Conners v. Winans

122 Misc. 824
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 122 Misc. 824 (Conners v. Winans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conners v. Winans, 122 Misc. 824 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The plaintiff brings this action to foreclose a land contract entered into by the parties on the 26th day of February, 1920, whereby the plaintiff sold and the defendant purchased a farm in the town of Augusta, Oneida county, N. Y., consisting of about 103 acres of land with farm buildings, and a small amount of personal property on the farm, for the sum of $12,500. The contract provided for the payment of $3,000 at its date and of the balance, with interest thereon at the rate of five per cent, in installments of $100 each on the first day of July of each year, until the full sum of $6,000 shall have been paid, when the vendor agreed to deliver to the defendant a good and sufficient warranty [826]*826deed of the premises, and the vendee is to deliver to the vendor his bond secured by a mortgage upon the farm for the balance of the purchase price, $6,500.

The contract contains the following provisions which are material here:

“ (1). The second party (vendee) shall not cut any timber on said farm during the continuance of this contract, except he may cut timber for ordinary repairs to buildings and fences on said farm, and also for his fire wood on said farm, and

(2). He shall keep the same in ordinary repair.

(3). He also agrees to keep the buildings thereon insured in some good safe insurance company approved by said Conners in an amount of at least six thousand dollars, and assign the same to said Conners as collateral security to this contract.”

The defendant vendee on March 1, 1920, entered into and still remains in possession of the premises according to the terms of the contract. He agreed to pay for the property upon the terms and conditions in the contract stated, and to make prompt payments as therein provided and agreed to all the terms and conditions of the contract; he was given the privilege under the contract of paying any greater amount on the principal sum than that prescribed in the contract.

The defendant has kept up the payments as called for by the contract, both principal and interest, but the plaintiff claims that he has breached the covenants above quoted in that (a) he has cut certain timber contrary to the provisions of the contract; (b) he has failed to keep the buildings in ordinary repair, and (c) has failed to comply with the provision as to insurance in that the policy of insurance does not conform to the terms of the contract.

The defendant has not abandoned the property nor has he shown any disposition to abandon it or to escape from the provisions of the contract; on the contrary, the evidence shows a definite purpose to complete the purchase. He has kept up the payments of principal and interest; he has built a milk house; has built a concrete dam to create an ice pond; has turned a hop house useless as such into an ice house; has made changes in the hay barns for a more economical and efficient use of them; and has changed a small horse bam unnecessary as such into a hen house and wood house. It is contended on the part of the plaintiff that some of these acts operated as a violation of the covenant to keep the property in ordinary repair, but these are noted now as indicating that the defendant has not abandoned but apparently intends to five up to the terms of the contract. He has already paid $2,700 of principal as of July 1, 1923.

[827]*827We have here presented for consideration a simple land contract which provides for the purchase and sale of the land, but fails to provide any remedies in case of the violation of any of its provisions. Any remedies which the plaintiff may have are, therefore, dependent upon the rules of law and equity applicable to the case. This necessitates an examination into the nature of land contracts in their legal and equitable aspects. On its face a land contract is simply an agreement whereby one party agrees to sell and the other party agrees to purchase a piece of property. Fundamentally there would seem to be no difference between such a contract and the ordinary contract for the purchase and sale of personal property, and on its face there is no difference excepting in one instance personal property, and in the other, land is contracted to be sold. Courts of equity in order better to conserve the rights of the parties have imposed peculiar characteristics upon land contracts where a vendee is let into possession, and the equitable remedies available grow out of these characteristics.

While the legal title remains in the vendor, the vendee in possession acquires an equitable title and the vendor holds the legal title in trust as it were for the vendee. There is an equitable conversion so that while the heirs of the vendor, in case of his death, must make conveyance of the legal title, the rights of the vendor under a contract, in case of his death intestate, pass to his representatives rather than to his heirs; the title of the vendee in-possession is such that in the event of his death intestate, his' interest in the realty descends to his heirs; so that, following the doctrine that equity deems that as done which ought to be done, the vendee in possession for all practical purposes becomes the owner of the property with all the rights of an owner in the operation of it, subject only of course to the terms of the contract; the vendor holds the legal title as security for the performance of the contract, but in effect has a vendor’s hen upon the property; the status of the parties is somewhat analogous to that of mortgagor and mortgagee. 3 Pom. Eq. Juris. (4th ed.) 3042, § 1261; Champion v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 398; Sewell v. Underhill, 197 N. Y. 168.

In Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, supra, the nature of a land contract and of the rights of the parties thereunder is stated as follows: The position of the vendor prior to conveyance is defined and determined by the doctrine of equitable conversion, rather than by that of mere equitable hen. He holds the legal title as security for the performance of the vendee’s obligation, and as trustee for the vendee, subject to such performance, and that title may be conveyed or devised, and will descend to his heirs. In equity, his real interest is personal estate; he becomes [828]*828by equitable conversion the owner of the purchase-money, of which the vendee is trustee, and this claim for the purchase-money passes on bis death to his executors or administrators. On the other hand, the vendee becomes, by conversion, the real beneficial, although equitable, owner of the land; his interest under the contract is, in equity, real estate, and descends to his heirs.”

Out of the nature of the relationship created by a land contract where the vendee is in possession, there have developed certain equitable remedies, among which is the right of the vendor in proper case to sell out the interest of the vendee for the purpose of satisfying his hen under the contract, in case of default, and while it seems a misnomer, for convenience this remedy is spoken of as foreclosure, and the action as one to foreclose the contract. 3 Pom. Eq. Juris. (4th ed.) 3046, § 1262.

Both the vendor and the vendee may under proper conditions maintain an action in equity to foreclose his lien upon the property.

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122 Misc. 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conners-v-winans-nysupct-1924.