DeLamar v. Fidelity Loan & Investment Co.

123 S.E. 116, 158 Ga. 361, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 155
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1924
DocketNo. 4236
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 123 S.E. 116 (DeLamar v. Fidelity Loan & Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeLamar v. Fidelity Loan & Investment Co., 123 S.E. 116, 158 Ga. 361, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 155 (Ga. 1924).

Opinion

Hines, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

TJpon rescission of a contract, the rescinding party must restore or offer to restore to the other party whatever he has received by virtue of the contract. This is the rule in cases both of rescission for fraud and of rescission by one party without the consent of the opposite party for non-performance by him of his covenants. Civil Code (1910), §§ 4305, 4306. “Destitution before absolution is as sound in law as in theology.” Summerall v. Graham, 62 Ga. 729. So, when the defendant rescinded the subscription- contract between it and the plaintiff, it should have restored or offered to restore to the plaintiff all money received by it from him upon payment of the stock subscribed for by him, unless the defendant was excused from restoration by the terms of the contract; and unless so excused, the plaintiff could treat the defendant’s attempted rescission as effectual for that purpose, and could, as we shall hereafter see, sue the defendant for the recovery of the money so paid by him.

Do the allegations of the petition show that the plaintiff had forfeited his right to restoration of the money paid by him under his contract of subscription to the shares of the defendant ? Where time is not of the essence of the contract, the nonpayment of the purchase-money or any installment thereof, at the time stipulated in the contract, would, not of itself authorize a rescission of the [365]*365contract or the forfeiture of the plaintiff’s rights, thereunder. Burkhalter v. Roach, 142 Ga. 344 (82 S. E. 1059). Did the plaintiff forfeit his right to this stock and the payments made thereon by reason of his failure to meet the installments of the purchase-price of the stock as they became due? Under the allegations of the petition, he made an initial cash payment on his subscription on July 1, 1921. He gave his note for $300 for the balance of the purchase-money of this stock, payable in ten monthly installments of $30 on the first day of each of the succeeding ten months. He paid the first and second installments due respectively August 1 and September 1, 1921. He did not meet the eight succeeding installments, the last of which fell due on May 1, 1922. On or about June 29, 1922, he offered to complete the payments on his note, and the company refused to accept payment. . On April 21, 1923, he tendered to the defendant the balance of the principal due on his note, amounting to $240, with interest thereon at 8 per cent., and demanded the stock. The company refused to accept that amount, and refused to issue and deliver to him the stock. The note given by the plaintiff for the deferred installments of the purchase-price of this stock provides that, upon the failure of the maker to pay any installment thereof as it falls due, it “may be cancelled and all installments thereon forfeited at the discretion of the holder thereof.” The contract of subscription provides that “a forfeiture under the terms of said note shall ipso facto forfeit this subscription.” Under these provisions, did a forfeiture of the subscription contract and of the payments made by plaintiff on this stock result from his delinquency in the payment of the installments of its purchase-price, when the company still kept the• subscription contract and the note, and refused to cancel and deliver them to the plaintiff?

It has been said-that forfeitures are abhorred in law and equity. Glover v. Central Investment Co., 133 Ga. 62, 65 (65 S. E. 147). The law does not favor forfeitures. Hicks v. Beacham, 131 Ga. 89 (62 S. E. 45); Parks v. Wilkinson, 134 Ga. 14 (67 S. E. 401); Burkhalter v. Roach, supra. Provisions in contracts as to forfeiture must be strictly construed. Thus construing the provisions for forfeiture in the subscription contract and in the note, the company had the right to' declare a forfeiture of the installments previously paid by the plaintiff on his note, upon his failure to [366]*366pay any subsequent installment or installments as they became due; but the exercise of this right was one in the discretion of the defendant, and depended upon a cancellation of the note. The right of forfeiture was contingent upon the default of the plaintiff in paying these installments, and upon cancellation of his note by the company. Both must have occurred before forfeiture resulted. Georgia R. Co. v. Haas, 127 Ga. 187 (56 S. E. 313, 119 Am. St. R. 327, 9 Ann. Cas. 677). Furthermore, as it was in the discretion of the company to declare such forfeiture or not, the provision in the note for the forfeiture of the installments which had been previously paid was not self-operating, but there must have been a declaration of forfeiture or some act or conduct on the part of the company equivalent thereto. 13 C. J. 609, § 644. If the company had intended to exercise its right to forfeit the previous installments, and thus to forfeit the subscription contract, it should have cancelled this note and delivered the same to the maker or have notified him that it liad cancelled the same and that it had exercised its right to forfeit these previous installments, and thus terminate the contract of subscription. If it did not cancel the note, but refused to cancel it, or did not notify the plaintiff, on his default, that it had exercised its right to forfeit these previous installments, and thus end his contract of subscription, there was no forfeiture of either under the terms of the note. It is true that if the company had cancelled the note or notified the plaintiff of the exercise of its right to forfeit these payments, this ipso facto would have forfeited and ended the contract of subscription. The forfeiture of the previous installments, in accordance with the terms of the note, would have operated to cancel the subscription contract; but mere failure of the plaintiff to meet the installments of the purchase-price of this stock did not ipso facto forfeit the previous payments. Default of the plaintiff in the payment of these installments and cancellation of the note by the defendant, or notice of its intention to exercise its right to do so, were prerequisite to a forfeiture of the subscription contract. Until the defendant exercised its discretion to forfeit the previous payments of installments of the purchase-money, and actually can-celled the note, the plaintiff could pay the balance due upon the purchase-money of his shares, and prevent the forfeiture. An offer to pay and a tender of the balance of the principal and interest [367]*367due on the unpaid installments of the purchase-price of his stock, before such actual forfeiture of his stock, would be the equivalent of payment, and would prevent the forfeiture of his contract of subscription and of previous payments upon his note given for the purchase of this stock. So we can not say that the petition shows on its face that the plaintiff had forfeited his rights and payments made under this contract, and that for this reason he was not entitled to recover.

But the defendant insists that the plaintiff comes into equity without clean hands, that equity will not cancel a contract except upon grounds of mutual mistake or fraud, and that a diligent creditor should not be interfered with by a court of equity in the prosecution of his legal remedies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 S.E. 116, 158 Ga. 361, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delamar-v-fidelity-loan-investment-co-ga-1924.