King v. Raab

99 N.W. 306, 123 Iowa 632
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 16, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 99 N.W. 306 (King v. Raab) 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
King v. Raab, 99 N.W. 306, 123 Iowa 632 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

It must be assumed at the outset that plaintiff is entitled to a specific performance of the contract. The district court so decreed, and, as defendants have not appealed, our decision cannot be any less favorable to them. Smith v. King, 88 Iowa, 257; West v. West, 90 Iowa, 41; McWhirter v. Crawford, 104 Iowa, 550. Eor this 'reason all the defenses interposed and somewhat elaborately argued are to be disregarded, save that with relation to the assessment of the cost of paving the street on which the lots abutted.

i. option to lesseeaseby The lease containing the option permitting the purchase of the land at any time during the term of five years took effect January 1, 1897, the paving was done at a cost of $321.60 in 1898, and the .option exercised in 1900. This option contained in the lease was equivalent to a continuing offer to sell, to which the notice of the election to purchase was an acceptance, and the two constituted a completed contract of sale as of the date of such notice. Willard v. Tayloe, 8 Wall., 557 (19 L. Ed. 501).

*• purchase°iand change^if1 property. The adequacy of the price when the lease was- executed is not questioned. And the authorities cited by both parties are-to the effect that any change in the value of the property or the infice occurring subsequently without fault of either party will excuse neither from compliance with the contract. Thus, in Falls v. Carpenter, 1 Devereux & Battle Eg., N. C., 237 (28 Am. Dec. 613), with reference to increase in válue, the court said: “The thing contracted for is in equity considered the purchaser’s from the time of the contract, and stands as security, only, to the seller. Ordinarily, therefore, advantages or disadvantages arising subsequently, either from un[635]*635foreseen accidents, or from contingencies on which the value was known at the time to be dependent, cannot be a cause for refusing to enforce an executory agreement more than for annulling an executed conveyance.” And it was observed by Field, Jr., in Willard v. Tayloe, supra, that: “The question in such cases always is, was the contract, at the time it was made, a reasonable and fair one ? If such was the fact, the parties are considered as having taken upon themselves the risk of subsequent fluctations in value, and such fluctuations are not allowed to prevent its specific enforcement.” In that case it was held that payment was to be in the currency constituting a legal tender when the contract was entered into, rather than greenbacks, subsequently made legal tender by an act of Congress. See, also, Low v. Treadwell, 12 Me., 441; Young v. Wright, 4 Wis., 144 (65 Am. Dec. 303); Pomeroy Specific Performance, sections 195, 322. The same principle was announced in Hale v. Wilkinson, 21 Grat. 75, where, the purchase price stipulated was $6,000 in Confederate currency. At the time of the tender this was worth but $385 in currency of the United States. As no delay of the vendee had exposed the vendor to this collapse in the consideration, the change in value was held not to afford any defense. But in neither line of decisions were changes of values occasioned by the involuntary acts of either party.

3' fomancefer" granting15 for sanie‘ Here the improvement of the street was directed by the town council, and the payment therefor by the owner, in order to protect the property from tax sale, compelled. It was in the nature of a compulsory improvement of hhe premises, and, too, one which the parties cannot be held to have anticipated in entering into the agreement. True knowledge of a municipality’s power to'pave its streets is to be imputed, but the exercise of this power in the smaller cities and towns of the state has been of such rare occurance that parties contracting for the sale of property abutting on the streets ought not to be held to have had in mind possible improvements of this character. As we understand, the record, there had been no pav[636]*636ing in Oedar Fall's at tbe time the lease was executed, and this lot abuts on a side street, and not on one of the main thoroughfares. The defendant has been compelled to expend a large sum of money in enhancing the value of this lot. He cannot be said to have contracted with reference to its changed condition, and we think the court was warranted in imposing equitable terms as a condition to specific performance. It is suggested that on the same ground payment made for a sidewalk might be added to the price stated in an option, but ordinarily the cost of such an improvement is not so large that its payment and loss can be said to be a hardship. Moreover, sidewalks, permanent and temporary, are so common that the owner may have been held to have contracted with respect to the possibility of being required to lay them at any time. The right to impose conditions where there has been a change of circumstances for which neither party can be blamed has often been recognized.

In Willard v. Tayloe, supra, the owner of property had leased property for ten years with an option to the lessee to purchase at a stated price. A year before the lease expired:, but after the Civil War had been in progress some time, the lessee elected to purchase, and tendered the stipulated price in legal tender treasury notes of the United States. The war had the effect of retiring gold and silver coin from general •use in commercial transactions, and legal tender notes had become the ordinary medium of exchange, though worth but 'about fifty cents on the dollar of standard coin. The tender was refused by Tayloe, and thereupon Willard.brought suit for specific performance. The treasury notes had by law been made legal tender, and, if Willard had bought the property on a coin basis, upon deferred payments in 1854 his tender of payment in 1864 in treasury notes would have been good, notwithstanding their depreciation. But in the face of the fact that the contract was a legal and valid one, and that the tender of payment would have been deemed good and sufficient in an action at law between the parties, it was held that by reason of the unforeseen change in circumstances, [637]*637which made enforcement according to the strict measure of legal rights a great hardship to the defendant, a court of equity would order specific performance only upon condition that the plaintiff would make payment in coin or its equivalent. In disposing of the case the court said: “In general it may be said that the specific relief will be granted when it is ajjparent from a view of all the circumstances of the particular case that it will subserve the ends of justice, and that it will be withheld when, from a like view, it appears that it will produce hardship or injustice to either of the parties. It is not sufficient, as shown by the cases cited to call forth equitable interposition, that the legal obligation under the contract to do the specific thing desired may be perfect. It must also appear that the specific enforcement will work no hardship or injustice, for, if that result should follow, the court would leave the parties to their remedies at law, unless the granting of the specific relief can be accompanied with conditions which will obviate that result. If that result can be thus accomplished a specific performance will generally, in such case, be denied conditionally. It is the advantage of the court of equity, as observed by Lord Eedesdale in Davis v. Hone, 2 Sch. & Lef.

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.W. 306, 123 Iowa 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-raab-iowa-1904.