Keifer v. Dreier

205 N.W. 472, 200 Iowa 798
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 205 N.W. 472 (Keifer v. Dreier) 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
Keifer v. Dreier, 205 N.W. 472, 200 Iowa 798 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Vermilion, J.

The plaintiff-appellee, on May 19, 1919, entered into a written contract with the appellants for the purl chase of a tract of 160 acres of land for $40,000. By the terms of the contract appellee was to pay $3,000 on the execution of the agreement, $8,020 on March 1, 1920, and $2,980 on March 1, 1923, and to assume and pay from March 1, 1920, as a part of the purchase price, a first mortgage of $8,000 and a second mortgage of $18,000. The contract provided that' thé time of payment was of the essence of the contract, and for a forfeiture of the right of the purchaser, in case of default, upon thirty days’ written notice. It was further provided that possession of the land was to be given March 1, 1920, and that the vendors would, on receiving the payments and interest promptly at the time provided, execute and deliver a warranty deed of the premises and an abstract showing merchantable title.

The appellee made the cash payment and the one required to be made on March 1, 1920, and went into possession of the land on that date. She also paid the interest due March 1, 1921, on the amount of the mortgage indebtedness which she was to assume and pay.

The land in question and an adjoining 160 acres had belonged to one Van Anne, and the whole tract of 320 acres was incumbered with a first mortgage of $16,000 and a second mortgage of $36,000. Van Anne, prior to the execution of the contract between appellants and appellee, had sold the 160 acres in question to appellants under a contract similar to that entered into by appellee, except as to the consideration — which was $36,000 — and the amounts of the payments.

On February 21, 1922, the appellee commenced an action against appellants to rescind her contract with them and to recovér the amount she had paid, on the grounds: (1) that the *800 contract had been procured by fraud, and (2) that appellants had no title, and the land was incumbered by mortgages in amounts double those she had agreed to assume and pay. She offered to surrender possession of the land and account for the rents and profits.

After March 1, 1923, the date on which, according to the contract, the final payment was to be made and the deed delivered, appellee, by an amendment to her petition, alleged that the appellants did not have title to the land on the date when, by the. contract, they were to execute a deed, and that they never had title, and could not perform and carry out their contract to convey title with- such incumbrances as were provided for in the contract.

The defenses presented to the claim of rescission were, in brief, that appellants would be and were able to perform their contract; that they had no knowledge, until the commencement of the action, that the mortgages were double the amount recited in the contract; that appellee had knowledge, prior to March 1, .1920, of the amount of the mortgages, and of the fact that appellants did not have title to the land, and had but a contract for its purchase from Van Anne; and that, by making a payment under the contract, paying the interest due on the part of the mortgage indebtedness assumed by her, and taking possession of the land-with such knowledge,-she waived any right to rescind the contract on account of the state of the title or the amount of the incumbrances. By a cross-petition, appellants sought a recovery of the interest due March 1, 1922, on the amount of the mortgage indebtedness assumed by appellee, which, upon her failure to pay, they had paid.

There was no evidence to sustain the allegation of fraud, and that question is no longer in the case.

Upon appellee’s failure to pay the interest due on the mortgage indebtedness March 1, 1922, appellants, on May 4, 1922, caused to be served on her a notice of intention to forfeit the contract on that account.. Thereupon, appellee commenced another action, to enjoin the threatened forfeiture of the contract. The two actions were consolidated and tried together. The trial took place after March 1, 1923, and resulted in the *801 granting of the relief asked by appellee, and the dismissal of appellants’ cross-petition.

At the time of the trial, appellants' did not have title to the land, and there had been no change in the mortgages. There was testimony to the effect that the holder of the second mortgage had agreed to a division of that mortgage, so that there would be a second mortgage of but $18,000 on the' land in question, and that the first mortgage could be paid on any March 1st, the date the interest was due, and a new loan of $8,000 obtained, secured by a first mortgage on the'land. There was no explanation of the appellants’ failure to secure title. Appellee was under no obligation to pay appellants the money due from her to enable them to use it to secure title. Webb v. Hancher, 127 Iowa 269. She was, under the contract, entitled to a conveyance on payment of the money due. The record is conclusive that, even at the time of the trial,'appellants were in no position to perform their contract, had demand for performance been made.

I. It is admitted that Mrs. Rohde, the daughter of appellant, acted for her in making the original contract and in what was done under it at the time when the second payment was made, the interest on the mortgages was paid, and possession was taken. Appellee testified that she left the whole matter’of the purchase of the land and the settlement made March 1, 1920, to her daughter, and that she sent the money to her. It fairly appears from the evidence that Mrs. Rohde knew of the fact that appellants did not have title to the land, and that they 'held but a contract of purchase from Van Anne, before paying the second installment under the contract of the interest on the mortgages and taking possession of the land. Van Anne testified that she asked him, about two weeks before March 1, 1920, who was going to furnish the abstract, and that he told her he had agreed to furnish appellants an abstract when he sold to them, and he supposed he would have to furnish her one the same way. The money to malee the payment coming due March 1, 1920, was sent to a bank in Rock Rapids. Mr. Shade, the president of the bank, testified that Mrs. Rohde asked him to have the title examined; that he told appellants they would have to furnish an abstract before the money would be turned over; that hé had *802 Mr. Morain examine the abstract; that Morain delivered the abstract and a written opinion as to the title to him, and he delivered the abstract and the opinion to her before the money was disbursed. The abstract showed the mortgages on the land, and that the title was in Van Anne, and the opinion called attention explicitly to these facts. There was no testimony from Mrs. Rohde, she having died before the trial.

Mrs. Rohde, having demanded the abstract and procured an opinion as to the title in the interest of her principal, and for the evident purpose of determining whether she would make further payment under the contract, must be deemed to have had such knowledge of the title and the incumbrances as the instruments she so procured plainly disclosed. The knowledge of Mrs. Rohde, the agent, thus acquired, was the knowledge of appellee, the principal.

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Bluebook (online)
205 N.W. 472, 200 Iowa 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keifer-v-dreier-iowa-1925.