Court Opinion

ID: 6894683
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:48:23.005626+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:05:56.339508
License: Public Domain

Thayer, J.
I concur in'the opinion delivered in this case, that the respondent cannot recover unless the destruction of the warehouse was occasioned by the act or neglect of the appellant. I believe that it is supported by reason and authority, although I was slow in arriving at that conclusion.
As to the question of construction of the contract of May 24, 1878, I am unable to concur in the view the majority of the court have expressed. When the case was argued, I was inclined to the opinion that the payment of the purchase price for the premises and the execution of the deed were intended to be concurrent acts, but upon more mature reflection, I have concluded that the appellant was obligated to pay the purchase money absolutely, at all events, unless the respondent by some act on his part prevented it. I am satisfied that the latter is not required to execute the deed until the appellant pays the money. By the terms of the contract, the respondent agreed to lease to the appellant the premises for five years, commencing on the 1st day of July, 1878, in consideration of which the appellant *491agreed to pay the respondent for the rent and usé thereof the sum of fifty-five dollars per month; and further agreed to purchase them of the respondent, and to pay him therefor on or before the expiration of said term the sum of $5,500. The respondent agreed that upon such payment being made, he would make and deliver to the appellant a good and sufficient deed to the premises in fee-simple. In pursuance of that contract the appellant entered upon and enjoyed the use and occupation of the premises during the term of said lease and agreement.
It is conceded by the authorities that covenants are to be construed to be either dependent or independent, according to the intention and meaning of the parties and the good sense of the case, and that technical words should give way to such intention. In the note to the somewhat ancient case of Pordage v. Cole, 1 Saund. 320, certain rules are laid down by which such intention may be ascertained and discovered; and they have been so often recognized and approved by the courts that they have become maxims in the law. Among said rules is the following: “3. Where a covenant goes only to a part of the consideration on both sides, and a breach of such covenant may be paid for in damages, it is an independént covenant, and an action may be maintained for a breach of the covenant on the part of the defendant without averring performance in the declaration.”
The contract between the parties in this case included the leasing as well as the purchase of the premises. The leasing for a term of five years constituted a material part of the consideration. The agreement to purchase was evidently the inducement to lease. The appellant says, by the contract, in effect, that if the respondent will lease the premises to the appellant for the term of five years, at the monthly rent of fifty-five dollars, the appellant will, on or before the expiration of that time, pay to the respondent $5,500 therefor. The former, after enjoying that privilege, had no alternative but to pay the purchase price and look to the latter for the deed. The appellant had the right to pay the purchase money at any time extending through a period of five years, and it would be absurd to'require the respondent to have had a deed prepared ready to deliver *492during all that time. It may be claimed that the rent was an equivalent for the use of the premises; but I do not know that. If the stipulation in the contract to purchase the premises had not been included in it, the respondent might not have been willing to rent for fifty-five dollars a month, or at all.
I understand the meaning of the rule I have recited to be, that where a contract embraces two subjects, and it has been performed as to one of them, and the party has a remedy for the breach of the performance of the other, the covenants as to that are not dependent unless made so by express words or necessary implication. The payment of the money for the premises would naturally precede • the execution of the deed, and after the appellant had enjoyed the benefit of a part of the contract, its obligation to perform the other part became absolute.
I am of the opinion that this case comes within the reason of said rule. I think it would be unjust to allow said appellant to enjoy the part of the contract, and not pay the purchase price of the premises as it stipulated to- do, because the respondent did not come forward in advance of such payment and tender a deed. Under the circumstances of the case, I do not believe that the respondent’s obligation to tender a deed would arise until after payment of the money.