Dunseath v. Hallauer

253 P.2d 408, 41 Wash. 2d 895, 1953 Wash. LEXIS 405
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1953
Docket31979
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 253 P.2d 408 (Dunseath v. Hallauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunseath v. Hallauer, 253 P.2d 408, 41 Wash. 2d 895, 1953 Wash. LEXIS 405 (Wash. 1953).

Opinion

Hill, J.

Wilbur G. Hallauer and his wife agreed with John D. Dunseath and his wife to exchange properties, the exchange agreement being dated January 15, 1949.

The Hallauer property was a ranch of approximately one hundred fifty acres in Okanogan county about twelve miles from Omak. It included a fully equipped apple orchard (eighty acres of producing trees and eight acres of young trees, not yet producing), together with a cold storage warehouse on the railroad two miles from the ranch. This property was valued, for the purpose of the exchange, at $40,000, and was referred to throughout the trial and the findings as the “Malott Orchard.”

The Dunseath property was a Seattle apartment house valued, for the purpose of the exchange, at $210,000. The Dunseaths were purchasing the apartment house on a contract on which there was $116,000 still due.

*897 The difference between the value of the Dunseaths’ equity-in the apartment house and the value of the Hallauers’ orchard was agreed to be $54,000, which was paid in cash by the Hallauers to the Dunseaths at the time of the closing of the transaction, March 1, 1949. On that date, also, the parties exchanged deeds and other documents of conveyance, the Hallauers took possession of the apartment house, and the Dunseaths took possession of the orchard property.

The winter of 1948-1949 was extremely cold in Okanogan county and throughout much of eastern Washington, and the prolonged low temperatures caused severe damage to fruit trees. Both parties were ignorant, on the date of the actual exchange, March 1, 1949, of the damage done to the Malott orchard, but during the spring and summer it developed that so many trees had been killed and severely damaged that it was impossible to continue the operation of the orchard as a commercially feasible venture.

Dunseath brought this action to recover damages, basing his claim upon a provision in the exchange agreement reading:

“Risk of damage to the respective properties prior to the closing of the deal is assumed by the seller of each of the properties, respectively.”

Most suits involving liability for loss or damage occurring between the date of execution of a contract to convey real estate and the date of its performance involve injury or destruction of buildings by fire. However, illustrative of other types of damage which are sometimes involved, we find: dam carried away by freshet, Green v. Kelly, 20 N. J. L. 544 (1845); land washed away, Neponsit Realty Co. v. Judge, 106 Misc. 445, 176 N. Y. S. 133 (1919), and Amundson v. Severson, 41 S. D. 377, 170 N. W. 633 (1919); land destroyed by crevasses or inundation, Ford v. Russell , 13 La. App. 390, 128 So. 310 (1930); property ruined by vandals, Coolidge & Sickler, Inc. v. Regn, 7 N. J. 93, 80 A. (2d) 554 (1951); and hurricane damaged buildings and fences, Gallicchio v. Jarzla, 18 N. J. Super. 206, 86 A. (2d) 820 (1952).

The trial judge took the position that there had been no *898 depreciation in any of the nonorchard acreage, the buildings on the property, or the cold storage warehouse, as a result of the cold weather. He valued the producing orchard at $500 an acre and the young orchard at $250 an acre, or a total of $42,000, but found that the land containing only dead and commercially useless trees, which would have to be removed, had a value of only $150 an acre, making the value of the eighty-eight acres as of March 1, 1949, only $13,200. The difference, or total damage, was $28,800, of which he estimated that ten per cent had been done by January 15, 1949. Deducting that ten per cent as being apart from the damage the Hallauers assumed, he found the damage subsequent to January 15th and prior to March 1, 1949, to be $25,920, and gave Dunseath judgment in that amount.

The Hallauers appeal, making twenty assignments of error. These assignments are so grouped for argument that they actually urge three reasons why the respondent’s cause of action should be dismissed and four reasons why the appellants are, in the event dismissal of the action is not ordered, entitled to a new trial.

Appellants first advance the proposition that the provisions of the exchange agreement dated January 15, 1949, were merged in the deed obtained by the respondent March 1, 1949; and where, they ask, “is there any provision in the deed between the parties in the instant case whereby respondent can hold appellants liable for the condition of the trees in March, 1949?”

One answer to this rhetorical question is that we cannot tell because the deed is not in evidence, this particular argument apparently being an afterthought on the part of the appellants. However, we answered a similar argument in Davis v. Lee, 52 Wash. 330, 100 Pac. 752 (1909), by recognizing the merger rule for which appellants contend and then pointing out that it has exceptions, one of which is that when there are stipulations in a contract for the sale of land of which the conveyance itself is not a performance, the question then becomes whether the parties intentionally surrendered those stipulations. We there quoted with ap *899 proval from Morris v. Whitcher, 20 N. Y. 41 (1859), in part as follows:

“ ‘In absence of all proof there is no presumption that either party, in giving or accepting a conveyance, intends to give up the benefit of covenants of which the conveyance is not a performance or satisfaction. ’ ”

We find this exception to the merger rule well stated in an annotation in 84 A. L. R. 1008, 1018:

“Where a contract for the sale of land embraces stipulations other than those relating to the conveyance of the subject-matter, and imposes upon the vendor the duty of performing acts other than those required to assure to the vendee the character of title stipulated for, the contract is something more than one for the mere conveyance of the subject-matter at a designated time, hence the execution and delivery of the deed of the land is merely the performance of the provisions relative to transfer of the title. It is one of several executory acts stipulated for, therefore its performance does not affect the vitality of the original contract as to collateral matters which the vendor has obligated himself to perform. Accordingly, where there are collateral undertakings expressed in such a contract which are not satisfied by a subsequently executed deed of the subject-matter', these undertakings survive the acceptance of the deed, unless there are provisions in the deed inconsistent with the survival of such covenants or stipulations.”

See, also, Green v. Kelly, supra.

We therefore hold that the collateral undertaking whereby the owners agreed to assume risk of loss until the deal was closed was not satisfied by the subsequently executed deeds and was not merged in but survives the execution of the deeds.

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Bluebook (online)
253 P.2d 408, 41 Wash. 2d 895, 1953 Wash. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunseath-v-hallauer-wash-1953.