CLARK, C. J., concurring. *Page 417 At the close of plaintiff's evidence, on motion, the action was dismissed, his Honor being of opinion that on plaintiff's own showing the title to real estate was involved and the justice's court was without jurisdiction to hear and decide the cause.
Plaintiff having duly excepted, appealed. It is settled by repeated adjudications in this State that though the relationship between the parties be technically that of landlord and tenant, the proceedings of summary ejectment instituted before a justice of the peace will not lie if it also appears that the defendant tenant in possession has acquired and holds an interest in the property itself, either under an executory contract of sale or otherwise and under circumstances giving him a right to call for an accounting and an adjustment of equities between the parties upon which the title may depend.McLaurin v. McIntyre, 167 N.C. 350; Hauser v. Morrison, 146 N.C. 248;Parker v. Allen, 84 N.C. 466.
The principle is very well stated in the first headnote to Hauser v.Morrison, supra, as follows: "Summary proceedings in ejectment given by the Landlord and Tenant Act (Revisal, sec. 2001) are restricted to the cases expressly specified therein; and when on the trial it is made to appear that the relation existing is that of mortgagor and mortgagee giving a right to account, or vendor and vendee requiring an adjustment of equities, a justice's court has no jurisdiction, and the proceedings should be dismissed."
It is also held in numerous cases that the principle does not (393) arise for the protection of a defendant from the bare averment in the pleadings that the conditions exist, but they must be made to appear from the evidence or admission of the parties. Pasterfield v.Sawyer, 132 N.C. 258; McDonald v. Ingram, 124 N.C. 272; Hahn v.Guilford Latham, 87 N.C. 172. And further, that the findings of the lower court on this question will be upheld if there is legal evidence to support it. Parker v. Allen, supra.
Considering the record in view of these principles, it appears in the present case that in 1916 defendants James Setzer and his wife, Viola, held a house and lot in Forsyth County containing one-sixteenth of an acre, subject to a mortgage to the Winston Building and Loan Association; that defendant having failed to make the payments to said *Page 418 company, the mortgage was duly foreclosed by sale, pursuant to its terms, and plaintiff, at the instance of W.T. Wilson, esq., an attorney who was acting for defendants in the matter, bought in the property and took a deed for same at $1,120, and with a view to helping defendants to a purchase of the lot, on 9th August, entered into a written contract of lease to be in force till 9th December following, at the rate of $3 per week, payable on Saturday of each week. In said instrument plaintiff further stipulated that, at the request of said James Setzer and wife, on or before said 9th December, he would sell and convey said property to them for $1,200 on terms of $50 in cash and the remainder of $1,150 to be evidenced and secured by note and mortgage on the property, etc.
The contract contained further stipulations as follows: "It is further understood and agreed that the said sale is to be made at the option of the said James Setzer and wife, Viola Setzer, their heirs and assigns, to be exercised on or before the said 9th December 1916. And it is further understood and agreed that if the said James Setzer and wife, Viola Setzer, their heirs and assigns, shall not demand of me (the said W.G. Jerome) the deed herein provided for on or before the said 9th December 1916, then this agreement is to be null and void, and party of the first part shall be at liberty to dispose of the said land to any other person, or to use same as he may desire in the same manner as if this contract had not been made; but otherwise this contract is to remain in full force and effect. . . ."
And further: "In consideration of the execution of this lease and option of purchase, parties of the second part hereby release and relinquish any and all rights which they have heretofore in this land by reason of their prior purchase of same, save those rights herein set out, and all claims to said land which they might at present have, save as herein set out, and all controversy as to the title to said land, as far as they are concerned or interested, save as herein set out."
(394) It appeared further from the oral evidence that defendant was in the habit of paying the rent that he paid to this attorney, Mr. W.T. Wilson, who would in turn pay the same to plaintiff; that this continued, the defendant paying at least three months of the rent and on Saturday, 9 December, the defendant paid W.T. Wilson the sum of five dollars, three of which was to be applied to the rent and two dollars on the bargain, and that some time the following week, after the 9th, defendants paid said W.T. Wilson forty-odd dollars on the price and between the 9th and the trial had paid said Wilson as much as fifty dollars in all. This attorney testified that he had no arrangement with Jerome, plaintiff, that he would collect this money for him, and no authority from him to receive it for him, but had *Page 419 with Mr. Setzer, that the latter was to bring the money to witness and he would turn it over. True, the witness testifies in the first part of his statement that he represented both parties in trying to get the matter settled, but this was evidently restricted to getting the parties together and inducing Jerome to buy, but, in reference to collecting the rent, etc., he states very clearly that he was acting for Setzer throughout, and further, that he did not notify Jerome on 9 December or before that, that Setzer and wife had elected to buy the property or that they had made any payment thereon, but, at some time in the following week, he "got Jerome into his office and tendered him the fifty dollars or told him he had it for him, and Jerome replied that he would not then receive the fifty dollars, but desired possession of the property."
On the material question in dispute Jerome, plaintiff, testified as follows: "James Setzer had paid, I think, three months rent altogether. He was behind on the 9th of December a little more than a month's rent, or a month's rent, and on the 19th day of December he was behind a month, and from the 9th to the 19th. James Setzer nor any one in his behalf prior to the 9th day of December did not tender me $50 or any other amount to be applied on this contract prior or after that date, neither he nor any one else. I was in Mr. Wilson's office a few days after the 9th day of December, and he said he had $40 if I would accept he would turn it over, but he didn't tender me $50 on it. This was about a week after the 9th of December, about the 15th, I think. I don't remember the exact date, but I know it was several days after the 9th."
On careful perusal of the instrument in question and of the testimony relevant to its correct interpretation, we are of opinion that, so far as any agreement to convey is concerned, the contract was only an option to buy, in which time is generally of the essence and which created no interest in the property itself unless and until there was acceptance according to its terms within the specified time or a recognition of such estate and interest by the conduct of the parties and in (395) waiver of the stipulations.
On this subject, the principle apposite is stated correctly, we think, in the recent case of Carolina Timber Co. v. Wells, 171 N.C. 262-264, as follows: "The cases on this subject are to the effect, further, that a stipulation of the kind now presented, providing for an extension of the time within which the timber must be cut, is in the nature of an option, and it is held by the great weight of authority that contracts of this character do not of themselves create any interest in the property, but only amount to an offer to create or convey such an interest when the conditions are performed and working a forfeiture when not strictly complied with. Waterman v. Banks, 144 U.S. 394; Hacher v. Weston, *Page 420 197 Mass. 143; Gaston v. School District, 94 Mich. 502; Newton v. Newton,11 R.I. 390; Bostwick v. Hess, 80 Ill. 138. Our own decisions are in general approval of these principles," citing Ward v. Albertson, 165 N.C. 218;Winders v. Kenan, 161 N.C. 628; Bateman v. Lumber Co., 154 N.C. 248;Hornthal v. Howcott, 154 N.C. 228.
And in Winders v. Kenan, supra, it is held, among other things: "When in consideration of a certain sum of money the owner of lands agrees to convey them within a named period upon the payment of an agreed purchase price, the writing is unilateral, an offer to give another the right to buy, an option, and not a contract to sell, which does not bind the one accepting its conditions to purchase the lands, and he is required to exercise his rights thereunder within the specified time, and perform the conditions imposed as to payment, in accordance with the terms of the writing.
"Where an option for a sale of lands has been accepted, which provides for the payment of the purchase price as a condition precedent, it is the duty of the purchaser to pay in accordance with its terms, and a mere notice of his intention to buy is insufficient.
"Unilateral contracts or options for the sale of lands are to be construed more strictly in favor of the maker, and the time of its performance by the one holding the option is of the essence of the contract, and the conditions imposed must be performed by him in order to convert the right to buy into a contract of sale."
And applying these principles to the facts of the present record, we are of opinion, further, that since the foreclosure the defendants have never acquired or held any interest in the property itself, but only held an option to purchase, which they lost by an entire failure to comply within the time and that the ordinary incidents of a contract between landlord and tenant, on which the latter is estopped to question the former's title, should prevail, and the justice had jurisdiction to hear and decide the cause.
(396) In the authorities cited by defendants, the tenant, in addition to his rights as lessee, had acquired and held an interest in the property itself, giving him the right to an account and adjustment of equities between them, either by the terms of the agreement or by recognition of the landlord in waiver of his rights, the case presented inHauser v. Morrison, supra. But in the present instance, as stated, no such interest has been made to appear in any aspect of the evidence, and the relationship between the parties is one of ordinary lease between landlord and tenant, and where the time of the lessee has expired by the terms of the agreement. See Burwell v. Cooper's Coop. Co.172 N.C. 79. With every disposition to sympathize with the efforts of the *Page 421 defendants to procure a home of their own, we think we are justified in saying, and the facts of the record disclose, that the defendants seem to have entered on an undertaking that has proved too much for them. They failed to make their payments to the building and loan companies, which we know are indulgent as far as permissible, and properly so. They have failed to comply with the option given by the plaintiff, who was endeavoring to help them. Where they procured the $50 which they claim to have tendered, but after the time specified, does not appear, but there is no likelihood that further indulgence would be of real benefit to them, and, in any event, we are of opinion, and so hold, that plaintiff is entitled to have his contract enforced in its integrity and on the testimony, if believed, there should be a verdict for plaintiff.
Reversed.