Lone Star Development Corporation v. M. A. Miller, A/K/A Michael A. Miller, and David M. Cross

564 F.2d 921
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 1977
Docket76-1595
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 564 F.2d 921 (Lone Star Development Corporation v. M. A. Miller, A/K/A Michael A. Miller, and David M. Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lone Star Development Corporation v. M. A. Miller, A/K/A Michael A. Miller, and David M. Cross, 564 F.2d 921 (10th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

WILLIAM E. DOYLE, Circuit Judge.

In this action in which damages are sought for alleged breach of contract for the sale of real estate, the basic issue is whether the presence of an unpaid loan owed by the vendor, which loan constituted a lien against the real property, was a justification for the vendees to rescind the contract and obtain refund, of the down payment which had been made by the vendees.

On May 29,1974, Lone Star Development Corp. entered into a contract with defendants-appellees to sell to the latter certain real property in Pueblo County, Colorado, for the sum of $588,000. $1,000 was paid as earnest money at the time that the agreement was reach. The balance was to have been paid at the closing on September 16, 1974. At that time plaintiff-appellant, vendor, was obligated to deliver a warranty deed and to furnish a merchantable title.

On March 27, 1974, prior to the date that the contract was signed, the property had been sold at a foreclosure sale for the sum of $479,756.71. This was pursuant to the terms of the deed of trust which secured an obligation in excess of $410,000. But under the law of Colorado, the property was subject to redemption by plaintiff-appellant at any time prior to September 26, 1974. Defendants were fully aware of the foreclosure sale as well as the right of redemption when they entered the contract. Lone Star was then in reorganization under the Bankruptcy Act and did not at that time or thereafter have independent funds with which to redeem the property. Lone Star maintains, and the trial court so found, that it was its intention to use the sale proceeds for discharging the obligation and lien. However, the appellees refused to go through with the transaction based on their contention that the unpaid lien rendered the title unmerchantable since it would not be removed prior to the closing. Thereupon, Lone Star filed the present action seeking damages.

The closing was not carried out and, of course, the property was not redeemed. Lone Star allegedly suffered damages as a result of loss of the transaction and it filed this suit seeking to recover from the defendants-appellants. They in turn moved for summary' judgment and submitted a “stipulation” of facts stating that they agreed to it only for the purpose of the summary judgment motion. Lone Star did not agree with it for any purpose. This statement of facts contained, among other paragraphs, the following:

11. All parties were aware of the state of Plaintiff’s title from before May 29, 1974, through September 16, 1974.
12. At no time from June 12, 1974, through September 16,1974, did Plaintiff have any resources with which to redeem the 19-acre tract from foreclosure.
13. In order to redeem the property from foreclosure, it would have been necessary for Plaintiff to have used Four Hundred Seventy-Nine Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty-Six Dollars Seventy-One Cents (479,756.71) of the money to be supplied by Defendants at closing.
*923 14. Plaintiff did not at any time on, before or after September 16, 1974, ever supply Defendants with any abstract of title or title insurance binder respecting the 19-acre tract.
15. At'no time did Plaintiff ever redeem the property from foreclosure.
18. Defendants did not on September 16, 1974, tender Plaintiff the balance of the purchase price.

In connection with the motion for summary judgment, briefs were submitted and the trial court granted the motion holding that the literal language of the contract governed. Since this required the seller to deliver on September 16, 1974, a general warranty deed conveying the property and since the seller could not come up with the funds on that date and had to rely on receiving these funds from the seller, it was unable to perform. As the court expressed it:

The possibility that a deed then delivered could become valid and sufficient at a later time if the plaintiff did apply the purchase price to the redemption of the property is not a basis for charging the defendants with consequential damages resulting from their failure to make that payment in reliance upon a presumption and conjecture that the plaintiff would make its warranties good by accomplishing the redemption. Given the knowledge of both plaintiff and purchasers that a foreclosure sale had been held before the contract to buy was executed and given the failure of the parties to make any reference to the fact in the contract, there is nothing to indicate that the agreement was anything other than what is reflected in the written contract.

Lone Star Development Corp. v. Miller, No. 74-M-989 (D.Colo. May 3, 1976). The trial court then went on to say that the purchaser had no duty to tender the purchase price until the lien was removed by the payment of the outstanding debt. Based upon this interpretation of the law, the court concluded that there were no issues of fact to be tried and ordered that judgment be entered for the defendants on the complaint and on the defendants’ counterclaim for the down payment.

The prefatory contention is that there existed issues of fact which served to preclude the entry of summary judgment. The questions which were tendered are whether the defendants-appellees were unable to go through with the contract on an independent basis, its own lack of financing; whether Lone Star intended to pay off the lien so as to redeem the property with the funds which it would receive from appellees at the closing; and finally, whether the redemption would have allowed the plaintiff to furnish a merchantable title to the property. Defendants, of course, maintain that the inability of the plaintiff-appellant to pay off the debt and discharge the lien prior to the closing in and of itself constituted a violation of the contract justifying rescission. The trial court, of course, accepted this.

Appellant relies on two Colorado cases, White v. Evans, 120 Colo. 200, 208 P.2d 922 (1949) and Mitchell v. Evans, 150 Colo. 568, 375 P.2d 101 (1962). Neither of these deal with our specific problem, that is repayment of the loan with independent funds. There are quotes in the White case that the purchaser of real estate is entitled to a marketable title, one which is free of doubts and which a reasonable man would accept. There can be no quarrel with this doctrine. It was stated, however, in relation to a fact situation in which a plat existed which dedicated substantial portions of the property purporting to be conveyed to the public. No effort had been made to vacate the plat and so, as a result, the vendors had title to only three and one-half acres while purporting to convey four and one-half. It is not surprising that the court upheld the vendee’s refusal to go through with this transaction.

Mitchell v. Evans, supra, was of the same character. It was conceded that there was a defect in the title not based upon an unpaid lien. Again, the court ruled in favor of the buyer noting that ordinarily a seller has a reasonable time to correct defects, but here the seller had elected to stand on the title that was tendered.

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Bluebook (online)
564 F.2d 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lone-star-development-corporation-v-m-a-miller-aka-michael-a-miller-ca10-1977.