First National Bank of Sparta v. Agnew

Taylor, J.

The grounds upon which the learned counsel for the defendants insists that the demurrer ought to be sustained are, 1. That the action is for a specific performance, and there is no averment that a deed was tendered to the defend*133ants, or that the plaintiff is ready or willing to. convey the premises upon payment of the purchase money. 2. That the only remedy of the plaintiff is to foreclose his contract. 3. That, there being no averment that the defendants ever got possession of the land agreed to he conveyed, the plaintiff can only bring an action for damages, and cannot recover the sums agreed to be paid by the terms of the contract.

lYe'are unable to hold that either of the grounds alleged by the learned counsel shows that the complaint does not state a cause of action against the defendants. The action is clearly not an action for a specific performance of the contract, but a legal action to recover money only. No other relief is asked, nor are there any statements in the complaint which call for a judgment of specific performance.

There seems to be some mistake, either in the contract itself or in the copy set forth in the complaint. The whole consideration is stated to have been $1,500, but it shows only $100 paid down, and $1,050 to be paid. A sum of $350, to make up the whole $1,500, is omitted. There is a further mistake in the claim for judgment for the $1,4.00, when, by the terms of the contract as set out in the complaint, there was only the sum of $750 due, with the unpaid interest at the time of the commencement of the action. But, notwithstanding these mistakes and omissions, the complaint shows that at the commencement of the action there was due and unpaid on the contract the sum of $750 and the accrued interest, a sufficient amount, certainly, to constitute a cause of action, if the plaint-* iff is entitled to recover it of the defendants.

Uo authority is cited by the learned counsel to sustain his second ground. The cases in this court go no farther than to hold that a vendor may proceed to foreclose the right of the vendee to have a specific performance of his contract, on his failure to make the payments as agreed; and this court has established the rule that in such cases the only judgment the plaintiff can have is a judgment of strict foreelosui’e of the rights of the vendee, unaccompanied by any personal judgment for the unpaid purchase money. Button v. Schroyer, 5 *134Wis., 598; Baker v. Beach, 15 id., 99; Landon v. Burke, 33 id., 452. It is a remedy, therefore, which a vendor ought not to be compelled to pursue, in a case where but a vei’y small portion of the purchase money has been paid, and we are not aware of any law or decision of this court which compels him to pursue that course.

The cases cited to sustain the third ground, that the action must be an action for damages strictly, where the action brought is strictly a legal action, are wholly inapplicable to the case at bar. All the cases cited, so far as we can ascertain, were cases where all the purchase money was past due, and where the vendor was not seeking to have the contract performed. It is probable that in England and other countries in which the courts of law and of equity are distinct courts, a vendor who brought an action in a court of law to recover upon a contract for the sale of lands, where all the purchase money was past due, would be held to have waived his right to have a specific performance of the contract; and as such court could only give a judgment for the payment of money unconditionally, it would limit the amount of the recovery to the damage actually sustained, for the reason that the title to the realty still remains in the plaintiff, and the court of law has no power to compel a conveyance on payment of the amount of the judgment recovered. But where the action is upon a contract for the sale of lands, where the installments are not all due, there can be no doubt as to the right of the vendor to maintain an action for each installment as it becomes due; and where the contract provides that the conveyance shall not be made until all the installments are due and paid, there would be an absurdity in holding that the plaintiff must show that he has offered to convey before suit brought. The covenants to pay, as to all installments except the last, are entirely independent of the covenant to convey, and can therefore be enforced without any allegation of an offer or willingness to convey. If it be urged that the vendee may be compelled to pay the greater share of the purchase money without having an assurance that he will get a good title to the land when he pays the whole, *135the answer is, that wlien be made his contract he is supposed to have examined into the title of his vendor, and satisfied himself of his ability to make him a good title when the payments are made; and if he entered into the contract without such examination, then that he trusted to his remedy upon the vendor’s covenant to convey, contained in the contract.

There can be no doubt that the complaint states a cause of action, and that the demurrer w,as properly overruled.

By the Gourt. — The order of the circuit court is affirmed.

Etast, C. J., took no part.