Christian v. Johnson Construction Co.

155 A. 181, 161 Md. 87, 1931 Md. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 10, 1931
Docket[No. 24, April Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 155 A. 181 (Christian v. Johnson Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christian v. Johnson Construction Co., 155 A. 181, 161 Md. 87, 1931 Md. LEXIS 11 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Johnson Construction Company sold, and Charles M. Christian and Grace Christian, his wife, bought, the leasehold interest in four lots, with the buildings thereon, for the sum of $3,000. The contract was in writing and under seal, and was executed on April 1st, 1926. Ten dollars were paid when the contract was signed, and the residue was agreed to be paid in equal monthly installments of thirty-six dollars, payable on the first day of every succeeding month from the date of the agreement. The vendees were to pay interest on the purchase price, taxes, insurance, and all expenses, when legally demandable, until the whole of the purchase money was paid. It was further covenanted that, if the vendees should default in payment of any monthly installment, taxes, or legal expenses, and such default continued for a period of over thirty days, the default should be considered a breach of the contract, and the whole amount due on this contract should become due and payable; and, if not paid, the contract, at the option of the vendor, should be null and void, and all payments made should be retained by the vendor as rental for the premises. The contract concludes with the stipulation.that: “Upon the payment of the full purchase price together with the interest, the said party of the first part agrees to give to the said parties of the second part a good and merchantable deed at the expense of the parties of the second part.”

*91 The vendees entered in possession and paid on account the sum of $587, which was in full of the first payment and the monthly installments and interest to August 1st, 1927; hut nothing more was paid, and on November 19th, 1928, the vendor brought an action on the contract to recover the amount of the unpaid purchase money with the interest due, taxes, and insurance. The plaintiff’s cause of action on the contract was set forth in the seventh count of the declaration, to which the defendants demurred. The demurrer was overruled, and the defendants in their pleas pleaded by way of set-off that the contract was entered into by the defendants upon the express condition that the honse on the lots sold should be in good order and condition and tenantable and fit for occupancy by them as their home, and that, after the contract was so entered into, the defendants took possession of the honse thereon, and furnished the same with household •furniture and effects, and attempted to live in and occupy said honse as their home, hut that said house was untenantable and unfit for occupancy by them as their home, because the roof and walls were not watertight, and so the rain came through in large quantities, and, after the repeated neglect and refusal of the plaintiff to make the house tenantable and fit to occupy as their home, the defendants rescinded the contract in the summer of 1928, and demanded from the plaintiff the return of the said sum of $587, which the plaintiff refuses to make. After the parties were at issue, trial was had and judgment entered on the jury’s verdict, which was for the plaintiff in the amount of $3,000.67, or the amount apparently due according to the terms of the contract on the day suit was brought, less the credit of $587.

During the trial, there was no controversy over the fact that there had been a contemporaneous parol agreement with respect to the repair of the honse by the plaintiff, and no question made of the admissibility of the evidence with reference to the conflicting versions of the terms of this parol agreement, and whether or not the plaintiff had made the repair as he had agreed by parol. Furthermore, the testimony on the part of the plaintiff and of the defendants in *92 support of their respective contentious with reference to the terms of the parol agreement and its performance or breach raised issues on these questions for the jury to find; and, under the plaintiff’s third prayer and the defendants’ second, the theory of each side on this branch of the inquiry was fully submitted. If, however, the defendants’ contentions be sound, that, under the allegations of the declaration, the terms of the written contract, and the circumstances of the record, the plaintiff, in order to recover, must aver and prove that, before the suit was brought, it had tendered to the defendants a grant or deed of assignment of the leasehold estate, then the nisi prius court was in error in overruling the demurrer to the seventh count of the declaration, which did not contain an averment of such tender, and also in granting the plaintiff’s third prayer, which did not require the jury to find the tender; and, moreover, the defendants’ first prayer taking the case from the jury should have been granted, if it had not been defective in form by confining its demurrer to the evidence offered by the plaintiff instead of addressing it to all the evidence in the case. 2 Poe, Pl. & Pr., sec. 295 B; State. v. Balto. & O. R. Co., 69 Md. 343, 14 A. 685, 688; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Cecil, 111 Md. 288, 73 A. 820; Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Panitz, 142 Md. 300, 120 A. 713.

1. The defendants assert that it was necessary for the plaintiff to aver and prove either a delivery of the grant, or its tender and refusal, before the plaintiff had a right of recovery for the purchase money due. The assertion assumes that the covenants here of the vendor to grant the leasehold estate and of the vendees to pay the purchase price are mutual and dependent covenants, and that the obligation to make the tender was not waived. Neither of these assumptions is correct.

(a) The attempted incorporation of the terms of the contract in the seventh count of the declaration by reference and filing with the declaration is not good pleading, and, on demurrer, the contract will not be considered as a part of the count. The count in question does, however, set up a contract to sell by the plaintiff, and to buy by the defendant, a *93 certain leasehold property at a specified sum, with interest and the payment of taxes, insurance, and expenses; the delivery of possession to the defendants, and the ability and readiness of the plaintiff to transfer the title and to do all other necessary things; the failure of the defendants to pay for a period of over ihirty days after default; and the fact that the defendants, after making numerous promises to pay the purchase money, finally notified the plaintiff that they were unable to perform their part of the contract by paying the amount due; and that, although repeatedly demanded, the defendants had refused to pay the money so demanded. Should it be assumed that the covenants to grant and to pay were mutual and dependent stipulations, and that a tender of the grant and an offer and readiness to perform may, in the first instance, have been a condition precedent to a right of action in the vendor for the failure of the vendees to have paid the purchase money, yet, since this tender was made useless by the refusal of - the vendees to pay and by their notice to the vendor that they were unable to perform their part, of the contract, a tender of the grant is dispensed with as a condition precedent to the right of the vendor’s suit for the purchase money. A tender is not necessary where it appears that, if made, it would have been futile.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 A. 181, 161 Md. 87, 1931 Md. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christian-v-johnson-construction-co-md-1931.