Landura Corporation v. Schroeder

539 P.2d 150, 272 Or. 644, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 465
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 539 P.2d 150 (Landura Corporation v. Schroeder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landura Corporation v. Schroeder, 539 P.2d 150, 272 Or. 644, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 465 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is a suit for specific performance of a contract for the sale of land. After the sustaining of a demurrer by defendants (the sellers), on the ground that the contract was not sufficiently definite for specific performance, particularly in its terms relating to contract payments, mortgage security and partial acreage release, plaintiff (the purchaser), filed an amended complaint seeking specific performance of the agreement as a cash sale, pursuant to a contract provision permitting it to pay off the contract balance in cash at any time. Defendants appeal from a de *646 cree granting specific performance on the condition that the contract balance of $100,000 be paid within 45 days.

The facts.

Defendants are the owners of 19 acres of land in Woodbnrn, on which they reside. They are elderly people and neither have received formal education beyond the eighth grade. Mr. Schroeder, however, had engaged in previous real estate transactions.

On September 26, 1973, they were approached by Roger Midura, a builder and a “co-owner” of plaintiff, a California corporation, with an offer to purchase the property. After three or four visits to defendants’ home, an agreement was reached on a sale price of $105,000. Based upon his discussions with defendants, Mr. Midura then typed a proposed contract of sale, including, among other things, a provision for payments over a term of 10 years, with interest at 7.25 per cent, “in order to assure the SELLER a guaranteed cash flow with minimal taxation on long-term capital gains.” The contract as proposed by Mr. Midura, however, also included a provision that “the PURCHASER can pay off any and/or all notes and/or mortgages * * * at any time, with no pre-payment penalties * *

That agreement was then submitted by Mr. Midura to defendants at their home and was read to them by him at that time and they also read it at that time, according to his testimony. According to defendants, however, Mr. Midura read it rapidly and they did not read it. The agreement was then signed by Mrs. Schroeder before leaving for work, but after some discussion of her desire to keep certain items, which was agreeable to Mr. Midura.

He and Mr. Schroeder then went to a bank where they discussed the agreement with one of its officers, *647 who suggested that an attorney be engaged to prepare the necessary escrow papers. Mr. Schroeder, however, objected to engaging an attorney.

While at the bank five “amendments” were added to the agreement below the signature of Mrs. Schroeder. These “amendments” not only included reference to the items which she desired to retain, but also provided, among other things, that as part of the down payment plaintiff would “assume the $10,583.33 assessment held by the City of Woodburn” and that the cash down payment would accordingly be reduced from $25,000 to $14,000; that the seller would pay all 1973-74 property taxes and give the purchaser one-fourth of the 1973-74 wheat crop.

Mr. Schroeder and Mr. Midura then signed the agreement in the spaces provided above these “amendments.” According to the testimony, Mr. Schroeder was under the impression that this was the “final agreement” to be executed by him. Mr. Midura then delivered to Mr. Schroeder a check for $5,000, which was accepted, endorsed and deposited by him.

A few days later Mr. Schroeder, in a conversation with a friend or neighbor, seemed pleased with the sale and the sales price until informed that, in effect, he was “giving them the house” at the price per acre he was being paid for his land. Mr. Schroeder admitted that he then “changed [his] mind.”

About two weeks after signing the contract, Mr. Midura “called” the defendants’ home and Mrs. Schroeder informed him that defendants did not intend to proceed with the transaction. They subsequently refused to sign the more formal contract of sale as presented to them by plaintiff, which later made an offer to pay the entire purchase price in cash.

*648 1. The contract provision permitting cash payment was inconsistent with the provision for a “guaranteed cash flow” for 10 years.

Among other contentions, defendants say that the contract, as prepared by plaintiff, is not properly subject to specific performance because of a fatal inconsistency in two of its important and material provisions. Thus, defendants contend that the provision of the contract, as prepared by Mr. Midura, under which plaintiff may pay off the entire contract at any time, “with no pre-payment penalties,” is completely inconsistent with the provision under which defendants were to be paid “a guaranteed cash flow with minimal taxation on long-term capital gains” with payments to be made over a period of 10 years and with interest at 7.25 per cent, as intended and understood by them.

In response, plaintiff contends that these provisions are not so inconsistent as to make the contract unenforceable by specific performance; that defendants “had no real preference as to the manner of payment,” but “wanted their price”; that plaintiff “would have preferred long term payments,” but “provided an alternative means of payment as is common in all contracts, giving the purchaser the option to prepay without penalty.” Plaintiff also contends that:

“The intent of the parties at the time of the execution of the contract must govern. Given the intent, clear and unequivocal by the testimony, the *649 contract provisions of § 2 and § 4 are not so inconsistent as to deny specific performance.” (Emphasis theirs)

and that:

“The trial judge had the opportunity to view and listen to the parties to determine their real intent. * * *” (Emphasis theirs)

Accordingly, plaintiff contends that even though the contract provisions for payments over a period of 10 years were not sufficiently definite for enforcement by specific performance, the trial court properly entered a decree granting specific performance of the contract as a cash sale under the authority of Phillips v. Johnson, 266 Or 544, 514 P2d 1337 (1973).

We agree that in determining whether contract provisions are inconsistent it is important to seek the intent of the parties.

In addition, as stated in Loomis v. MacFarlane, 50 Or 129, 134-35, 91 P 466 (1907) (quoting from another authority):

“* * * ‘Where the true import and meaning of a written instrument is doubtful, and the intention of the parties cannot be determined from its language, the right doctrine is that it should be construed most strongly against the person using the doubtful language, * *

Upon reviewing the record in this case as in a trial de novo on the appeal of a suit in equity, we find that it was intended by the parties at the time of the execution of this contract that defendants have a “guaranteed cash flow” over a period of 10 years, interest at 7.25 per cent and with “minimal taxation on long-term capital gains.”

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Bluebook (online)
539 P.2d 150, 272 Or. 644, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landura-corporation-v-schroeder-or-1975.