John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance v. Behr

295 N.W. 436, 229 Iowa 900
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 31, 1940
DocketNo. 45256.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 295 N.W. 436 (John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance v. Behr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance v. Behr, 295 N.W. 436, 229 Iowa 900 (iowa 1940).

Opinions

Richards, C. J.

Plaintiff seeks to avail itself of prior holdings of this court that, though a defendant claims adversely no other title or interest in the plaintiff’s real estate than the right to have its use and possession as a tenant, the plaintiff-owner may, in an action to quiet title, compel an adjudication of such *901 claimed right, as being, if unfounded, a cloud on plaintiff’s title. See Equitable Life Ins. Co. v. C. C. Taft Co., 192 Iowa 934, 178 N. W. 880; Davis v. Niemann, 219 Iowa 620, 258 N. W. 761. Though in the argument of defendants it is said that in these authorities the facts differ from those in the instant case, the defendants have not designated nor have we discovered any material-factual distinctions. Viewing the action as properly brought, we go to the basic controversial question, that is, whether defendants’ claim of right of possession of the plaintiff’s real estate, as tenants during the crop year beginning March 1, 1940, was unfounded.

During the crop year ending March 1, 1940, defendants were occupying and cultivating, as plaintiff’s tenants, the premises described in the petition. There was a written lease for that year, referred to as Exhibit A. During several preceding years the same relationship had existed under annual leases. In September 1939 the parties made another written lease, Exhibit B. In terms it created a tenancy for the crop year beginning on March 1, 1940.

Paragraph XII of Exhibit B contains the following: “XII. In the event the first party should sell said farm or any portion thereof, he shall have the right to terminate this lease as of March 1st, following the date of the lease or as of any March 1st during the term of the lease by giving notice of such termination to second party on or before January 15, next preceding the date such termination is to take effect, but in the event second party has under this lease done Fall plowing or sown Fall grain, first party shall in the event of such termination pay to him the actual cost to second party of the seed sown and the value of the labor for Fall plowing which shall be $2.00 per acre for the plowing actually done prior to the receiving of said notice of termination.” Standing on these provisions, plaintiff averred that it sold the land in October 1939, and on December 21, 1939, mailed to defendants a notice that such sale had been made, and that plaintiff elected to terminate and cancel the lease, Exhibit B, and that defendants were required to surrender possession on March 1, 1940.

Upon the trial a number of counter-propositions to the alleged terminating of the lease were urged by defendants. One *902 was that the'attempted cancellation and termination on a date later than November 1, 1939, was interdicted by chapter 235, Acts of the Forty-eighth General Assembly, now a part of section 10161, Code, 1939, and in any event was so violative of a matter of public policy declared and established in the act,’for the promotion of the general welfare, that a court in which equity is invoked will not reward plaintiff for its such conduct,-by quieting its title. But in considering in their sequence the questions presented, we will not come to a discussion of chapter 235: For another thing urged by defendants was that the evidence failed to show that plaintiff sold the premises. And we find ourselves in agreement with the trial court that the plaintiff failed to establish that it had sold the land at the date the notice was given, or on January 15, 1940, within the meaning to be accorded paragraph XII. As to there having been a sale, the showing plaintiff made was that on December 4,1939, it signed a written acceptance of a so-called offer in writing that had been made by Alvin W. and Richard H. Brown to purchase the premises. Plaintiff affirms that by accepting the so-called offer it sold the land to the Browns. We are unable to agree that plaintiff’s position is sound, in view of the following considerations:

For convenience, the writing signed by the Browns we will designate as an offer and the writing signed by plaintiff we will designate as an acceptance, without intending thereby any inference as to the real character or effect of the writing. As stated, plaintiff contends that by accepting the offer plaintiff sold the land, but not in that strict sense attributed to the word “sale” in Eldridge v. Kuehl, 27 Iowa 160. What plaintiff means is that it entered into an executory contract, binding on both parties in such manner that it was the equivalent of a sale, because completion of the transfer of title from the seller to the buyer was a certainty, for, if completion of alienation should not be voluntarily accomplished, it would be done under compulsion of the law, at the instance of either party. And in that connection it may here be noted that in interpreting language in leases, to the effect that lessor may terminate the tenancy in case he should sell the premises, this court has not been inclined to hold that the parties necessarily intended to use the word “sell” in the strict sense of a completed conveying of the title. But it is *903 equally true that when so used the word “sell” does imply at least a good faith contract for alienation of the premises from the sellér'to the buyer, and such contract must create an enforceable obligation to convey, and a like one to purchase, binding upon the parties respectively, and enforceable by either against the other. Otherwise the premises have not been sold. Burmeister v. Council Bluffs Inv. Co., 222 Iowa 66, 268 N. W. 188, Luse v. Elliott, 204 Iowa 378, 213 N. W. 410. Whether there was such a contract in the instant case necessitates a further recital of matters appearing in the two writings that constituted such a contract, if there was one.

One of the provisions therein found is that plaintiff will transfer to the Browns a merchantable title. There is also stated a condition that the Browns will make all objections to the validity of the title within 60 days of the date of the contract and not thereafter. Then follows a provision with respect to the undertakings of plaintiff in event of such objections being made. The provision is substantially this. The contract shall be void and the earnest money shall be refunded upon failure of plaintiff to make the title merchantable within 60 days.

It may be conceded that there was a contract of some nature •between the Browns and plaintiff. The question is whether, in the light of our prior holdings, it was such a contract that it can be said the land was sold. Viewing the provisions in the writings that have been mentioned, it will be noted that the Browns contracted for a merchantable title. That this was no inconsequential thing for them to require is evident, because plaintiff was not undertaking to convey by general warranty deed. Its only agreement was that a special warranty deed would be given the Browns. Yet, upon the Browns making objection to anything rendering the title unmerchantable, the plaintiff reserved to itself the option to withdraw from all undertakings to sell and convey, and to annul the contract in toto, and by refunding whatever had been paid to terminate all interests of the Browns in the land. A person on whom the owner of land confers the right to become its purchaser on stated terms, at the election of such person, is in no sense a purchaser. The land has not been sold.

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295 N.W. 436, 229 Iowa 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-hancock-mutual-life-insurance-v-behr-iowa-1940.