Gumaer v. Draper

33 Colo. 122
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1905
DocketNo. 4484
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 Colo. 122 (Gumaer v. Draper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gumaer v. Draper, 33 Colo. 122 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

[123]*123Negotiations for the purchase by Mrs. Gumaer, appellant, defendant below, of certain lands in-Custer .and Fremont counties, owned by Draper, appellee and plaintiff, resulted in the following con-

“ Florence, Colo., April 4, 1.89.9.
“This is to certify that I have, this 4tb day of April, 1899, sold to E. L. Gumaer the following described tracts of land,-to- wit”: (here follows the description) * * *
“The consideration-for said.lands .being eleven thousand one hundred eighteen 50-100 dollars, and to
be paid as follows, .to wit: - •
“Cash-........................$.1,240.00
“On or before August 15, 1899,.. 2,158.50
“Ou or before Dec. 15, 1899..... 2,240.00,
‘ ‘ On or- before April 15, 1900...". 2,240T0
“On or before August 15, 1900.. 3,240.00-
“$11,118.50
“Two warranty deeds covering said lands are enclosed and attached to 'a sealed -envelope and are-to be placed in the First National -Bank of -Pueblo, Colorado, and to;be held'by said.bank as security for said eleven thousand one hundred eighteen 50-100 dollars, or any part thereof, .together with interest at six per cent, from-date and ten per cent., per annum after maturity until paid. On payment of the full amount of said consideration and interest thereon, then the said Tank is to deliver .to said.E. L. Gumaer, or .order,- the attached envelope, together with the two enclosed deeds.. In the event the said amounts are not paid on or before the fifteenth day of August, 1900, then the said envelope and deeds .are to-be returned to W-GW.. Draper and possession of the place given him. It is. further understood and agreed that said E. L. Gumaer is to have [124]*124the full use and benefit of said 1,120 acres from this date, and the 'taxes are to be paid by said E. L. Gumaer commencing with the assessment for the year 1898, which she agrees to pay; also agrees to pay promptly the taxes for 1899 and 1900.
Signed: ' “William W. Deapbe,
“E. L. Gumaee,
‘ ‘ By A. B. G., Agent. ’ ’

The cash payment of $1,240 was made by Mrs. Gumaer at the time the contract was executed, and she was at once thereafter let into possession; but neither of the deferred payments was made at the time designated, or at all. Because of such failure, and a few days after the expiration of the time prescribed for making the last payment, Draper demanded of, ands received from, the bank, with which the title papers were deposited, the attached envelope and deeds, and, within a few days, brought this action against Gumaer for the recovery of possession of the property.

To. the complaint setting forth the foregoing facts, there was filed an answer containing, among other defenses, what is designated a cross-complaint, in which defendant alleges that she and plaintiff, several months after the execution of the contract set forth in the complaint, entered into a further agreement whereby plaintiff waived the requirement as to the time of the four deferred payments mentioned in the contract of April 4, and also waived the right to resume possession as' originally agreed upon; and that defendant, relying upon such agreement and understanding with plaintiff, did not make the payments or any of them at the times originally designated, and, so relying, made large and valuable improvements upon the premises to the amount of about $3,500, which she would not have made were it not for such waiver, all of which was known to [125]*125plaintiff; and furthermore, in pursuance of such subsequent agreement, plaintiff never made demand upon defendant for any. of such payments before bringing this action. As soon as defendant learned that plaintiff had withdrawn from the bank the title deeds, she offered to pay, and was able, willing and desirous of paying, to the plaintiff, the full amount of the deferred payments and interest, but plaintiff then, and at all times thereafter, refused to accept the same. Defendant therefore asked the court to compel plaintiff to execute and deliver to her deeds of conveyance for the property upon the payment by her of the balance of the purchase price, in accordance with the terms of the original contract, and general relief was prayed.

The trial court found the issues in favor of defendant, and declared that plaintiff had a vendor’s lien upon the premises in controversy to the extent of the unpaid purchase, price, but was not entitled to the possession of the premise's. On the contrary, the decree provided, in accordance with the prayer of the cross-complaint, that defendant within a specified time should pay to plaintiff the balance of the purchase price, and the plantiff should then deliver the necessary deeds to defendant, and upon failure so to pay, that the lands should be sold to satisfy the vendor’s lien, and the proceeds, or so much thereof as were necessary, should be applied to the payment of such indebtedness.

To the decree both parties excepted and prayed an appeal to this court. The defendant perfected her appeal and brought up the record. The appellee has assigned cross-errors.

1. The appellant says that the contract above set forth amounts to a present sale of the lands. In their brief her counsel maintain, upon the authority of Morton v. Dickson, 90 Ky. 572; Holcomb v. [126]*126Dowell, 15 Kan. 378, and Mack v. Dailey, 67 Vt. 90, that the vendor may not treat the vendee after default as a tenant and bring an action for possession, but his only remedy is specific performance. Appellant, therefore, asks for a reversal of the judgment because, as her counsel- say, a plaintiff who sues for possession of land which hedías sold and does not pray in his complaint for any equitable relief, and does not amend his complaint on the trial by adding such a prayer, cannot have, as was given in this case, a decree of sale of the land for. the unpaid purchase price.

The appeal of the appellant is wholly without merit.-. It would seem that, under section 169 of the civil code, a plaintiff is entitled to any relief consistent with the case made by his complaint, and embraced within the issue, though, as here, the relief which the court grants does not come within that specifically prayed. But if this is not so, yet, as-the defendant herself, by way of cross-complaint, asked for, and obtained, the very relief which she now says the eourt improperly granted, she cannot — even if it was erroneous — be now heard to object’to the decree which allowed it. The appeal of the appellant, therefore* is dismissed. ’

2. The remaining question is whether the appellee’s cross-errors are meritorious. ITe maintains that a fair construction of the contract, taken as a whole, makes it nothing more than an option for the sale of the premises, and that the legal title, at least,'was not to vest in the vendee until after all the deferred payments were made, and that, by the express provisions of the contract, the vendor was entitled to re-enter and resume possession upon the failure by the vendee to make the payments as therein provided.He cites: Hoffman v. Remnant, 72 Cal. 1; Hannan

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33 Colo. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumaer-v-draper-colo-1905.