Court Opinion

ID: 7104919
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:19:54.444096+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:32.323315
License: Public Domain

G-rauger, J.-
I. To our minds the judgment of the district court reflects the true spirit of the law and i. contract: performance sufficient. effectuates justice between these parties., The record unmistakably discloses that the defendant has undertaken a faithful and substantial compliance with the terms of the contract, and, had she been met with a like spirit and purpose on the part of the plaintiff, both, before the -expiration of the sixty days from the recording of the sheriff’s deed, would have been in possession of the exact rights contemplated by the contract. The contract was delivered to Mr. Hule as an officer of the ■bank, and payments thereon were to be made at the bank. Mr. Rule says the plaintiff told him “that, when the money'was ready to comply with the contract, I was to notify him, and he would send the deed.” The ■contract was sealed when delivered to Mr. Rule, and was not opened or examined by him until February 8, after "the controversy as to the amount to be paid arose. Mr. Rule, however, had some information, in a general way, as to the amounts required to be paid, as that the taxes were about six hundred dollars, and that the other .amount was thirty-two hundred dollars. That both Mr. Rule and defendant believed on the twentieth of December, 1888, that enough was paid to comply with the •contract, is not to be seriously questioned. He says he did not notify Totty of the amount paid in, but that the money had been deposited there to comply with the contract, and asked him to send the deed. This indicates that he did not expect or understand that the question of amount was to be first settled in California, but was to be determined at the bank, and that view is in harmony with the instruction given him by the plaintiff. No other way is in harmony with a proper ■carrying out of the contract with the plaintiff in California. The testimony clearly shows that when the ■question as to the exact amount arose, the defendant was vigilant to know what, under the contract, was .required of her, and was at all times willing to pay it. *650Tlie slight discrepancy as to the amount will not justify a decree for the plaintiff under such a state of facts.
II. There is a difference of opinion as to the amount of rent to be paid under the contract. The 2 the samo plaintiff ’ s view is that he was entitled to rent, in advance, at fifty dollars per month. By the terms of the contract the defendant could at any time after December 5, 1888, have paid the amount required, and was then entitled to a deed ; and she only guaranteed the rent until she should comply with her-contract. If she had paid it on the fifth day of December no obligation for rent would have arisen under her guaranty, for no time would have elapsed. She made the payment on the twentieth day of December, and her obligation for rent then expired. On the eleventh day of December, there was placed in the bank twenty-two dollars and fifty cents, and oh the twelfth, twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents, making together a total of fifty dollars. There is some dispute in the testimony as to what this money was placed there for. The appel-ant’ s view is that it is one month’s rent, and the defendant says that when she placed it there it was to apply as. rent if she failed to get the money to redeem within the sixty days ; but, if she did get it, it was to apply on the purchase price. Mr. Hule makes no positive denial of' this, but does not remember it. The plan of so placing the money was in accord with reason, as by so doing she was not paying beyond the terms of her contract; while, if she paid the month’s rent, and then paid the purchase price within the month, she would be paying rent for the use of her own premises.
III. There is much speculation and theorizing on unimportant matters in this case, as of the money __. ' stmúuanéous placed in the bank by the defendant, three thousand dollars was obtained from one Brett, and deposited in the name of Brett, with notice by him to Mr. Rule that it was to be used for payment by the defendant when the deed was ready •, seven hundred dollars was obtained from the defendant’s father. Mr. Russell, and was, at the suggestion of *651Mr. Hule, deposited to the credit of her father, but for the defendant’s' use when the deed should arrive. It was also understood that Brett should have a mortgage to secure him for the loan on the premises in question; and because of these facts it is urged that the deposits in the bank were conditional, not absolute; that the plaintiff was not required to furnish a deed to the defendant or his father, by which she could secure Brett for the money to perform her contract. It seems tobe the appellant’s theory that the defendant’s obligation for payment was primary, and that of the plaintiff secondary; that the defendant must first pay to the plaintiff, and then the plaintiff must deed to the defendant. The law, under the contract, imposed no such duty. It was the defendant’s duty to be first ready to perform by payment., to have the money at the bank ; and thereupon it was the duty of the plaintiff to have his deed for delivery; and the performance, in the eyes of the law, will be simultaneous. The law, in construing contracts, will look rather to an observance of the original intent of the parties than to its defeat, and let us give the thought application in this case. If on the twentieth of December, 1888, the plaintiff had been present with his deed at the bank willing to practically observe his contract, there would have been this state of facts: The slight discrepancy in the amount of payment could have been determined, and would have been paid; the deed to the defendant, the mortgage to Brett as security for the money he furnished, and the money for the plaintiff would have been there. The deed and mortgage would have been passed to the proper parties, and the money to the plaintiff. Each party would have had his exact rights. Public policy, in the interest of fair dealing, demands the support of such a rule. Such a result, in this case, was, to our minds, defeated because of the absence of the plaintiff, when he should have been present, or some one in his interest, to have permitted a performance of the contract. Mr. Hule was the party who was to notify him when to send the deed, and was *652the only party to whom the defendant could look at Mason City, and he believed and told her that her payments were sufficient, and notified the plaintiff to send the deed. She even offered to pay more within the sixty days, but was assured by Mr. Buie that she had paid enough. Upon this she had a right to rely. The record shows that the plaintiff was anxious to escape his contract by any technical result. Opportunities have been frequently given him to take all that he could demand under the contract, which he has constantly refused. These opportunities, it is true, were after his return, and after the expiration of the sixty days, when he was under no legal obligations to accept them if the defendant had before forfeited her right to enforce the contract, which we think she had not done. The law and the equity of the case are with the defendant.
The amount fixed by the district court to be paid by the defendant is liberal to the plaintiff, but, as defendant; does not appeal, we do not disturb it. We unite in saying that the judgment should be affirmed.