Flanagan Estate v. Great Cent. Land Co.

77 P. 485, 45 Or. 335, 1904 Ore. LEXIS 103
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 77 P. 485 (Flanagan Estate v. Great Cent. Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanagan Estate v. Great Cent. Land Co., 77 P. 485, 45 Or. 335, 1904 Ore. LEXIS 103 (Or. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolverton,

after stating the facts in the foregoing terms, delivered the opinion of the court.

1. The first contention in logical order to be noticed is that the forfeiture was prematurely declared, it being insisted by counsel for the defendant land company that the third payment of 50 per cent of the $49,000 remaining of the purchase price after the payment of the $1,000 was not then due and payable. The position depends upon the proper interpretation of the contract, the plaintiff contending that the payment in question fell due July 25, 1903. The agreement or contract, as will be noticed, provides that Sengstacken shall pay on the day which it-bears [340]*340date the sum of $1,000, “and shall within ten (10) days thereafter deposit 25 per cent of ($49,000.00) Forty-nine Thousand Dollars, in the Flanagan & Bennett Bank to our credit and subject to our order, and shall within one year thereafter deposit in said bank fifty per cent of said Forty-nine Thousand ($49,000.00) Dollars with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent per annum.” The inquiry centers, about the employment of the word “ thereafter,” where found the second time in the excerpt. Does it bear relation to-the date of the contract and that of the payment of the $1,000, or to the date of the deposit of the 25 per cent of the balance of the purchase price designated ? By pursuing the contract further, it will be found that the stipulation touching, the last payment is that it shall be made two years after its date, so that all payments save this one are unmistakably fixed with reference to the date of the execution of the contract, and it is highly improbable that the payment in question should have been fixed with reference to some other da,te. Indeed, a critical reading of the conditions does not seem to us to lead to such a result, and we are firmly of the opinion that the contention is without merit.

2. It is next insisted that the deed by the Flanagan heirs, the vendors in the contract, to plaintiff carried the title of the premises to it, so as to defeat the purposes of the escrow, which is tantamount to, or is in itself, a breach of the contract on their part, and for that reason plaintiff cannot insist upon the remedy sought, the plaintiff not having placed in escrow a deed executed by it to the land company to' be delivered upon like conditions as the former. The rule seems to be well established that a deed deposited in escrow does not become operative to convey the title until the performance of the conditions or happening of the event upon which it was intended to be delivered to the grantee.designated, except in certain cases [341]*341arising through incapacity of the grantors, where by fiction of law it is allowed to take effect from the first delivery : 1 Devlin, Deeds (2 ed.), § 328 ; Prutsman v. Baker, 30 Wis. 644 (11 Am. Rep. 592); Taft v. Taft, 59 Mich. 185 (26 N. W. 426, 60 Am. Rep. 291); Andrews v. Farnham, 29 Minn. 246 (13 N. W. 161); Cannon v. Handley, 72 Cal. 133 (13 Pac. 315).

3. An inspection of the provisions of the deed to the Flanagan Estate will disclose, however, that it was not the purposeof the Flanagan heirs thereby to supersede the escrow, or to defeat the title that was intended to be conveyed by the latter instrument at the happening of the events upon which it was to become operative as a conveyance. By express condition the deed was made subject to the contract, and to the conveyance to the land company evidenced by the escrow, which we are impressed was effective to subordinate any title that may have passed thereby to the title that would have been acquired through the escrow-if the conditions had cometo pass upon which it was so placed. The fact that the plaintiff knew of the escrow, and of the terms and conditions upon which it was to become operative, would not alone have been effective to subordinate its title to that which would have ripened by the escrow taking effect as a deed, but it would be held, upon principles of equity, to have acquired the legal title in trust for the defendant land company. This, however, would not obviate the objection of the defendant, because it was‘the purpose of having the deed deposited in escrow to avoid the possibility of trust relations thus arising, and the necessity of requiring their enforcement so as to obtain the legal title. We think, however, as indicated above, that the conditions of the deed to the Flanagan Estate of themselves subordinated its title to that which would have accrued to the land company through the escrow, had the conditions upon whichitwas so placed cometo pass; hence [342]*342we conclude that the second objection is not well asserted.

4. The next objection pertains to the relief sought, it being insisted that the court ought not to decree a strict foreclosure under the conditions prevailing. A forfeiture is not insisted upon here, and, if it were, equity would not enforce it. While it might refuse in many instances to. interfere for the relief of an obligor against forfeiture for breach of an obligation, it will never interpose to declare a forfeiture, that being a matter, if insisted upon, entirely for the law side of the court. The plaintiff, by the act of instituting a suit for a strict foreclosure, recognizes the agreement as still in force and presently subsisting, for its purpose is to get rid of the equity of the land company-by obtaining a decree barring it forever. The plaintiff thereby admits that the land company has an equity in the premises which plaintiff’s predecessors by the terms of the contract agreed to convey, but submits that the company should be foreclosed thereof by reason of not having fulfilled the stipulations therein contained upon its part.

5. It was once a mooted question whether strict foreclosure could be at all maintained in this State, in view of the provisions of our statute with relation to the foreclosure of liens (B. & C. Comp. § 423), but it has been settled in favor of the remedy, as applied to contracts for the sale of land, in Security Sav. Co. v Mackenzie, 33 Or. 209 (52 Pac. 1046), where the lien thereby acquired is differentiated from the lien acquired for the security of some debt, which latter is alone declared to be within the intendment of the statute.

6. By the contract of sale an equitable conversion takes place, the vendee being deemed the owner of the land in equity, and the vendor to have a lien thereon for the purchase money, but at law these relations are not recognized. The lien suggested is known in the books as a vendor’s [343]*343lien,” but does not exist in this State after title has passed : Frame v. Sliter, 29 Or. 121 (45 Pac. 290, 34 L. R. A. 690, 54 Am. St. Rep. 781). Its only existence, therefore, is upon the idea, which is nearly if not quite a fiction, that the title has passed when it has not, and that the vendor retains a lien upon the land which has passed to the vendee in equitable contemplation, but has not in law or in reality, the prime fact being that the legal title is reserved pending compliance on the part of the vendee with the conditions upon which it is to be conveyed. “And the so-called ‘lien,’” as'said by Mr. Justice Bean in Security Sav. Co. v. Mackenzie, 33 Or. 209 (52 Pac. 1046), “is simply the vendor’s right to enforce his claim for the purchase money against or out of the vendor’s equitable estate ” — not his legal estate, for he has none.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P. 485, 45 Or. 335, 1904 Ore. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-estate-v-great-cent-land-co-or-1904.