Dargan v. Page

73 S.E.2d 705, 222 S.C. 520, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 16, 1952
Docket16695
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 73 S.E.2d 705 (Dargan v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dargan v. Page, 73 S.E.2d 705, 222 S.C. 520, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 55 (S.C. 1952).

Opinions

[522]*522Baker, Chief Justice.

On August 2, 1951, the appellant executed an option to O. L. Todd, his heirs, successors and assigns, for a consideration of $50.00, giving to him the right, option and privilege of purchasing all of the pine timber and hardwood timber of certain dimensions named therein on a tract of land in Horry County, South Carolina, more particularly described in said instrument of writing “all for the sum of Sixteen thousand dollars ($16,000.00), payable at the office of Corche Page, Conway, S. C., at any time within thirty (30) days from the date hereof.” (Emphasis added.) This instrument of writing contained further provisions pertinent to the issues raised by this appeal, and as follows:

“Provided, however, that the purchase money hereunder shall not be due or payable until the tender to the grantee, after grantee’s demand therefor hereunder, of good and sufficient conveyances in the law for said property, free of encumbrances, and with the approval of the Attorney of the grantee. I or we further agree, at any time within the period above mentioned, on demand of said grantee, or Attorney, to deliver to said grantee or Attorney, for inspection and copies, all evidences of the title to said land, and to convey to said grantee all the above described timber, privileges, timber rights, and easements, free of all encumbrances, with all deeds in the chain of title properly recorded; by a good and sufficient general warranty deed, together with exclusive rights of way and all the timber thereon, over said land and contiguous lands, and the right to build and con-* struct, maintain and operate railroads, steam skidders, tramways and cart-ways over and across said lands, with the right to use such brush and small timber as grantee may desire for such purposes, free of charge: But with the privilege to said grantee of taking, at grantee’s pleasure, a conveyance of such title as I or we may have, with a deduction from the above mentioned price, proportionate to any defect in, or encumbrances on, said title.

[523]*523“This contract is made upon the express condition that the purchase money of said timber is to be paid within the time limit, subject to the above conditions; and upon failure of the grantee to make payment within fifteen (15) days after the tender of good and sufficient title to said timber, as above provided, this contract shall cease and be utterly null and void. I or we further agree to give the said grantee the full term of 2 years on all hill timber and 3 years on Swamp timber years, from the date of said deed, to cut and remove the said timber from the said land.” (Emphasis added.)

This option to purchase was prepared by O. L. Todd or at his direction, and on August 4, 1951, said Todd assigned all of his rights, title and interest therein to the respondent.

The first knowledge that appellant had of the assignment of this option either actual or constructive, came to him on September 3, 1951, the second day after the time limit of thirty (30) days had expired, and when R. D. Epps, Esq., an attorney at Conway, senior member of the law firm of Epps & Hoffman, representing the respondent, and on behalf of the respondent, demanded a conveyance of the timber under the option which appellant had given to O. L. Todd, and offered to pay the consideration therefor. The appellant took the matter under advisement, after procuring from Mr. Epps a copy of the option, and on the following day, notified Mr. Epps that he would not convey the timber for the reason that the option had expired on September 1, 1951.

This action was then brought for specific performance, the complaint alleging “That if the option was not exercised within the time provided, which, however, the plaintiff denies; still, any failure to exercise the same was due to the fact that the defendant could not, after due diligence, be found or located so that the plaintiff could make demand any sooner than the same was made.” The defendant (appellant) in his answer admits that he has no office separate and apart from his home and residence, but alleges that [524]*524while he was not at his residence the greater portion of Friday, August 31st, and on Saturday morning, September 1st, he returned there at about 12 o’clock noon on said Saturday and “was available and could easily have been reached at his residence on the afternoon of September 1st, the last day in which to comply with the said option”; that having learned that Mr. Epps had been trying to reach him on the phone, although he did not know the purpose thereof, he made special effort to get in touch with Mr. Epps during that afternoon, but was unable to do so.

Issue having been thus joined, the case was referred to Honorable J. K. Dorman, Master in Equity for Horry County, who after taking all testimony offered by the respective parties, submitted said testimony, and his report in which he held that time was of the essence of the contract, that is, that the option expired on September 1, 1951, and that at that time no notice of acceptance or demand for a deed had been made on defendant (appellant), “and that the option lapsed ipso jacto”; and recommended that the complaint be dismissed and judgment for the defendant-appellant be entered. 1

On exceptions to the Master’s report, the Circuit Court reversed the Master, and ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant (appellant) execute and deliver to the attorneys for the plaintiff (respondent) a good and sufficient deed, conveying to the plaintiff (respondent), his heirs and assigns, the timber described in the option, and to contain all the conditions and privileges expressed in the option, upon the tender to defendant, or his attorney, of the purchase price therefor “which is Sixteen Thousand and no/100 Dollars.” It was further ordered, that if the defendant (appellant), for any reason failed to comply as to the making such deed of conveyance, then, the plaintiff (respondent) may at any time after ten days from the date of the order, and within twenty days from the date hereof, pay the purchase price into the hands of the Clerk of Court for Horry County, whereupon “the said Clerk shall execute and de[525]*525liver to plaintiff, his heirs and assigns, such deed for said timber.”

The printed argument of respondent sets forth the issues involved in the appeal as two in number, to-wit:

“1. Is time of the essence of this contract?

“2. Even if time be of the essence, do the circumstances of this case excuse the respondent from strict compliance, or, in other words, is the appellant estopped from claiming that the timber deed was not demanded within 30 days ?”

There is, however, a third issue in the case which is discussed in the briefs of counsel, and in the report of the Master, and in the decree of the Circuit Court and it should be first disposed of. It is whether or not, under a proper construction of the option, it expired September 1, 1951.

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Dargan v. Page
73 S.E.2d 705 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 S.E.2d 705, 222 S.C. 520, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dargan-v-page-sc-1952.