle was recognized and thus expressed by Justice Elkin in McHenry v. Mitchell, 219 Pa. 297: “A different question would be presented if the forfeiture clause required payment on a day certain, without reference to the presentation and delivery of a deed; in which event payment must be made within the time, whether the deed be delivered or tendered or not.” Here, by the terms of the contract, the plaintiff was under obligation to pay the whole of the purchase money before he was entitled to demand a deed: McCullough v. Boyd, 120 Pa. 552; Lichetti v. Conway, 44 Pa. Superior Ct. 71. Therefore, leaving out of view for a moment the question of waiver and estoppel, it cannot be said that the defendants were equally with the plaintiff in default, under the terms of the contract, in not tendering a deed at the time the purchase money became due, and therefore the principle upon which Hatton v. Johnson, 83 Pa. 219, and cases of that class rest, would not be applicable. Another point to be noticed is, that there is no allegation that the defendants were not able and willing to perform their part of the contract at the time the whole of the purchase money became due. In short, by the terms of the contract the plaintiff was in default, and the defendants were not, and had not been.
A waiver is an intentional abandonment or relinquishment of a right, and may be inferred from conduct. Certainly the acceptance of the last payment of $30.00, in the absence of any qualifying fact or circumstance, raised the conclusive inference that the defendants intentionally abandoned and relinquished the right to *143enforce a forfeiture for previous failures to pay on the day. The cases cited by the plaintiff’s counsel, fully sustain that conclusion. But none of these cases sustain the contention, that the mere act of receiving a payment, or several payments, after the dates when the purchaser was bound to make them, without more, operates as a complete abrogation of, the explicit agreement we have quoted, or as a waiver of strict compliance with its terms, as to the amounts falling due thereafter. Such acceptance, standing alone, is not inconsistent with an intention of insisting on such performance in the future, and does not estop the vendor. The purchaser has no right to rest on such indulgence shown on one occasion, or on a number of occasions, as a ground for claiming it on all occasions. Doubtless, there may be circumstances, short of an express promise, accompanying the acceptance of payment out of time, which would warrant him in assuming that the vendor intended not to require strict compliance in the future. So also the silence of the vendor, seeing the purchaser make valuable improvements after default, may perhaps create an equitable estoppel. But there is nothing of that kind in the case as now presented. It does not appear that the plaintiff made valuable improvements, or that anything was said or done at the time the payments were made or afterwards from which the inference of an intention not to stand on the contract, as to future installments, could be inferred reasonably. There is the bare fact that up to and including June 30, 1912, the defendants accepted payments at irregular intervals and varying in amount. This, we conclude, does not raise a legal implication of waiver of strict performance by the plaintiff of his agreement to pay the balance of purchase money when it fell due. It follows that the defendants’ conveyance of the land to another, which was about four months after the plaintiff’s unexplained and unexcused default, was not a breach of the agreement which entitled the plaintiff to recover back the money he had paid. As was *144said in Sanders v. Brock, 230 Pa. 609, the defendants were not bound to forever continue to hold the property to await the offer and convenience of the purchaser. Nor were the defendants bound to enter judgment in the amicable action of ejectment which was agreed to and annexed to the original agreement, in order to enable them to dispose of the property. The amicable action was agreed to in aid of the defendants’ rights after forfeiture, not as a condition precedent to the vesting of those rights.
The case may present a different aspect on the trial, but as presented by the statement of claim and the affidavit of defense, the plaintiff was not entitled to summary judgment.
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted with a procedendo.