Court Opinion

ID: 9625316
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 07:36:15.357995+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:06:06.178753
License: Public Domain

PERRY, J.
Plaintiff commenced an action in forcible entry and detainer in the justice court of Malheur county to obtain possession of the following described lands:
The Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (NWi/4 NW14) and the East Half of the Northwest Quarter (Éy2 NW%) and three (3) acres in the Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (SW14 NE14) all lying and being in Section Eighteen (18), Township Twenty (20) South, Range Eorty-six (46) E.W.M., Malheur County, State of Oregon, containing 123 acres more or less, and all appurtenances thereunto belonging.
A trial in the justice court resulted in a hung jury, and the defendants having filed an affirmative answer in equity, the cause was transferred to the circuit court of Malheur county. In the trial in the circuit court, the trial court granted a decree denying the equitable *667defense set np by the defendants and ordering the restitution of the possession of the land to the plaintiff. From this adverse decision the defendants have appealed.
The admitted facts to be considered in a determination of this controversy are as follows:
On February 21,1949, plaintiff and his wife, Cora E. Share, and the defendant, H. H. Williams (as “Harvey H. Williams”) and his sister, the defendant Edith Williams, entered into a contract wherein the plaintiff and his wife agreed to sell and the defendants agreed to purchase the above-described real property for the sum of $14,800, of which sum $6,000 was paid at the time of the execution of the contract, and the balance of $8,800, with interest at 5 per cent per annum, was to be paid in equal annual installments of $1,500 until fully paid, the first payment to be made on or before January 1, 1950. It was further agreed that timo and strict performance was of the essence of the contract, and that upon the failure of the defendant purchasers to fully perform, the plaintiff and his wife, at their option, might declare the contract terminated and again take possession of the premises; that all payments made were to be retained by the plaintiff and his wife as liquidated damages and as a reasonable rental. The United States National Bank of Portland, Ontario Branch, at Ontario, Oregon, was to and did become the escrow agent of the parties. Thereafter on January 23, 1950, an agreement was entered into between the parties entitled “Cancellation of Contract of Sale and Escrow Agreement”, which agreement, after reciting a consideration of “One and no/100 and other valuable consideration in hand paid” by each of the parties to each other, provided as follows:
“It is understood and agreed that the parties have made other and different arrangements, and *668have entered into a separate and distinct contract regarding the sale of said lands by the First Parities to the Second Parties, which agreement is not herein set forth and has not been revealed to the scrivener hereof. It is further understood and agreed by all parties that the said Contract of Sale and Escrow Agreement, above mentioned, is hereby terminated, cancelled and rendered for naught, and that the same is null and void and of no effect after the execution hereof, and that the rights of the parties are hereafter to be determined by their separate, new and different contract and agreement. It is further understood and agreed that the said United States National Bank of Portland, Ontario Branch, at Ontario, Oregon is hereby instructed, requested and directed to return the deed and abstract now by it held in escrow to the First Parties, and the Bank will thereupon be and hereby is forever released and discharged of any and all further obligation or liability whatsoever to the parties hereto, and the parties hereby agree that they will forthwith pay to said bank, prior to delivery of said instruments to the First Parties, all sums due and owing to said bank for its services as escrow.”
On March 1, 1950, the plaintiff Charles E. Share, and the defendant, H. H. Williams, entered into a lease for a period of one year for the premises in controversy, providing a crop rental as consideration for the use of the land. On Odtober 17, 1950, the defendants executed an instrument entitled “Waiver”, which read as follows:
“WHEREAS Chas. E. Share and Cora E. Share, husband and wife, are negotiating with Robt. E. Lees, of Ontario, Oregon, for a mortgage loan upon the following described real property and premises, to-wit:
“The Lot 1 (NW!4 NW%) and the E% NW% and approximately 3 acres in the SW% NE% °f Section 18, Twp. 20 S, R. 46 E.W.M., in Malheur County, Oregon, containing approximately 127.69 acres.
*669“AND:
“WHEREAS said Robt. E. Lees has refused to make such loan without first obtaining the waiver hereinafter set forth, NOW, THEREFORE,
“IN CONSIDERATION OF THE PREMISES We, H. H. Williams, a single man, and Edith Williams, a single woman (we being brother and sister), do hereby covenant and agree to and with said Robt. E. Lees, his heirs and assigns, that in the event said Robt. E. Lees makes the aforesaid mortgage loan to said Chas. E. Share and Cora E. Share any right, title, interest, claim, lien or equity we or either of us may have, or claim to have, in or to the above described real property, or any portion thereof, shall be subsequent, inferior and secondary in both time and right to the lien of such mortgage, and we and each of us do hereby waive any such right, title, interest, claim, lien or equity in favor of such mortgage and mortgagee, and consent that such mortgage shall be a first, prior and existing lien upon the whole of said above described real property, and also the grazing rights appurtenant thereto.”
It is the contention of the defendants that there was no default in the contract of purchase between the parties prior to January 23, 1950, upon which date the document entitled “Cancellation of Contract of Sale and Escrow Agreement” was executed by the parties; that while the purchase contract was in full force and effect the cancellation agreement was executed by the parties for the purpose of assisting the plaintiff in procuring a mortgage loan upon the real estate, and that the parties had agreed that the defendants would continue in possession of the premises ,in the guise and status of tenants for such length of time as might be necessary for the plaintiff to secure the mortgage loan upon the premises, not exceeding two years, and that thereafter defendants would be reinstated under the purchase agreement; that there *670was no other consideration for the execution of the “Cancellation of Contract of Sale and Escrow Agreement”.
Defendants, after alleging the necessity of an adjustment of rights between the parties by reason of the sale of certain grazing rights made by the plaintiff, alleged that fraud had been practiced by the plaintiff in obtaining the execution of the cancellation agreement, a failure of consideration, and asked that the original contract be decreed to be in full force and effect, and that defendants be permitted to comply with the terms thereof.
The plaintiff denied the contentions of the defendants. His testimony is to the effect that the defendants came to him in December, 1949, just prior to the due date of the payment to be made on January 1, 1950, and stated they would not have the money to make the payment when it became due, but it is clear plaintiff made no attempt to declare a default of the defendants under his option in the contract. Plaintiff’s explanation of the understanding of the parties is as follows:
“A It was in the way of an alternative, I’ll say, demanding possession of the property, in which I told them that if they would release the sale contract I would lease them the ranch. The situation as it was was placing me in a position that I just couldn’t carry on with it, and they should have possession of the ranch under a lease. There was considerable conversation between Mr. Williams and I as to his ability to farm the ranch. He told me that he could, and that the money that he would make for me as a landowner under a regular lease, that is, you know, from tenant to landowner, that the money he would make for me under that kind of a setup would amount to more than the payments would have under the original sales contract. I didn’t expect that, but I told him that was fine, if he did that he could have the place then for two *671years. He wanted to know if he could buy the place at the expiration of the two years providing he was there that long, and I told him he could.
“THE COURT: Pardon me. Did you say you told him he could or he could not?
‘ ‘ THE WITNESS: That he could.
“MR. SCHROEDER: Q So the original deal was that he was to have the lease for one year and if he could make as much money as he thought he could make you he could have it another year, is that it?
“A Provided he took care of the ranch in a good farmer-like condition.
“Q At the end of that time you would talk sale with him?
“A Yes, sir; that’s right.”
Plaintiff further stated he at no time told defendant, H. H. Williams, that they were continuing in effect the original contract of purchase and sale as executed by the parties, and he further testified as follows:
“Q Now, when you considered the- possibility of any re-sale to Mr. Williams, or an ultimate sale to Mr. Williams, did you have in mind the same terms and the same price?
“A No, sir.
“Q You intended to raise the price if you sold to him, didn’t you?
“A There was no way of telling.
“Q What did you have in mind?
“A Nothing at all as to price.
“Q Nothing at all as to price?
“A No, sir.
“Q But you did tell Mr. Williams that there was a possibility, if he performed satisfactorily, that you would consider selling the place back to him?
“A That’s right.”
The testimony of the defendants generally supported the allegations of their pleadings relative to *672the making of an oral agreement that the terms of the original contract of purchase and sale were to be continued with the exception of deferment of the time of payment and the privilege of the plaintiff obtaining a loan thereon.
The “Cancellation of Contract and Escrow Agreement”, after providing for a nominal consideration, made the following recital of fact:
“It is understood and agreed that the parties * * * have entered into a separate and distinct contract regarding the sale of said lands by the First Parties to the Second Parties, * * # and that the rights of the parties are hereafter to be determined by their separate, new and different contract and agreement * *
The plaintiff’s statement, that the scrivener had no authority to place the foregoing recital in the contract, is an assertion without force as his signing thereof in the absence of a showing of actual fraud upon him is binding. Kight v. Orchard-Hays et al., 128 Or 668, 275 P 682; 3 Williston on Contracts, Rev ed, 1737, § 606.
 It seems clear to us, considering the relationship of the parties and the facts in evidence, that the import of the recital in the cancellation contract is that the plaintiff and the defendants had entered into a new agreement. The trial court, however, in effect, in its decree found that the agreement made in the contract of cancellation was in accordance with the evidence offered by the plaintiff, and we have found nothing in the record which persuades us that this finding of the trial court should not be followed. It requires no citation of authority that an oral agreement of parties looking to an eventual sale and purchase of real property is unenforcible unless the evidence is such that it raises an estoppel in pais to dispute the oral contract of sale and purchase void *673under the statute of frauds. The agreement of the plaintiff was to do something in the future, based upon the contingency that the defendants carried on a satisfactory operation upon the land. Such representations do not constitute fraud. 23 Am Jur 799, Fraud and Deceit, § 38. We find nothing in the evidence that would indicate that prior to or at the time of the execution of the mutual agreement the plaintiff in anywise intended not to offer to sell the premises at some future time to the defendants.
There is, however, another situation in this case which deserves the attention of this court. There can be no question that at the time of the execution of the cancellation agreement the defendants were not in default. The evidence clearly shows that the terms of the contract of purchase and sale as originally entered into were not insisted upon by the plaintiff. The entire course of the plaintiff’s actions leading to the cancellation agreement, and as testified to by him, was one of indulgence towards the defendants. The fact that the plaintiff entered into a contract of cancellation is consistent only with his regarding the original contract as then still subsisting. Johnson et al. v. Berns et al., 111 Or 165, 209 P 94, 224 P 624, 225 P 727.
The defendants had paid a substantial sum of money under the terms of the original contract of purchase and sale entered into between the parties. They had paid $6,000 of the total purchase price of $14,800. The agreement for a mutual rescission makes no reference whatsoever as to the placing of the parties in statu quo.
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the instrument entered into was nothing more than a cancellation agreement, each party agreeing to terminate the contract as of the date of the cancellation agreement, with *674each party to retain the benefits or disabilities had in accordance with the terms of the contract. The plaintiff relies upon the case of Harman v. Franks, 178 Okla 560, 63 P2d 54, 58, where the purchasers were woefully in default. The facts in that case are entirely different from the facts in the case before us, the court there saying on page 564:
“In other words, as the evidence appears to us, Mr. and Mrs. Harman in effect agree to forget everything connected with the contract of sale, and as a complete substitution therefor go into the sheep raising business with Franks because of their inability to carry out the terms of the contract of sale, and to prevent foreclosure of the same and the probable resultant judgments against them.”
The defendants in the present case were not woefully in default, and there was no threat of foreclosure indicated.
In the case of Johnson v. Feskens, 146 Or 657, 661, 31 P 2d 667, it is stated:
“The right to declare a forfeiture is derived from the stipulations of the parties and if parties under no disabilities choose to contract for a forfeiture a court of equity can afford no relief against the forfeiture in the absence of some fraud or improper practice upon the part of the person seeking to impose the forfeiture: 2 Warvelle on Vendors (2d Ed.), section 807. But notwithstanding this, forfeitures are regarded by the courts as a harsh way of terminating contracts and where a party insists upon a forfeiture he must establish his right by clear and convincing proof.”
There ,'is no instrument before us in this case which would permit the plaintiff to retain the payment made on the purchase of the lands, unless it be said the plaintiff is relying upon the terms of the original contract of purchase and sale, which provided for the payment of the money and a means of *675declaring forfeiture thereof. Such a position is untenable for if the agreement of rescission is ineffective to cancel the original contract of sale, then the original contract of sale and purchase is still in full force and effect as contended by the defendants.
It seems clear to us from the actions of the parties and the recitals in the agreement that the parties were mutually abandoning all rights under the contract. Having both consented to this recission, neither can base any claim thereon except such rights as each may have to the restoration of status quo. Johnson v. Feshens, supra.
Since the time of the case of Frink v. Thomas, 20 Or 265, 25 P 717, it has been the rule of this jurisdiction “that when the parties voluntarily agree to rescind a contract, there being no express stipulation with reference to payment or payments already made thereunder, the law •will imply a promise on the part of the vendor to refund such payment or payments to the purchaser, and the latter may maintain an action to recover back the same”. Mascall v. Erikson, 131 Or 509, 516, 283 P 2. Also “a rescission contemplates not only the destruction of the contract, but also the restoration of the parties to their former estate or situation”. Miles v. Hemenway, 59 Or 318, 111 P 696, 117 P 273. There being no provisions made in the contract of cancellation, and it being admitted that the parties were not placed in statu quo, the defendants are entitled to the return of their payment of $6,000, with interest at 6% per annum from the date of payment, less the reasonable rental of the premises from February 21, 1949, to January 23, 1950, the time in which the defendants occupied the premises under the contract of sale to the date of its mutual rescission, the parties having agreed on crop rentals subsequent to that time.
*676It needs no citation of authority that an action for money had and received, which is the right of action held by the defendants against the plaintiff for the recovery of their payment, cannot be set up as a defense to the possessory action of forcible entry and detainer brought by the plaintiff, and ordinarily this court could grant no relief to a defendant upon such an issue between the parties. However, in this case it appears from the record that the parties stipulated for the removal of the cause from the justice court to the circuit court. We do not have that stipulation before us, but since the trial court considered the matter of placing the parties in statu quo, we may assume that the stipulation for removal was not only for the purpose of determining the right of possession, but also for fully determining the equities between the parties, and for us to remit this cause as presented without full determination would result only in a multiplicity of suits. Therefore, this court feels at liberty in this ease to settle and determine this matter between the parties as fully as possible.
That portion of the decree of the trial court granting the immediate restitution of the possession of the real property to the plaintiff is affirmed, and, in accordance with this opinion, the cause is remanded to the trial court for the purpose of determining the amount of the reasonable rental for the use of the premises by the defendants to be deducted from the $6,000, with interest, and a judgment for the balance thereof entered in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff.
The decree of the trial court is affirmed in part and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Neither party shall recover costs in this court.
*677P. J. Gallagher, argued the canse for appellants.
W. F. Schroeder, of Vale, argued the cause for respondent.