Ford v. Hofer

111 N.W.2d 214, 79 S.D. 257, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 44
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1961
DocketFile 9854
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 111 N.W.2d 214 (Ford v. Hofer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. Hofer, 111 N.W.2d 214, 79 S.D. 257, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 44 (S.D. 1961).

Opinions

BIEGELMEIER, J.

On October 1, 1954, defendants Jacob G. Hofer and his wife, vendors, entered into a written contract for deed with plaintiffs, Orville F. Ford and Ida C. Ford, his wife, vendees, for 560 acres of Campbell County land. The purchase price was $11,200 of which $1,200 was the down payment and the balance of $10,000 principal was to be paid $500 on October 1, 1955, and a like sum on each October 1st thereafter for twenty years with interest. The contract was on a printed form containing terms similar to those in Speer v. Phillips, 24 S.D. 257, 123 N.W. 722. The Fords who were tenants on the land continued to occupy and farm it until the fall of 1957, when they moved to a nearby town SO' the children, as Mrs. Ford explained, could go to school there; she further testified that it was their intention to go back and farm the land in the spring of 1958. Mr. Ford accepted employment in a garage there in the fall of 1957. The dates and amounts of some of the payments are in dispute; it is undisputed that when on October 1, 1955, payments of $500 of the principal and $400 interest were due, Ford paid $100 in cash and gave a note and chattel mortgage to Mr. Hofer for the balance of $800; two payments of $100, one of $75 and another of [259]*259$300 were made by the fall of 1956 and in July 1957 a further payment of $531.26. Hofer testified that he applied this $1,206.26 all on the interest, which paid all of the interest in arrears and in adivanc'e to October 1, 1957; that fall he told Ford that he expected one payment on the principal and “the taxes and the insurance had to be paid up”; and “they (these payments) could have been made anytime”. After this conversation Mr. Ford paid Hofer $200 evidenced by a check of Ford’s father cashed October 28, 1957. No time was set for payment of the $300 balance of this one principal. On December 21, 1957, Ford had a farm auction sale of most of his personal property. Hofers had consulted a lawyer and on December 11, 1957, executed a Declaration of Forfeiture addressed to Orville F. Ford and Ida C. Ford, which stated the land contract “is hereby declared forfeited by reason of default in the payments therein * * * that the undersigned are the sole owners of the title to said lands * * *” which they recorded in the Register of Deeds office on December 18,. 1957. No copy of this Declaration of Forfeiture or notice of its recording was ever e>._wed on either of the Fords. On December 16, Hofer :.3A:.:je:. the chattel mortgage of record and on the 27th gave Mr. Ford a cheek for $200 marked Refund on land payment.

Between March 10 and 19, 1S58, Hofer made efforts to sell the land to others and later in March 1958 he sold it in separate tracts to four different buyers for $15,270.

Un August 28, 1958, plaintiffs commenced this action naming Hofers and the purchasers as defendants. Plaintiff’s pleadings prayed the court determine the amount due on the contract and other equitable relief. The answer of the Hofers was a general denial and a defense denominated a cross claim. An amended answer of the other defendants was a general denial with the further allegation that they purchased the property in good faith without notice of any claims of the plaintiffs therein.

The trial court’s findings follow the facts above set out, were generally favorable to the defendants. A judg[260]*260ment quieting title in Hofers subject to the rights of the later purchasers and dismissing the plaintiffs’ complaint followed.

Whether the Fords as vendees abandoned the contract for deed with the Hofers as vendors is decisive of the appeal.

Defendants contend that plaintiffs by accepting the note and cancellation of chattel mortgage and by accepting repayment of $200, plaintiffs knew that the contract had been cancelled, abandoned their rights under the contract and are estopped from asserting any rights in the property. As the elements of estoppel are not present, Lambert v. Bradley, 73 S.D. 316, 42 N.W.2d 606, the claim of abandonment remains to be considered.

The acts of the parties to a written contract for deed in order to constitute abandonment must be positive, unequivocal and inconsistent with the continuance of the contract. Golden v. Cornett, 154 Ky. 438, 157 S.W. 1076; Douglass v. Brooks, 242 N.C. 178, 87 S.E.2d 258; Mood v. Methodist Episcopal Church South, Tex.Civ.App., 289 S.W. 461; Sammons v. Hodges, Tex.Civ.App., 95 S.W.2d 734; Linscomb v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 8 Cir., 199 F.2d 431. In Ely v. Jones, 101 Kan. 572, 168 P. 1102, the Supreme Court of Kansas, referring to a well-known text writer quoted with approval as follows:

“In 2 Warvelle on Vendors (2d Ed.,) § 826, it is said:

“ ‘It has been held in some of the earlier cases that an agreement to rescind is as much an agreement concerning land as the original contract, and henc'e should be in writing; but all the later cases, both in England and the United States, are unanimous in affirming that a contract in writing, and by law required to be in writing, may in equity be rescinded by parol, and this even though the contract may have been under seal. Such rescission may be effected, not only by [261]*261an express agreement, but by any course of conduct clearly indicating a mutual assent to the termination or abandonment of the contract. It may consist either of words or acts, and all the circumstances attending the transaction may be shown to prove intention; but if evidenced by acts alone they must be such as leave no doubt as to such intention.’ ”

Accord: Gaido v. Tysdal, 68 Wyo. 490, 235 P.2d 741; where abandonment is relied upon, some of the courts require that a clear intention to abandon be shown. Kennedy v. Neil, 333 Ill. 629, 165 N.E. 148; Fulton v. Chase, 240 Iowa 771, 37 N.W.2d 920; Collins v. Collins, 348 Mich. 320, 83 N.W.2d 213, 68 A.L.R.2d 575. It may be the courts 'have adopted this standard because abandonment of a contract by a vendee has the same result as a forfeiture. They are referred to and regarded with disfavor in the same terms. “Abandonments and forfeitures are abhorrent to the law and all intendments are against them”, Stockmen’s Supply Co. v. Jenne, 72 Idaho 57, 237 P.2d 613, 617, where the court held the evidence of abandonment of the written contract was insufficient to counteract the requirement of notice to forfeit it. Cf. Carr v. Troutman, 125 Ind.App. 151, 123 N.E.2d 243.

Forfeitures are considered as odious in the law, Barnes v. Clement, 12 S.D. 270, 81 N.W. 301, and are not favored by the courts. Courts of equity will seize upon slight circumstances to relieve a party therefrom. Pier v. Lee, 14 S.D. 600, 86 N.W. 642. This court has said abandonment of a water right results from a concurrence of an intention to surrender and the actual relinquishment thereof. While conduct may support an inference of an intention to abandon a property right, it should not be lightly implied. Cundy v. Weber, 68 S.D.

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Ford v. Hofer
111 N.W.2d 214 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.W.2d 214, 79 S.D. 257, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-hofer-sd-1961.