(dissenting).
I continue to hew to the original majority opinion and the rationale of that decision with its supporting authorities.
A Petition for Rehearing seeks review of that portion of our decision which determined that Lewis and O’Brien had exercised the option provisions of the Offer and Agreement to Purchase by filing suit herein. This Court, by an Order dated June 24, 1986, through a majority vote of the Justices, granted the Petition for Rehearing, but limiting the issue thusly: Should the options contained in the Offer and Agreement to Purchase be deemed exercised under these pleadings and these facts and circumstances?
Essentially, Lewis and O’Brien believe that our previous decision is erroneous and yes, indeed, they want specific performance to be granted. But they want the options to be reinstated so that they have an opportunity to exercise the options in the future. Lewis and O’Brien cite not one single case wherein specific performance of an unexercised option was sought, or where specific performance of a contract containing future options was sought — and where a court then granted specific performance and gave the party seeking same the opportunity to exercise or not — the options in the future. The cases cited in O’Brien I have not been distinguished or contravened so far as this author is concerned.
The majority opinion, in my opinion, seeks to write around the mutuality of remedy which our Legislature directed by state statute. If one thinks about this basic principle, it is really not too hard to understand: Neither party to an obligation can be specifically compelled to perform unless the other party thereto has performed or is specifically compellable to perform. Thus, an unexecuted option is essentially a unilateral instrument which lacks the mutual elements of a contract and cannot be specifically performed.
This author notes the complaint of Lewis and O’Brien. It states that they are ready, willing, and able to perform all things required of them under the Offer and Agreement to Purchase and said complaint prays for specific performance of the contract between the parties. Important to my way of thinking is the fact that Lewis and O’Brien filed a Notice of Lis Pendis against all of the property covered by the Offer and Agreement to Purchase.
Emma Richards and R-J Development refused' to sell some lots to Lewis and O’Brien at the agreed upon price as set out in the “Offer and Agreement to Purchase.” Lewis and O’Brien then commenced suit seeking that the agreement be specifically enforced.
However, the Agreement did not provide solely for the sale of lots. An option *135clause, also included within the Agreement’s provisions, is at issue. When Lewis and O’Brien requested specific performance, they thrust themselves (perhaps unknowingly) onto the horns of a dilemma. They were either to get the entire agreement, including options, or they were to get specific performance of the first twenty-two lots only, and lose the options for future purchases. The law affords no other choice. Lewis and O’Brien cannot be half in and half out — at their unilateral decision.
As was stated in O’Brien I, 387 N.W.2d 521, 527 (S.D.1986), in order to award specific performance, there must be mutuality of remedy. SDCL 21-9-4. Note that the majority opinion does not address this state statute. Thus, specific performance will not generally be awarded for “a contract which imposes a continuing obligation upon the person against whom the relief is sought while performance of its terms is optional with the party seeking relief....” 71 Am.Jur.2d Specific Performance § 27, at 44 (1973).
An unexecuted option, however, is a unilateral instrument which lacks the mutual elements of a contract, and cannot be specifically performed. See O’Brien I, 387 N.W.2d at 527, and the cases and authorities cited therein. Until an option is accepted, specific performance cannot be awarded. See Miller v. Hiett, 133 Colo. 576, 298 P.2d 394 (1956); Sooey v. Zacharski, 321 Mich. 351, 32 N.W.2d 479 (1948); Standard Reliance Ins. Co. v. Schoenthal, 171 Neb. 490, 106 N.W.2d 704 (1960); Bobo v. Bigbee, 548 P.2d 224 (Okla.1976); and Lincoln Land & Dev. Co. v. Thompson, 26 Utah 2d 324, 489 P.2d 426 (1971).
Filing suit for specific performance “is generally regarded as an exercise of the option and as supplying the element of mutuality_” 71 Am.Jur.2d Specific Performance § 144, at 187 (1973). When a party files suit for specific performance, he places himself under all the obligations of the contract and submits himself to the court’s jurisdiction to compel him to perform, thus removing the freedom to refuse performance. 71 Am.Jur.2d Specific Performance § 144. See also Asbury v. Cochran, 243 Ala. 281, 9 So.2d 887 (1942); Johnson v. Elliot, 123 Mont. 597, 218 P.2d 703 (1950); Standard Reliance Ins. Co. v. Schoenthal, 106 N.W.2d 704; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Stephens, 214 N.Y. 488, 108 N.E. 856 (1915); and Leadbetter v. Price, 103 Or. 222, 202 P. 104 (1921).
The majority avoids holding Lewis and O’Brien to the option on the following grounds: suit was brought to enforce the original “Offer and Agreement to Purchase,” and at the time of commencement of suit, no option had been exercised. Although this is true, the majority opinion overlooks that the option was an inseparable part of said agreement which could not be specifically enforced unless the suit itself is seen as providing requisite option acceptance. They cannot be half in and half out as they unilaterally choose. Lewis and O’Brien were not entitled to select what they want to be bound by within the contract (partial specific performance); the law simply does not condone it and the majority opinion is legally untenable in its basic premise. Furthermore, Lewis and O’Brien deemed the contract an entity, not a fragmentary document, or contractual jigsaw puzzle. Since the decision in O’Brien I, which Lewis and O’Brien found satisfactory in part and unsatisfactory in part, they have shifted their conceptual legal position in this Court, witness their own original brief.
The Options were also to generate a contract for deed and the Court properly included the required contract for deed clauses in the Options to avoid future language problems. We submit that under the particular circumstances of this case that the options cannot be separated from the transaction and treated differently. To hold that they be deemed exercised or unenforceable, and the contract for deed on the first 20 lots be enforceable, as appellants contend, would be contrary to the express agreement of the parties and would be grossly inequitable. The offer and *136agreement to grant the options was not a naked promise. They were not naked options. The options were an important part of the whole package. The Court properly found that the options were an integral part of the transaction and included the option agreements in the Decree. As stated in the Memorandum Decision at SR79, Exhibit 11, was a document which, within its four corners, established that there was a firm and complete agreement reached by the parties. (Emphasis supplied mine.)
Plaintiffs-appellees’ brief at 18-19. Lewis and O’Brien sued for specific performance of the entire Agreement, and this they received in O’Brien I.
Here, it was R-J Development’s and Emma Richards’ wrongful repudiation of the consummated Offer and Agreement to Purchase which led to this land sale litigation which has lasted for nearly three years. During this time, Lewis and O’Brien have lost the use of three selling seasons and it appears that financing could have been jeopardized. It appears on rehearing, however, that R-J Development and Richards contend, via our prior decision, that two and one-half years’ interest is due on the option provisions. To adjust the equities and bring about substantial justice, however, this Court should direct the trial court to fashion its judgment and decree so that all of the parties’ duties and obligations, including payments and the running of interest, will begin 30 days after the entry thereof. R-J Development and Richards should not be allowed to profit from their wrongful repudiation and the litigation arising therefrom.
In my reading, this is the only decision of its kind in the history of American Jurisprudence. The majority’s decision relies upon a broad, sweeping equitable declaration found in Ellison v. Ventura Port Disk, 80 Cal.App.3d 574, 583, 145 Cal.Rptr. 665, 670 (1978), and said authority does not specifically rivet onto the issue at hand. There are no specific decisions to support the majority’s holding; hence, the holding is blanketed in supposed safety by a generic declaration in a California case. Therefore, in my mind, the majority’s holding is incorrect in that it permits Lewis and O’Brien the opportunity to exercise the options in the future. Such a holding appears to be without precedent in the law of these United States. We should affirm our prior decision. I further dissent based on what I perceive to be a lack of consistency between Lewis’ and O’Brien’s original prayer for relief and their later prayers under the Notice of Review and, consequently, resulting in a shift of the majority opinion. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent therefrom.