George v. Stockton

COLLIER, C. J.

— It has been repeatedly adjudged that the vendee of real estate,who has executed his note for the payment *138of the purchase money on a day certain, and received from the seller a bond conditioned to make title generally, cannot successfully resist an action at law on the note, upon the ground that no title has been made: (Read’s Adm’r. v. Cummings, et al. 3 Greenl. Rep. 82: Bailey v. Clay, &c. 4 Rand. Rep. 346.) This principle rests upon a rule which has been often applied to covenants, viz: When the money is to be paid at an appointed time, and the day of payment is to happen, or may happen before the thing which is the consideration of the payment of the money, is to be performed, the performance of the thing is not a condition precedent to the right to demand the money: (Thorp v. Thorp; 1 Salk 171: Jones v. Sommerville; 1 Porter Rep. 457.)

In Dow v. Tuttle, (4 Mass. Rep. 414) it was held that if the promisee of a note payable at a day certain, agreed by writing at the time the note was given, not to demand payment of it until a certain time after its maturity, such contract is a collateral promise for the breach of which, an action would lie, if there were a legal consideration. In chancery it would be a good ground for an injunction; but it would not be a bar to an action on the note, when due by the terms of it, because it is repugnant to the note, and would destroy its effect. In the case at bar, no precise day is prescribed by the bond when the vendor is to perfect the vendeee’s title, yet a day is fixed for the payment of the note; and an agreement that the payment should be postponed ’till the title was made, would be repugnant to the terms of the note; and upon the authority of the case last cited, does not constitute a bar to the action in a court of law.

This court, under its former organization, in Christian v. Scott, (1 Stewt. Rep. 490) decided, that to let in a defence at law, against a promissory note given for the purchase monej’’, there must be an entire failure of consideration,'or a rescission of the contract of purchase. In that case, the vendee had occupied and cultivated the land from the time of sale up to the trial, which must have been of some benefit to him, and consequently a valuable consideration in law. (To S. P. Peden v. Moore, 1 Stewt. & Porter Rep. 71: Wilson v. Jordan; 3 Stewt. & Por*139ter Rep. 92: Howard v. Witham, et al. 2 Greenl. Rep. 390.)

In Wade v. Killough, (3 Stewt. & Por. Rep. 431) itappeared that the defendant executed a bond, conditioned to make title to the plaintiff to a tract of land, on the 25th December, 1S2S; and the plaintiff gave to the defendant his promissory note for the payment of the purchase money on the same day. An action having been brought upon the note, the plaintiff in error contended in his defence, that inasmuch as by the terms of the contract, the purchase money was to have been paid, and a good and sufficient title made on the same day.; and the title had not been made, but tho vendor was incapable of making the same, the action could not be maintained. The court was of opinion that the argument was not defensible; that the principles of law by which it was attempted to sustain it, did not apply to the case. There the vendor had executed his bond with covenants, and the vendee his note for (be purchase money: on these, the parties were entitled to their legal remedies against each' other respectively. Here is a case decisive of the merits of the defence set up in tho case before us, and shows a clear right in the defendant to his judgment.

The view we have taken of the law, relieves us from examining with particularity, the instructions of the judge of the Circuit Court to the jury; or from scanning with critical accuracy, the stipulations contained in the condition of the bond. It is entirely immaterial whether “then” be taken tornean “when,” as insisted by the defendant in error, so as to make the payment of the purchase money a condition precedent to tho right to demand the execution of the proper title. We place our opinion upon the previous adjudications of this court, which hold, that where the vendor has put the vendee in the possession of land, executed a bond for title, and taken a promissory note, or other security, for the purchase money, he is entitled to recover at law, upon the note, if the contrac-t of Sale remains unreseindecL

It remains but to add that the judgment is affirmed.