Glaser v. Dannelley

170 P. 63, 23 N.M. 593
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1918
DocketNo. 2035
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 170 P. 63 (Glaser v. Dannelley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glaser v. Dannelley, 170 P. 63, 23 N.M. 593 (N.M. 1918).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

ROBERTS, J.

This is an equitable action brought by the appellee, B. G. Glaser, to cancel a contract entered into between himself and the appellant, Wm. U. Dannelley, and to compel the restitution by the said Dannelley of the sum of $500, paid by Glaser to Dannelley to apply in part payment for the purchase of a 40-acre tract of land located in Curry county, N. M., and for the re-delivery to Glaser of a note for $500, given in payment of the balance due upon the purchase price of the said lands, and for $700 damages claimed to have been suffered by the appellee. The case was tried to the court without a jury, special interrogatories of fact and law were propounded to tbe court, and judgment was entered by tbe court against tbe appellant, decreeing that tbe said contract be can-celled, that tbe sum of $500 paid by tbe appellee to tbe appellant be returned, together with tbe said note above mentioned. Tbe court found that no damages were due tbe plaintiff.

At tbe time of tbe making of tbe contract hereinafter referred to, appellant was tbe owner of tbe real estate therein contracted to be sold to appellee. , Tbe principal part of tbe negotiations, leading up to tbe making of tbe contract were conducted, on behalf of tbe appellant, by agents employed by him to sell tbe land referred to. Appellant lived near tbe land and was well acquainted with tbe people living and owning land in tbe vicinity of tbe tract contracted to be sold. Appellee was a stranger living in an adjoining state. He desired tbe land and tbe leases in question for a cattle range. The agreement, reduced to writing, was as follows:

"Know All Men by These Presents, that this contract and agreement, made and entered in this the 18th day of August, 1915, by and between Wm. U. Dannelley, of Curry county, New Mexico, party of the first part, and B. G. Glaser, of Bubbock county, Texas, party of the second part, witnesseth: That for and in consideration of the sum of one thousand and no-100 dollars, to be paid by the said second party to said first party as hereinafter specified and set forth, and the performance of the other covenants and conditions hereinafter mentioned by said first party, the said party of the first part has this day sold tó second party the following described property, lying, situate, and being in Curry county, New Mexico, as follows, to-wit: The N. W. ü of theS. W. 14 section 27, township 4 north, range 35 east N. M. P. M., containing 40 acres of land, more or less, as the case may be, together with four miles of three-wire fence, and one-half mile of one-wire fence, posts on said four-mile to go with wire. The said first party further covenants and agrees to obtain for the said second party a three-section lease on land in the vicinity of said 40 acres, these leases to be for one year from January 1, 1916, the said second party to pay for said leases; and it is further agreed that said second party will deposit with this contract in the First National Bank of Clovis, N. M., as first payment on said property above described, the sum of five hundred dollars, same to be turned over to said first party by said bank when the said first party deposits in said bank a good and sufficient warranty deed and abstract of title to said forty acres of land above described. Said second party also to deposit herewith bis certain promissory note for the sum of five hundred dollars, payable to said first party and to bear interest from date at tbe rate of eight per cent, per annum and due twelve months after date.
“It is further agreed by and between the parties hereto that time is of the essence of this contract, and that a failure or refusal to comply therewith by either of said parties will at the option of the other party mature the entire contract. And it is further agreed that upon the payment of said note above described the said bank is to deliver to said second party said deed and abstract above mentioned.”

The first payment of $500 was made direct to appellant ; the note was executed and deposited with the bank, and likewise the warranty deed, as required by the contract. Appellant failed to tender the leases provided for to appellee by the 1st of January, 1916, and on the 5th day of that month appellee notified appellant in writing that, because of his failure to so tender such leases, he elected to treat such contract as at an end, and demanded the return of the sum of $500 so paid by him. Thereafter appellant tendered leases, and some question is made as to land covered by them; but the view we take of the case makes such' question of no moment, as it has no place in the case, if the covenant on the part of appellant to procure sucb leases was independent of the agreement on the part of appellee to pay for the same. In other words, if the payment by appellee of the rentals for the leased lands was not a condition precedent to their procurement and delivery by appellant, clearly the judgment of the district court must be affirmed, regardless of the merits of the other questions presented, for it is conceded that appellant did not tender performance of this part of the contract within the time stipulated, and time was made the essence of the contract.

In this case the. point arose in this manner: At the close of plaintiff’s case, defendant interposed a motion for a verdict upon two grounds: (1) That the complaint' did not show that the plaintiff (appellee) had performed, or offered to perform, the conditions in the contract upon which was dependent the procuring of the leases by the appellant; and (2) that the complaint contained, no allegation, and there was no proof, to the effect that appellant renounced or repudiated the contract or the terms thereof. It is the contention of the appellant that the written contract between the plaintiff and the defendant imposed upon the plaintiff the performance of certain conditions which were concurrent and dependent, and which, therefore, required from the plaintiff performance thereof, or a tender of performance, before an action would lie upon the contract. The condition in question is involved in that part of the contract which provides:

‘“The said first party further covenants and agrees to obtain for the said second party a three-section lease on land in the vicinity of said 40 acres, these leases to be for one year from January 1, 1916, the said second party to pay for said leases.”

If the appellant is correct in this contention, clearly the court was in error in not sustaining his motion, for neither the complaint nor the proof showed a tender of the lease money by appellee. If the acts to be performed by the parties to this contract relative to the leased lands are dependent and concurrent, neither party would be entitled to an action against the other without the averment of performance or the tender of performance on his part. If, however, the procuring of the leases is a condition precedent to the appellee’s covenant to pay the rentals of the leased lands, then he is entitled to maintain his action for rescission of the contract, because of the failure of appellant to perform within the time stipulated time having been made of the essence of the contract. This, on the assumption that the action for rescission would lie for this breach, which was not questioned by appellant in the court below, if the covenant is independent.

In Loud v. Pomona L. & W. Co., 153 U. S. 564

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Related

Heyde v. State Securities, Inc.
320 P.2d 747 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1958)
Price v. Van Lint
120 P.2d 611 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1941)
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246 P. 904 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1926)
Glaser v. Dannelley
193 P. 76 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
170 P. 63, 23 N.M. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glaser-v-dannelley-nm-1918.