Jacobson v. Swan

278 P.2d 294, 3 Utah 2d 59, 1954 Utah LEXIS 248
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1954
Docket8050
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 278 P.2d 294 (Jacobson v. Swan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobson v. Swan, 278 P.2d 294, 3 Utah 2d 59, 1954 Utah LEXIS 248 (Utah 1954).

Opinion

WADE, Justice.

Plaintiffs Emil J. Jacobson and wife, respondents here, brought this action in unlawful detainer to recover about 1.20 acres of land with a home thereon in Orem, Utah. Plaintiffs sold this property to defendants, George W. Swan and wife, appellants here, under a uniform real estate contract, which after defendants’ default was successively superseded by two other contracts. In each of these plaintiffs purported to lease such premises to defendants for a specified period and defendants agreed to pay a specified monthly rental, together with a specified amount stated to be due and unpaid under the original contract and all taxes, insurance premiums and other similar debts accruing during such period against such property. After defendants defaulted in their payments under the second lease agreement plaintiffs commenced this action upon defendants’ failure to surrender the premises after notice to do so, claiming the right to possession and to retain all the payments made by defendants under all three of such contracts.

The trial court found that the stipulation as to liquidated damages amounted to a penalty which it would not enforce. Plaintiffs were awarded judgment for possession of the property and damages for holding over after notice to quit was served upon them. They were required to account to defendants for the sums paid under the original contract but not for the amounts *62 paid under the two subsequent lease agreements. Plaintiffs appeal, and defendants cross-appeal, each assigning as error parts of the judgment and rulings made adverse to them.

Prior to the sale to defendants a Mr. Nielson owned the property and listed it for sale with the Dixon Real Estate Company of Provo, Utah, for $14,000 with a down payment of $6,000 or more. Plaintiff, Emil Jacobson, a salesman for the company negotiated the sale to the defendants who could raise only $4,000 down payment so Jacobson advanced $10,000 and with it and the $4,000 down payment purchased the property receiving a conveyance to him and his wife on June 27, 1947, and on that day they sold it to defendants under the uniform real estate contract. This contract recited the $14,000 purchase price with the down payment of $4,000 and required monthly payments of $80 per month or more to be applied first to the payment of five per cent interest on all deferred payments and the balance to be applied on the payment of the principal until- the purchase price was paid in full. The buyers agreed to pay all future taxes and insurance premiums and in case they were in default to pay the cost of enforcing the agreement including a reasonable attorney’s fee. Buyers further agreed that in case they remained in default in making any payment for 30 days' after it became due the sellers at their option would be released from all obligation to convey such property and forfeit all payments which had been made under such contract as liquidated damages and thereupon the buyers would became tenants at will of the sellers and that time was of the essence of the contract.

On March 11, 1949, defendants being in default in their payments, plaintiffs served them with an unconditional notice to quit the premises. After some negotiations, plaintiffs’ attorney drew the first lease agreement dated- (sic) day of April, 1949, which was signed and became effective some time in that month. This agreement recited the making of the contract of sale, that a copy thereof was attached to and made a part of such agreement, that the defendants had defaulted in making their payments and were then “merely tenants at will,” and that plaintiffs were willing that defendants remain in possession of such property “on a month to month basis for a period not to exceed one year from the date hereof, upon the terms and conditions herein set forth.” It then provided that the “Lessors [plaintiffs] hereby lease to the Lessees [defendants] * * * for a period commencing May 1, 1949, and ending April 30, 19S0,” the premises in question and the defendants agreed to pay $100 per month on the first day of each month of such period, $80 of which “shall be rental and $20 shall be credited” to the payment of $889.41 the total sum then in arrears under the original contract, which defendants' agreéd to pay on or before *63 April 30, 1950. Defendant also agreed to pay all insurance premiums and taxes assessed against such property during that period. This contract further provided that if defendants made all the payments in accordance therewith a new contract of sale would be entered into reciting the purchase price of $14,000 and giving credit for all payments made both on the original and substituted contracts. It stated “that the purpose of this contract is to allow the Lessees a reasonable opportunity to reinstate their right to purchase said property but at the same time to preserve the Lessor’s right to remove the Lessees from possession as tenants at will in the event the latter do not perform according to the terms of this contract.” Each party agreed in case of his default in performing the contract “to pay all costs and expenses that may arise from enforcing this agreement, * * * including a reasonable attorney’s fee.”

Upon special interrogatories a jury found that the Swans had paid a total of $1,440 during the year this lease was in effect and that on June 7, 1950, Swans paid $287.41 for -taxes, insurance and attorneys’ fees due under the lease. As stated before, they were required to pay, in addition to the $287.41, $80 per month as rent and $20 to apply on the arrearage plus the balance owing on the $889.41 or a total of $1,849.41. They were thus in arrears under this lease $409.41.

On June 27, a new lease agreement was entered into by which Jacobsons gave Swans another opportunity to make substantial payments over a three-year period, after which, if they so performed, the parties would revert to the original contract and give Swans credit for all payments they had made under all three contracts. Swans were to pay $300 on or before August 31,. 1950, as rental, apparently from April 30 to that time. In case they failed to make that payment, defendants agreed to surrender the property to the plaintiffs on September 1, 1950, “and thereafter they will have no interest in or right to said property and that they will have no claim of any kind against the Lessees for any reason whatsoever.” In case that payment was made the lease provided that “the Lessors hereby lease to the Lessees on a month to month basis for a period commencing with September 1, 1950, and. ending May 31, 1953,” and defendants agreed to pay $100 per month as rent on the first day of each month during that period and all insurance premiums, taxes, water rates, and gas and electric light charges against such premises during such period and each party agreed in case of his default “to> pay all costs and expenses that may arise from enforcing this agreement * * * including an attorney’s fee.”

Defendants made the $300 payment and commenced on the three year term, .making payments totalling $1,900, but on March 5, *64 1952, defendants being in default in their monthly payments, plaintiffs served them with an unconditional notice to surrender the premises on March 31, 1952. Immediately after this notice and until the suit was commenced on November 8, 1952, defendants tried to negotiate a settlement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P.2d 294, 3 Utah 2d 59, 1954 Utah LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobson-v-swan-utah-1954.