Court Opinion

ID: 7952735
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:33:54.977243+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:12.742971
License: Public Domain

Potter, J.
February 2, 1926, Floyd Reason, a resident of Livingston county, bought of the Interstate Development Company, a Florida corporation, on a land contract called an agreement for deed, the Florida real estate here involved. Subsequently he *378made substantial payments on the contract and valuable improvements on tbe land. This agreement for deed or land contract was not recorded. He continued payments on tbe contract until February 1, 1929, tbe date of bis last payment. November 15, 1929, tbe Interstate Development Company deeded tbe premises to F. A. Krob, of Kansas City, Kansas, by warranty deed wbicb did not mention or reserve any rights under the contract with Reason. October 19, 1934, Floyd Reason died while a resident of Livingston county and bis son, Marion J. Reason, was appointed administrator of his estate by the probate court of that county. At his death, Floyd Reason left surviving him a widow and five children, all of whom were of legal age. The Interstate Development Company and F. A. Kroh, prior to filing claim against the estate of Floyd Reason, deceased, to recover tbe amount claimed to be due on the land contract, tendered to tbe administrator of Floyd Reason’s estate two deeds, one from the Interstate Development Company, a Florida corporation, and the other signed by F. A. Kroh and C. E. Krob, her husband. A claim was then filed against the estate of Reason. Various objections were made to its allowance,- — that tbe property, after Floyd Reason ceased paying upon the contract in 1929, was conveyed by the Interstate Development Company to F. A. Kroh by a warranty deed absolute in form and this, having been done after tbe cessation of payments upon tbe land contract by Floyd Reason, was claimed to constitute a ground for rescission upon tbe part of Floyd Reason because it disabled tbe vendor in such contract from its performance and amounted to an abandonment of tbe contract; the deeds tendered were insufficient in law; and no claim to recover tbe alleged unpaid balance *379due upon the land contract was maintainable at the time the claim was presented. These claims were sustained by the trial court and claimants appeal.
Ordinarily where property is conveyed to another by deed absolute in form by the vendor to a vendee other than the one named in the land contract as a contract purchaser, which deed makes no mention of the contract vendee’s interest, and such deed is recorded, it amounts to an election by the vendor to rescind the contract because the vendor has disabled himself from performance by conveyance of the title of the property to the vendee and the vendee under the land contract is entitled to rescind.
One who has contracted to sell a piece of property, whether real or personal, to another and who sells or transfers the same property to a third person while the contract still remains in force and executory, violates the contract by disabling himself from performing it and thereby gives to the other party the right to rescind it or treat it as abandoned and to recover whatever he may have given in consideration of it. 1 Black on Rescission and Cancellation, §§ 210, 211; 2 Black on Rescission and Cancellation, §432.
This was the rule recognized in Atkinson v. Scott, 36 Mich. 18, and cases cited therein, as well as in Weaver v. Aitcheson, 65 Mich. 285, and Himebaugh v. Chalker, 261 Mich. 80.
Conditions apparently changed after the death of Floyd Reason. F. A. Kroh reconveyed the real estate to the Interstate Development Company after Reason’s death, and F. A. Kroh and the Interstate Development Company presented a claim against the estate of the deceased vendee. Having once disabled itself from performance under the land contract, the vendee could treat the contract as *380rescinded and the vendor cannot again reestablish liability upon the part of the vendee without some affirmative act upon the vendee’s part. Chicago Boulevard Land Co. v. Apartment Garages, 245 Mich. 448; Balesh v. Alcott, 257 Mich. 352.
Upon the death of Floyd Reason, the title to all real estate and interest therein belonging to him descended to his heirs so far as real estate in Michigan is concerned.  Its title became absolute, subject only to be divested if it became necessary to have recourse thereto for the payment of the creditors of deceased. Marvin v. Bowlby, 142 Mich. 245 (4 L. R. A. [N. S.] 189, 113 Am. St. Rep. 574, 7 Ann. Cas. 559); Windoes v. Colwell, 247 Mich. 372. No deed was executed to the heirs of Floyd Reason, deceased, nor was such a deed tendered. The deed tendered was not one to any person entitled to accept the legal title to the real estate. It was not a deed to the administrator of the estate. There was no deed tendered to a person in being capable of taking title to the real estate. The estate of Floyd Reason is not a person who could be a grantee under the law of Florida, nor under the law of Michigan. 2 Tiffany, Real Property (2d Ed.), § 434; 8 R. C. L. p. 953; 4 Thompson on Real Property (1st Ed.), § 2985.
The trial court was correct. Judgment affirmed, with costs.
North, C. J., and Fead, Wiest, Butzel, Bushnell, Edward M. Sharpe, and Toy, JJ., concurred.