Hawes v. Swanzey

Weaver, J.

The defendants Swanzey admit entering into a contract to purchase the land, and that they made a payment of $500 thereon, and deposited other moneys in^ *52the defendant bank to be paid plaintiff when the conveyance was delivered according to contract. They allege by way ox defense: (1) That plaintiff agreed to furnish them an abstract showing perfect title to the land, and make due conveyance thereof on or before July 1, 1902, but failed so to do, the abstract furnished showing the title to be iii fact seriously defective; and that, after waiting until September 25, 1902, for plaintiff to perfect said title, they rescinded the contract by notice in writing, and demanded a return of the advance payment. (2) By way of counterclaim defendants restate the matters of their answer, and ask judgment against plaintiff for the sum of $500, money received by him on account of said attempted purchase. After the case had been pending several months, defendants filed an amendment to their answer, alleging they had been induced to enter into the contract by the_ false representations of the plaintiff’s agent in respect to the liability of the land to overflow from the adjacent river.

i. ageeeme't abstractf’evidence' I. It is conceded that there waá an apparent defect in plaintiff’s title, and that the same was not cured until a conveyance by quitclaim was obtained from one Cooley, a citizen Qf New York, on September 20, 1902. When, the defect was discovered, defendants did not at once refuse to be longer bound by their contract, nor demand a return of the advance payment; and by their failure to do so, and by frequent inquiries of plaintiff or his agent as to the progress made in their efforts to perfect the title, they must we think, be held to have consented to a reasonable delay to enable plaintiff to accomplish that end. After various unavailing efforts to ok. tain the necessary conveyance, plaintiff sent his agent to New York, and, as above stated, succeeded in procuring Cooley to execute the instrument. Toward the latter part of this period defendants became somewhat impatient, and said to the agent they did not intend to take land unless they were obliged to, or would not take it unless the deed from Cooley was procured; but no direct effort was made to accomplish a rescission of *53| tbe contract until tbe morning of tbe day after the agent re-2 turned from New York with the deed ready to consummate 'the deal, when the written notice above referred to was served. In our judgment, aftefdiaving thus acquiesced in the delay until the title was in fact perfected according to their demand, and until plaintiff was fully prepared to comply-with the contract on his part, equity will not allow defendants to assign that delay as a reason for absolving them from! due performance on their part. See Welch v. Whelpley, 62 Mich. 15 (28 N. W. Rep. 744, 4 Am. St. Rep. 810); Brown v. Guarantee, etc., 128 U. S. 403 (9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 127, 32 L. Ed. 468); Murphy v. Lockwood, 21 Ill. 611; Renwick v. Bancroft, 59 Iowa, 116; Reed v. Jones, 8 Wis. 392; Pritchard v. Todd, 38 Conn. 413; Quinn v. Roath, 37 Conn. 16; Hubbell v. Von Schoening, 49 N. Y. 326; Rader v. Neal, 13 W. Va. 373; Butler v. Archer, 76 Iowa, 551. For a case somewhat similar in its facts to the case at bar, see King v. Gsantner, 23 Neb. 795 (37 N. W. Rep. 654). Had the defendants, on the 1st day of (July, 1902, when the conveyance of a good title was due, demanded the same, and, upon plaintiff’s failure to comply, had refused to be longer bound by their contract, and demanded a return of the advance payment, their position in defense of this suit would have been materially strengthened; but, having failed to do so, it is not necessary for us to consider what would have been the precise measure of their rights under those circumstances. The doctrine approved in Luse v. Deitz, 46 Iowa, 205, cited in behalf of appellants, is not applicable to the issue here presented. In that case Luse neither had nor claimed title to the land he agreed to convey. And it was held he could not compel Deitz to specifically perform the contract, because the ■ latter had no reciprocal right to the same remedy against him. In this case, however, plaintiff did have title, though defective, and on discovering the defect he had, at least in the absence of a stipulation making time of the essence of the agreement, and in the absence of a distinct refusal by the defendants to proceed further, a reasonable time in which to cure *54the defect and tender such a title as he had agreed to convey. See 22 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (1st Ed.) pages 960, 961, and cases there cited. When, therefore, on September 20, 1902, the defect had been cured, plaintiff was in no position to recede from the contract, and an action against him for specific performance at the suit of the defendants would certainly have been upheld. It cannot, therefore, be said that the equitable remedy was not mutual. The finding of the district court that plaintiff procured and tendered to defendants a good title within a reasonable time is fully sustained by the record.

2. specific per-rescission. II. The defense based on the alleged misrepresentations by plaintiff’s agent cannot prevail. In the first place, were the issues such as to permit its consideration, the evidence in support of the allegation is weak, indefinite, and unsatisfactory. Ave think, however, the defense must fail for another reason. In their written notice served upon plaintiff before this suit was brought defendants base their supposed right of rescission upon the failure of plaintiff to furnish a good title, and upon nothing else, and we think it is not competent for them on the trial to show any other or different reason for that action on their part than the one assigned by them in the writing by which the rescission was sought to be affected. Donly v. Porter, 119 Iowa, 545. Indeed, Mr. Swanzey, as a witness, ádmits that he learned that the land was liable to overflow two months before he served the notice of rescission, and that up to the date of such service he remained willing to accept a conveyance. from plaintiff according to their contract. He further admits that after he knew of the overflow of the land he continued to call upon plaintiff to make him a good title. The idea that any defense could be offered on the ground of false representations is quite clearly an afterthought.

■3. act of vendors agent, III. It is finally said that plaintiff, through his agent, .has continued to treat the land as his own, and rented it for the year 1903. It appears that the agent of plaintiff, seeing the land was likely to lie idle *55for tbe season by reason of tbe dispute between plaintiff and defendants, did assume to rent it; but it was also shown he acted not only without tbe authority of tbe plaintiff, but against bis express directions.

Tbe conclusion reached by tbe trial court appears to be just and equitable, and tbe decree appealed from is aeeirmed.