Court Opinion

ID: 6906587
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 22:01:27.414405+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:22.259075
License: Public Domain

BUBNETT, J.
We note at the outset that this is not a suit for specific performance, but is one of strict foreclosure, wherein the owner of the fee seeks to compel the vendee to pay the purchase price within a time fixed by the decree or abandon the undertaking.
1. The demurrer was properly sustained to the plea in abatement, it being in the nature of lis pendens. The equity court had obtained jurisdiction first in this suit for strict foreclosure wherein all the rights of all the parties can be fully and finally adjudicated; hence it is not permissible for any of the litigants to institute an action at law covering the very questions over *492which the chancery tribunal had already rightfully assumed authority.
2, 3. A defendant is entitled to set forth by answer as many defenses and counterclaims as he may have, but it is required by Section 74, L. O. L., as amended by the act of January 28,1915, that they be separately stated and refer to the cause of action which they are intended to answer, in such a manner that they may be intelligibly distinguished. It was proper for the defendants to allege a rescission by express stipulation of the parties, and the terms agreed npon for such a cancellation of the contract, including the amounts to be repaid by the plaintiffs. It was error, therefore, for the court to strike out the matter averring the payments made for improvements, and the like, for repayment of these amounts was part of the alleged conditions of the rescission agreement said to have been made by the parties. In abatement of the suit it was competent to state that the payments were made out of time with the acquiescence and approval of the plaintiffs, which, under the doctrine of Graham v. Merchant, 43 Or. 294 (72 Pac. 1088), and Kemmerer v. Title & Trust Co., 90 Or. 137 (175 Pac. 865), and other like precedents, would postpone the operation of the default until after reasonable notice by the vendor to the vendees that in the future, strict performance as to time and amount of payments would be required. It was wrong to strike out that matter.
4. It is impossible to determine from the answer whether the strip is part of the tract described in the contract or something in addition thereto. If it was something further that was to be included in the contract, and not part of the tract therein described, it cannot be the subject of dispute here, in the absence of a showing that its omission from the written memo*493rial of the agreement was the result of fraud or mistake, for we learn in Section 713, L. O. L., that:
“When the terms of an agreement have been reduced to writing by the parties, it is to be considered as containing all those terms, and therefore there can be, between the parties and their representatives or successors in interest, no evidence of the terms of the agreement, other than the contents of the writing, except in the following cases:—
‘ ‘ 1. Where a mistake or imperfection of the writing is put in issue by the pleadings. * * ”
It would be another matter if by appropriate narration it should appear that the plaintiffs represented to the defendants as a means of inducing the latter to make the contract, that the north line of the premises described in the instrument coincided with the fence mentioned but it is not so pleaded.
5, 6. Respecting the matter of furnishing an abstract, the terms of the agreement are that that instrument shall be delivered contemporaneously with the full payment of the purchase price, and the plaintiffs could not be put in default by the defendants until the latter had tendered the money required. So far as the alleged verbal agreement that the defendants should suspend payments until the plaintiffs had secured a vacation of the road and furnished an abstract to that effect is concerned, it is not alleged to have been made on any consideration and, hence, cannot have any value as a contractual modification of the original agreement. On the other hand, under the authority of Neppach v. Oregon & California R. R. Co., 46 Or. 374 (80 Pac. 482, 7 Ann. Cas. 1035, and note), if the plaintiffs represented to the defendants that they need not make payment until the vacation of the strip was accomplished, etc., and thereby lulled them into a sense of security it would operate to stay the hands of plain*494tiffs until the matter was again set at large by reasonable notice that a strict performance of the contract by the defendants would thenceforth be required. The matter stricken out was at least amenable to a demurrer on the ground that the several defenses were not separately stated, but, including as it did matters properly cognizable as part of the alleged rescission agreement, the omnibus motion to strike out should have been overruled even as to matters defectively pleaded, against which it was directed. With these observations, we pass to a consideration of the testimony concerning the alleged mutual agreement of the parties to rescind the contract.
We premise that, as in any other contract, the minds of the parties must meet on an identical proposition which they both understand alike and to which they both assent in the same sense; otherwise, there is no agreement. It appears by the testimony that there had been some negotiations between the parties on'the subject and that the plaintiff E. H. Hawkins had offered the defendants $250 to surrender possession of the premises and cancel the contract. This, however, had not been accepted and this suit had been instituted; after which, the defendant wife, Mrs. Rodgers, made an appointment by telephone to have Mr. Hawkins meet her at a real estate office in Eugene at a certain time. Going there, Hawkins found Mr. Rodgers in the outer office, while the latter’s wife was in an inner room. After some delay they called Hawkins into the latter room, when, to quote in substance the testimony of both Rodgers and his wife, Mrs. Rodgers told Hawkins that they had decided to rescind the contract and to give immediate possession of the place, at the same time handing him their copy of the con*495tract. They say that he took it and said, “AH right.” Rodgers testified further as follows:
“Q. Did Mr. Hawkins ask you anything about what amount of money you would accept or anything like that?
“A. He asked me if we accepted what he offered; I told him no, we wouldn’t accept that.
‘ ‘Q. What did he say?
“A. He said, ‘Well, I will be willing to pay something.’ ”
He says they gave possession about January 10th, following, and that he saw the plaintiff E. H. Hawkins afterwards working on the place.
Mrs. Rodgers testified substantially as related and as follows:
“Q. When you handed Mr. Hawkins your copy of the contract between yourself and your husband on the one side, and' the plaintiffs Hawkins and wife on the other, and made your statement, you then turned to leave, and left the room?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Were you afraid he might hand it back to you?
“A. No, sir. I was sitting there. I had no further business in there. I had business with Mr. Peterson.
“Q. You w;ere done and you left?
“A. Well, I don’t think there were any words passed between me and them. I immediately got up as Mr. Skotheim did, and started to walk out of the door. I did not go clear out. I was standing just outside of the door, waiting.
“Q. You handed him this paper and made your statement simultaneously, didn’t you?
“A. Not so much so. I told him we had decided to rescind the contract, and handed it to him.
“Q. And turned and walked off?
“A. I was sitting down. I sat there for a second or two, and there was nothing said and I got up and walked out.
*496“Q. Then yon were ready to leave right then and there and have nothing further discussed between you?
“A. It was not necessary that anything more should be said.
‘ ‘ Q. When you handed him the paper and made your little speech, you were done, is that the idea?
“A. Comparatively. Not done. I expected something back.
“Q. But there was no^further conversation?
“A. I had no further conversation with Mr. Hawkins ; no, sir.
“Q. That settled that phase of it so far as you were concerned?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. There was no occasion for any further discussion; is that right?
“A. I didn’t see that there was.”
E. H. Hawkins testified that' when he met Mrs. Rodgers in the inner office, she said, “This is a copy of the contract. We give up the place”; that he did not hear her use the word “rescind” and that he would not have known what she meant by it if he had heard it. He says that Mrs. Rodgers “got up and stood through the door between the rooms,” and further testifies:
“Q. What did you do then?
“A. I asked Mr. Rodgers if they were going to hold me to my agreement to give them two hundred fifty dollars; he didn’t answer, and she turned around and said, ‘No, we won’t accept it.’
“Q. Then what did you do?
“A. Well, I thought, ‘Perhaps you won’t get anything else.’
“Q. What else did you do?
“A. I don’t think I did anything else. You know it was Rodgers that I spoke to. I asked him if they accepted it, and he didn’t answer, but she did.
“Q. What did you refer to when you asked about the $250?
*497“A. I referred to the.conversation that I had had a few days before np there, when I told him if they would give up the place and give me full possession, I would give them two hundred fifty dollars.
“Q. Was that before or after suit was brought?
“A. I think it was before.
“Q. Now, after this suit was brought in this court, have you had any more dealings with the Rodgers?
“A. I have not.
‘ ‘ Q. Mr. Hawkins, did you make any arrangement with them at all that day there in the office, of any kind?
“A. No.
“Q. Did you know or understand what they meant or what they were trying to do?
“A. I did not.”
7. Prom the testimony of the defendants themselves it is quite apparent that there was no meeting of the minds of the parties on the question of contractual rescission, and that we are safely within the record in saying that no such rescission was made. Not a word was said about the repayment of the moneys expended in improvements, such as lawns, orchards and the like; neither was there any statement whatever about the return of the payments on account of principal, interest and taxes, although the contract itself states that these shall be forfeited on the default of the vendees, yet all these are averred tó be part of the agreement to rescind upon which the defendants rely. The alleged contract of rescission by mutual agreement must be laid out of the ease for an utter failure of proof.
Respecting the claim that the plaintiffs had no title to the strip of land, the bone of contention here, and granting that it was to be included in the contract or was part of the land described, and that the title of the plaintiffs is at present defective in the respect contended, we find in 39 Cyc. 1410, the following rule:
*498“The American decisions have uniformly held that the vendor cannot be placed in default for defect of title or inability to convey, by tender of performance by the purchaser and demand for performance by the vendor before the expiration of the time fixed by the contract for making a conveyance, the view being taken that it is perfectly legal for one to contract to convey title to land which he does not own. If the title is defective, or if he has no title, at the time of entering into the contract, but such defects are cured at the time fixed for performance, or before any demand for title was made, or at any time before suit commenced to rescind, or before or during the trial of a suit or cross-bill by the purchaser to rescind the contract, or before final decree, a rescission will not be permitted, provided there has been no unnecessary delay or fraud on the part of the vendor by which injury, accrues to the purchaser. And it has been held that even in case of injury caused by delay in making good the title, a rescission will not ordinarily be granted if compensation can be made therefor.”
A leading case is Hanson v. Fox, 155 Cal. 106 (99 Pac. 489, 132 Am. St. Rep. 72, 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 338). It is not pretended that the defendants offered to pay the balance remaining due on the purchase price. We remember that the contract prescribes that they may pay this on or before five years from the date of the instrument. Even if they had exercised their option to offer payment before the maturity of the contract, still, having thus anticipated the time of payment, the plaintiffs would have a reasonable time thereafter in which to furnish the marketable title. '
8. It is plain upon the record, under these principles, that the plaintiffs were not in default respecting the strip and the defendants were in no position to force rescission. On the other hand, if in fact the plaintiffs did not have title to the. land they undertook to con*499vey, they had no standing to declare and enforce a default against the defendants, for the obligations of the parties are mutual and concurrent, and, as in any other such stipulation, neither can enforce a rescission against the other unless he is at the time himself able to perform. Again, as stated in McCourt v. Johns, 33 Or. 561 (53 Pac. 601), the contract will not be rescinded for failure of title to an insignificant portion of the premises. A slight defect in quantity of property ought not to be used as a cover for the consequences of extravagant speculation. This subject is treated at length in Charles B. James Land & Investment Co. v. Vernon, 129 Tenn. 637 (168 S. W. 156, 52 L. R. A. (N. S.) 959, and note).
On the subject of improvements the books afford a variety of precedents and it is impossible to lay down any hard-and-fast rule. It is made the subject of statute in Georgia to the effect that a trespasser may set off permanent improvements enhancing the value of the land as against the claim for use and occupation. A similar provision is found in bur Code in Section 330, L. O. L., where the defendant in ejectment is entitled to set off against damages for the withholding of the premises, the value of permanent improvements made upon the property while holding under the color of title adversely to the claim of the plaintiff in good faith. This, however, relates to actions at law. It is held in Seymour v. Cleveland, 9 S. D. 94 (68 N. W. 171), that a vendee is not an adverse holder in good faith under contract to purchase so as to secure compensation for improvements under the statute of that state. In Putnam v. Ritchie, 6 Paige (N. Y.), 390, the mother of certain defendants who were heirs of a deceased tenant under a long lease surrendered it without authority. The landlord made improvements on the *500premises and after the'heirs came of age and asserted their title nnder the lease of their ancestor they were permitted to enjoy the improvements made, without compensating the landlord. In Rainier v. Huddleston, 4 Heisk. (Tenn.) 223, the party who made the improvements while in possession of property under an oral contract for the purchase thereof was found to be himself in default and was refused compensation for the improvements. In Banks v. McQuatters (Tex.), 57 S. W. 334, it is held that where the vendor is not in default and the vendee is, the latter cannot tax the former with the value of improvements when he tries to recover his land. In Guthrie v. Holt, 9 Baxt. (Tenn.) 527, it is said that where a-vendor is not in fault and the vendee is remiss in performance, the latter cannot compel payment for improvements. It is analogous to the situation in Caro v. Wollenberg, 83 Or. 311 (163 Pac. 94), where we held that a mortgagee in possession could not, without the consent of the mortgagor, load the premises with permanent improvements so as to increase the burden of the mortgagor on redemption.
9. The feature common to both situations is that in each the individual making the improvements is putting them on the land of another. They are differentiated' by the fact that it was not originally directly within the scope of the contract that the mortgagee should have title to the land, while, on the other hand, the very purpose of the agreement was ultimately to pass title to the vendee. It is plain on principle that a defaulting vendee cannot install expensive improvements upon the realty and compel the vendor to pay for them absolutely and at all events. It is equally equitable that the vendor cannot justly avail himself unrestrictedly of the benefit of the vendee’s labors and *501expenditures which really enhance the value of the estate. It is believed that the more reasonable and equitable rule is stated in Lytle v. Scottish American Mortgage Co., 122 Ga. 458 (50 S. E. 402). It is true that in a sense the decision there is aided by the Georgia statute already noted, but after treating of the duty to make compensation for improvements in some manner, the court, speaking by Mr. Justice Lamar, says:
“This does not lead to the conclusion that the vendor can be compelled to pay for costly changes which he did not order and does not desire, and which, though valuable, are not of a character useful to him. Such a result is obviated by the terms of the decree. If the vendor elects to take back the land, he must return the purchase money less damages and rent. If the land has been improved, he must allow the vendee for the enhancement in value occasioned thereby, before he can take the land thus improved. But the vendee cannot force the vendor to pay for the building or other meliorations. "When the vendee asks compensation therefor, another factor is injected into the case, whereby he loses the absolute right to the purchase money and forces an accounting under which he can secure only what legally comes to him on a sale of the property. The rights of the parties must be adjusted; and upon the vendor’s paying the vendee what is equitably due for improvements and return of purchase money, the vendor has the option to take the land under the terms of the rescinded contract. If he does not desire to exercise this option, the property should be sold, the proceeds should be first applied to the payment of what is due the vendor, and the balance should be paid over to the vendee. In this way the rights of both parties are fully preserved. The vendor is not obliged to buy the improvements, though to protect his interest he may use his special judgment against the land as cash at the sheriff’s sale. At the sale the vendee also *502may get the benefit of the enhanced price due to the improvement. ’ ’
See, also, Moore v. Giesecke, 76 Tex. 551 (13 S. W. 293).
The object of this suit is to establish a price which the defendants must pay or be foreclosed and excluded from the premises. Some payments have been made and it is stipulated in the contract that these are forfeited if the defendants shall make default. It is said in 39 Cyc. 2004 :
“However, the terms of the contract itself, or the purchaser’s own conduct or default, may work a forfeiture of such payment, thereby depriving the purchaser of his right to recover the purchase-money paid”; citing many authorities.
The defendants agreed to pay a balance of $9,000 and interest. This is subject to possible deductions on account of defect in title to the 14-foot strip mentioned, if it be true that the title is defective. The defendants are entitled to litigate this question under proper pleading. The record before us is not sufficient to enable us to determine that matter.
It is possible that the road was initiated under the law as it stopd prior to the act of February 24, 1903 (Laws 1903, p. 262), rendering it amenable to Section 4821, B. & C. Comp., providing that
“if any part of any road in this state shall not be opened for four years after or from the time of its location, the same shall become vacated.”
Again, title by prescription may have been acquired up to the line of the fence prior to the enactment of Section 6372, L. O. L., preventing adverse user, however long continued, from becoming the basis of title to land within the lines of an established county road. It may be, too, that the proceedings by which the laying *503out of the road was attempted were so .defective that the highway itself exists only by prescription and covers only the ground actually occupied by public travel. All these questions may be involved and are worthy of examination.
If the defendants are found to be entitled to a deduction under such cases as McCourt v. Johns, 33 Or. 561 (53 Pac. 601), the net remainder will be the price to be charged against them on strict foreclosure, and a decree should be entered by the Circuit Court allowing them a reasonable time, to be fixed by that court, in which to pay the balance thus computed. The decree of the Circuit Court should also provide that in default of payment as prescribed the land should be sold and the proceeds of sale.applied to the payment of the balance of the purchase price and taxes thus ascertained, and that the overplus, if any there be, shall be paid to the defendants Eodgers. In this way, the defendants will get the benefit of whatever enhanced value they have conferred upon the land, for it will be reflected in the public sale and will be an inducement to bidders to purchase. On the other hand, the plaintiffs may protect their interest by bidding at the sale and making the property bring enough to satisfy their claim for purchase price. The plaintiffs agreed to sell. In that respect their contract would be carried out by means of the public sale and they cannot complain. The defendants agreed to buy and pay a purchase price. They have the option of paying the adjusted price and taking the land. They also have the alternative of allowing it to go to sale where their supposed betterments will possibly attract bidders who will give more for the land than if there were no improvements upon it.
*504At best, the- acquiescence in making payments out of time and tbe alleged excusing of the defendants from making further payments until settlement about the strip, would amount to matter in abatement, which was waived by the parties’ submitting themselves to the jurisdiction of the court upon the merits of the controversy. The decree must be modified and remanded to the Circuit Court with leave to that tribunal to grant permission to the defendants to amend their pleadings with reference to the alleged defect in title, with a view of ascertaining the truth of that matter and of making a proper abatement of the purchase price in the calculation of the amount which the defendants must pay to avoid strict foreclosure. A similar solution was worked out in Bickel v. Wessinger, 58 Or. 98 (113 Pac. 34), and is in line with the doctrine taught in Flanagan Estate v. Great Central Land Co., 45 Or. 335, 343 (77 Pac. 485, 488), where Mr. Justice Wolverton, delivering judgment, said:
“It does not follow, however, that the court will always declare a strict foreclosure of the contract. - It may also decree a foreclosure by a sale of the land in the ordinary way, although the title has not passed from the vendor, dependent upon the exigencies and the equities of the case”; citing Security Savings Co. v. Mackenzie, 33 Or. 209 (52 Pac. 1046).
As equity acquired jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter before the commencement of the action at law, the latter proceeding should be permanently enjoined and the whole matter worked out to final solution in this suit. The result attained by this process will be a foreclosure of the contract on equitable principles. The performance of the terms of such a decree will operate to leave the parties where it found them, each exonerated from obligation to the *505other, and that will be a veritable rescission. The decree is therefore modified in accordance with the principles indicated, and the snit is remanded to the Circuit Court for further proceedings, neither party to recover costs or disbursements in this court.
Modified and Remanded.
McBride, C. J., and Benson and Harris, JJ., concur.
Denied April 15, 1919.