Gaven v. Hagen
Before: Baldwin
Synopsis
In a contract for the sale and purchase of land, which is silent as to the possession, there is no implied license for the purchaser to enter.
Z., the owner of land, contracts in writing to sell it to K., nothing being said as to the possession. K. is to give three notes, falling due at different periods, for the purchase money. The first two notes become due at very short dates, and after they are paid, Z. is to make a deed to K., with covenants against his own acts. ¡First note is paid before the second falls due; Z. deeds the land to plaintiff, subject to the contract with K., the deed containing covenants of warranty against acts of the grantor. Later, and on the day the second note is due, K. sells the land to McE., one of the defendants. K. took possession under the contract. Shortly after, plaintiff demanded of K. payment of the second note, and tendered him a deed from himself (plaintiff) to K., with the covenants mentioned in Z.’s contract. K. said he could do nothing. Plaintiff then formally demanded payment and execution of the mortgage. K. wished to see his attorney. After the third note fell due, plaintiff demanded of McE. payment of the two notes; tendering the deed from Z. to him, (plaintiff) and also a deed from himself to McE., offering also a mortgage to be executed by McE. to secure the third note, and demanding possession. McE. refused. Held, that, under the contract, the purchaser was not entitled to possession at once; that payment of the first two notes, or tender, was a condition precedent to his right of possession; that until then, the vendor Z., or his assignee, had the legal title and could maintain ejectment against the vendee.
Held, further, that the tenders made by plaintiff were a sufficient assignment to McE. of Z.’s covenants to plaintiff; that when McE. got a deed from plaintiff, and also an assignment of the deed from Z. to plaintiff, he would stand in the same position as if the contract between Z. and K. had been literally performed.
To make a valid tender so as to give the vendee a right of possession, under such contract, the money should be offered to Z., and a deed demanded of him, with an offer to execute the mortgage, if the party was unwilling to take the deed of McE.
Baldwin, J. delivered the opinion of the Court Field, C. J. concurring.
Ejectment for a lot in San Francisco. The case rests upon these facts: One Zottman, on the thirteenth of July,'1858, was the owner of this lot, and then entered into a written contract with Kelly for the sale of it. The instrument recites the terms of the agreement, which were, that Kelly was to pay §3,372 50, as follows: $872 50 on or before fifteenth August, with interest, etc.; $1,250 on the fifteenth November, 1858, with interest, etc.; and the remainder ($1,250) to be paid on or before March 1st, 1859, with interest, etc., notes to be given for these sums. It was agreed that on payment of these two first notes, then Zottman was to execute to Kelly a good and sufficient deed, with covenants against his own acts, and whereupon Kelly was to execute a mortgage on the premises for the security of the last note. Nothing was said in the deed about the possession. The first note was paid. Before the second note fell due, Zottman made a deed of .the premises to plaintiff, subject to the written contract with Kelly; and this deed contained a covenant of warranty against the acts of the grantor. On the fifteenth of November, 1858, Kelly sold to McEwen, one of the defendants. Possession seems to have been taken under this contract. [211]It was proved that plaintiff, shortly after the fifteenth of November, 1858, saw Kelly and demanded payment of the second note, and tendered him a deed from himself (plaintiff) to Kelly, with the covenants mentioned in Zottman’s agreement. Kelly replied that he could not do anything. Plaintiff then made a formal demand for payment and execution of the mortgage. On the twenty-fourth of March, 1859, plaintiff demanded payment of the two notes then due, of McEwen, the assignee of Kelly, and tendered him the deed from Zottman to plaintiff, and tendered a deed from himself to McEwen, and demanded payment of the second note, and offered him a mortgage to be executed by him (McEwen) to secure the payment of the third note. Plaintiff also offered McEwen a tax deed. Plaintiff demanded possession from McEwen; all these demands were refused.
It has been seen that the legal title to this lot was in Zottman, and by him assigned to the plaintiff. It is true, an equity existed by virtue of the agreement and a compliance with its terms. But it is not so clear that this agreement gave, or was understood to give, a right of possession to Kelly, until a compliance by him with its terms—by the payment of the two first notes. The face of the paper would seem to indicate the contrary. The first two notes were to be paid at short time, and after the payment of the first and second, the agreement stipulates for the execution of a deed by Zottman, and of a mortgage by Kelly. If it were understood that Kelly was to take possession immediately, why was not a mortgage taken at the time for the payment of the whole purchase money ? Besides that there is no implication of a license to enter from the mere fact of an executory agreement of this sort, the particular facts of this case oppose the idea that the vendee was to have the consideration, or any part of the consideration, for which he bargained, until he complied with the terms of the bargain on his part. (See 22 Barb. 260, Spencer v. Toby)—a case which we do not entirely approve of, but which, we think, correctly lays down the general proposition as to implied license arising from a mere contract of purchase.
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