Mader v. Hintz

186 N.W.2d 897
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1971
DocketCiv. 8566
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 186 N.W.2d 897 (Mader v. Hintz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mader v. Hintz, 186 N.W.2d 897 (N.D. 1971).

Opinion

EUGENE A. BURDICK, District Judge.

This is an action brought by the respondents, Joe Mader, Sr., and Viola Mae Mader, as vendors, against the appellants, Gottfried Hintz, Arthur Tietz and Murlin M. Hintz, as purchasers, to reform a contract for deed relating to certain premises known as “Mader’s Trailer Court” in the outskirts of Bismarck, and to cancel the contract for failure of the purchasers to make payments. The appellants • counterclaimed for recovery of all payments made and for the value of improvements made by them, claiming that they had rescinded the contract by reason of the alleged unmarketable condition of the title to the premises. The district court ordered the contract for deed reformed with respect to the description of the premises and ordered cancellation of the contract for failure to make payments, and provided for a ninety-day period of redemption. The appellants appealed from the judgment entered and demanded a trial de novo in this court.

On July 17, 1959, the parties entered into an earnest money contract for the sale and purchase of the trailer court, a tract comprising 3.84 acres, describing it as follows:

“The Mader’s Trailer Court located in Section 5, Township 138 North, Range 80 West of the 5th PM consisting of approximately five and one-half acres more or less and being located South and East of the Missouri River Bridge in Burleigh County, North Dakota.”

The earnest money contract set forth the purchase price of $100,000.00, and terms of payment, and acknowledged receipt of $1,-000.00 as the earnest money consideration. The earnest money contract also provided as follows:

“It is further agreed that on the 24th day of July, 1959, and upon payment of the sum of $24,000.00, above mentioned, the parties hereto will enter into a contract for deed covering and concerning said sale and purchase, and further providing for a delivery of warranty deed by parties of the first part upon full payment of the purchase price by parties of the second part

The earnest money contract is silent as to the quality of the title to be delivered upon *899 performance of the contract; neither did it provide for the furnishing of an abstract of title.

On July 24, 1959, conformable to the earnest money contract, the parties executed a contract for deed covering:

“The following described premises situated in the City of Bismarck in Burleigh County, North Dakota, namely: A tract of land lying in the Northwest Quarter of Section 5, Township 138 North Range 80 West and in the Northeast Quarter of Section 6, Township 138 North Range 80 West of the 5th PM that is described as follows

The description then continues by metes and bounds which failed to describe the premises intended by both parties to be the subject of the contract. Unaware that the metes and bounds description of the premises was confusing and inaccurate, the purchasers caused the contract to be recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh County on the 17th day of August, 1959.

The contract for deed also contained the following provision:

“At the time of the execution and delivery of this agreement, said parties of the first part promise and agree to furnish at their own expense, to said parties of the second part an abstract of title to said property showing a good and marketable title thereof in said parties of the first part, free of all incumbrances as of the date of this agreement, except special assessments that have not as yet been annually levied and annually included in the yearly taxes against said property for public improvements heretofore made.”

The purchasers paid the $24,000.00 balance of the down payment upon execution of the contract for deed, and on August 1, 1959, as provided in the contract for deed, went into possession of the premises and continued in uninterrupted possession until about three weeks after giving “Notice of Rescission by Purchaser” on December 11, 1967. Until that date, the purchasers also had made timely payment of ninety-nine monthly installments of the purchase price as they became due. Each monthly installment was in the sum of $573.75 and included .interest at 4½ per cent per annum, “being payable on the amortization principle.” The installment payments were to be made commencing September 10, 1959, “and then on or before the 10th day of each month thereafter until fully paid.” The purchasers also had the right to prepay the balance or any part thereof without penalty.

The vendors did not furnish any abstract of title to the premises to the purchasers until after one of the purchasers, Murlin Hintz, who was the actual operator of the trailer court under the contract for deed, had received a request from the State Laboratories Department that it be furnished (1) a blueprint of the trailer court showing a plan for respacing trailers in the court in compliance with its regulations, (2) “the date when the sewage system of your trailer court will be connected to the city sewage disposal system,” and (3) “the completion date for the rewiring of the electrical circuits in your court.” The letter of request from the State Laboratories Department is dated November 16, 1967. In an endeavor to prepare the requested plat, using the metes and bounds description of the contract for deed as a guide, the purchasers first learned that the description was faulty. Thereupon, the purchasers consulted legal counsel who advised that they procure an abstract of the title to the premises. Promptly upon receiving the purchasers’ request, the vendors furnished them with an abstract of the title certified to November 30, 1967. The purchasers had the abstract of title examined by their attorney who advised them that the title was “bad, very bad.” Without further ado, the purchasers prepared and delivered to the vendors a “Notice of Rescission by Purchaser.” The vendors, after receipt of the notice, informed the purchasers that *900 they wanted nothing to do with possession of the premises and declined to acquiesce in the attempted rescission. On the contrary, the vendors served upon the purchasers a notice of willingness to do anything necessary to continue the contract for deed in force and to assure the purchasers a marketable title to the premises.

The purchasers failed to pay the 100th installment due December 10, 1967, and vacated the premises about January 2, 1968, whereupon the vendors commenced the action at bar on January 8, 1968. The vendors alleged in their complaint the failure of the purchasers to pay the installment due December 10, 1967, and taxes for the year 1967, and declared the unpaid installments due and owing. Pursuant to stipulation of the parties, the district court appointed a receiver to operate the premises while the action was pending in the district court and during the ninety day period of redemption specified by the court. The purchasers failed to redeem the amount remaining unpaid on the contract for deed within the time specified and, thereupon, the court discharged the receiver and ordered possession of the premises to be restored to the vendors.

We shall consider first whether the purchasers had grounds for the attempted rescission of the contract for deed.

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186 N.W.2d 897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mader-v-hintz-nd-1971.