Kauffman v. Raeder

108 F. 171, 54 L.R.A. 247, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3758
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1901
DocketNo. 1,473
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 108 F. 171 (Kauffman v. Raeder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kauffman v. Raeder, 108 F. 171, 54 L.R.A. 247, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3758 (8th Cir. 1901).

Opinions

SANBORN, Circuit Judge,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

,May one party to a contract, who has accepted and retained the benefits of-.-its substantial performance by, the other party, retain and-[175]*175enjoy these benefits, and still rescind the agreement, and escape all the burdens and liabilities of the contract, because the first. party lias failed to perform at the exact time stipulated therein a subordinate covenant, incidental to the main .purpose of the agreement, which goes only to a part of the consideration, and whose breach may be compensated by damages? This is the most important ques-I ion which this case presents. It will be conducive to brevity and perspicuity to obtain a clear idea of the relations of the parties to the agreement to be considered, their respective covenants therein, and the moving considerations which induced them to make their stipulations, before entering upon the discussion of this issue. This conception must he secured by the light of the fundamental rule that the situation of the parties when the contract was made, its subject-matter, and the pm pose of its execution are material to determine the intention of the parties and the meaning of the terms they used, and that when these are ascertained they must prevail over the dry words of the stipulations. Accumulator Co. v. Dubuque St. Ry. Co., 64 Fed. 70, 74, 12 C. C. A. 37, 41, 42; 27 U. S. App. 364, 372; City of Salt Lake City v. Smith (C. C. A.) 104 Fed. 457, 462.

On June 19, 1895, when this agreement was made, the plaintiff, John W. Kauffman, had made a lease of the valuable premises in the heart of the city of St. Louis involved in the negotiation to the Central Realty & Improvement Company for a term of years, whereby he was secured — First, by his legal right to eject the lessee and to take back the premises upon default in the payment of any installment of the rent; and, second, by the covenant of the lessee, in the receipt: during the year then ensuing of a rent of $35,000 in quarterly payments. 'The defendants had formed the project of organizing a corporation, the Century .Building Company, of purchasing this lease from the lessee, of assuming its covenants, and of constructing a building on the leased premises in the name of this prospective corporation. They could derive no rents or income from the premises during the year then ensuing, while the building was in course of construction, and they desired to carry the time of payment of this $35,000 forward to a period when the building would be completed and the property would be yielding an income. For this purpose they induced the plaintiff to make the contract under consideration. In this agreement the plaintiff and the defendants made certain covenants with each other. By the dry words of the contract the plaintiff covenanted to accept preferred stock of the Century Company at its par value for the $35,000 rent which was coming due in the then ensuing year, and to assign and transfer this stock to the defendants and their associates for $35,000 and inierest thereon at 0 per cent, per annum from the time that the rent fell due by rhe terms of the lease. On the other hand, the defendants covenanted to pay this $35,000 and interest to the plaintiff on or before July 1, 1898. The legal effect, the real meaning, of the agreement was that Kauffman covenanted to release (1) the security of his right to eject (he lessee and its assignee, and to recover back the premises, for a failure to pay any installment of this rent, and (2) the security of his lessee’s agreement to pay it, and to accept in lieu of this [176]*176security the personal covenant of the' defendants that they would pay the rent, with interest, on or before July 1, 1898, and the preferred stock of the prospective corporation, which he agreed to hold and to deliver to the defendants upon their performance of their covenant to pay the rent. The considerations which Kauffman agreed to give to the defendants for their covenant to pay the rent and interest were (1) the use by the prospective corporation of the leased premises for a year without the payment of any rent; (2) the release of the premises from Kauffman’s right to retake them for the failure to pay any installment of this rent; (3) the release of the realty company and of its proposed assignee, the Century Company, from liability-to pay this rent; and (4) the assignment and transfer of the 350 shares of stock. The single consideration which the defendants agreed to give to the plaintiff for all these covenants was the payment of the $35,000 and interest on or before July 1, 1898. Thus it will be seen that the main purpose of the contract was the novation the release by the plaintiff of the leased premises, of the lessee and of its proposed assignee from liability for the rent, and the covenant of the defendants to pay it with interest. The desideratum which induced the agreement and which went to the whole consideration of both sides was this novation. Without that the contract would never have been made. The covenant of Kauffman to take, to hold, and to assign and transfer the stock to the defendants was subordinate and incidental to the main purpose of the agreement, never induced its making, and went only to a part of the consideration. It was not their prospective procurement of this stock that induced the defendants to promise to pay the $35,000 and interest, but it was the use of the premises by their corporation without the payment of rent for a year, and the release of the leased premises, of the lessee, and of its proposed assignee from liability for this payment. They contemplated organizing the proposed corporation and issuing its stock themselves, and they were not hiring strangers to purchase this stock for them. Nor was it the prospective acquisition of this stock, which this contract compelled Kauffman to hold in trust and to transfer to the defendants, that induced the plaintiff to agree to release his property, his lessee, and its proposed assignee from liability for the rent; but it was the personal covenant of the defendants to pay it. The plaintiff was not desirous of purchasing the stock, but the defendants, by means of their covenant to pay the rent and interest, hired him to accept and hold it until they paid it. The terms of the agreement are not conditioned by either the market price or the agreed value of the stock as in a contract of sale, but solely by the amount of the rent and the interest upon it. Thus the situation of the parties when the contract was made, the ends they sought to attain, and the very terms of the agreement compel the conclusion that its main purpose was the novation, that the stipulation concerning the stock went only to a part of the consideration and was subordinate and incidental to this purpose, while the covenants which went to the whole consideration of the agreement, those which actually induced the contract, were, on the one hand, the promise of the plaintiff to release the property, the lessee, and [177]*177its assignee from liability for the rent, and, on the other, the covenant of the defendants to pay it, with interest, on or before July 1, 1898.

Now the plaintiff has performed the substantial parts of his covenants, and the defendants have accepted and retained the substantial benchts which they sought to secure by the performance of his covenants, while they have refused to perform any portion of their own.

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Bluebook (online)
108 F. 171, 54 L.R.A. 247, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kauffman-v-raeder-ca8-1901.