McCourt v. Johns

53 P. 601, 33 Or. 561, 1898 Ore. LEXIS 164
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 53 P. 601 (McCourt v. Johns) 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
McCourt v. Johns, 53 P. 601, 33 Or. 561, 1898 Ore. LEXIS 164 (Or. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolverton

delivered the opinion.

On September 16,1891, the plaintiff became the owner, by mesne assignments and transfers, of a certain bond for a deed made, executed and delivered by George W. Johns and Julia A. Johns, widow, to Edward Snell, June 21, 1886, whereby, in consideration of the sum of $7,255.52, to be paid by him on June 21, 1896, without interest, and that he would assume the payment of $1,000 and accumulating interest due the school fund of the State of Oregon, they obliged themselves to convey to the said Snell or his assigns, certain real property situate in Marion County, Oregon, described as. containing 229.32 acres. Snell executed his note for the said sum of $7,255.52, conditioned as by the bond indicated, and prior to its maturity he and his assigns paid the amount due the school fund, and $255.52 upon the note. On the twenty-eighth day of September, 1895, in a suit then pending in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Marion County, against James McCourt, the plaintiff herein, and George W. and Julia A. Johns, two of the defendants herein, and others, it was duly adjudged and decreed that the Salem Improvement Company and other plaintiffs therein were the owners in fee and entitled to the possession of 6.28 acres of said land, thereby ousting McCourt and the said Johns therefrom. It was further decreed therein that McCourt and the [563]*563Johns pay the costs of suit, amounting to $426. It is shown by the testimony that the said George W. and Julia A. Johns were not the owners nor entitled to the possession of another small parcel of such premises, containing 4.90 acres ; and it is further apparent that, by an error of computation, the number of acres mentioned in the bond is 3.75 acres in excess of the actual acreage according to the description. On June 20, 1896, plaintiff made to defendants George W. and Julia A. Johns an offer in writing to pay the amount remaining due upon said promissory note, and to perform all the conditions of said bond on his part, to be accepted by defendants at their option on either the twentieth, twenty-first or twenty-second days of the same month, and notified them of the absence of title to the several parcels hereinbefore alluded to, and of their inability to convey the same, and that if they were unable or unwilling to convey to plaintiff a good and sufficient title to all the lands described in such bond, and surrender full possession thereof, he would rescind their contract, and demanded of defendants repayment of all moneys paid under the terms' of the bond, together with the reasonable value of all improvements made upon the premises during the time of its occupancy by the plaintiff and his predecessors. On the same day defendants offered to deliver to plaintiff a deed executed by them covering the lands described in the bond, and on the tenth day of, July, 1896, the defendant George W. Johns tendered to the plaintiff a warranty deed to all the lands described in the bond, in accordance with its terms and conditions, together with a release of the mortgage executed by George W. Johns to Julia A. Johns, and a deed from the Salem Improvement Company of all its interest in and to said premises, and demanded the payment of the amount due upon the $7,255.52 note, and notified [564]*564plaintiff in writing that lie was ready and willing to comply with all the terms and conditions of said' bond. The plaintiff refused to accept the deeds and releases, and failed to pay the sum demanded, but notified defendants of his rescission of the contracts. George W. Johns assigned his interest in the $7,255.52 note to Julia A. Johns, and thereafter, on December 31, 1886, to secure the payment of a certain other promissory note of $10,500, with interest at six per cent, per annum, due from him to the said Julia A. Johns, he made, executed and delivered to her a mortgage upon all his interest in. the premises described in the bond. . Subsequently another mortgage was given for the purpose of correcting some errors discovered in this one. The releases above referred to were intended as a discharge of both these mortgages. Prior to the commencement of this suit, the said Julia A. Johns became indebted to the defendant John Hughes, and, to secure the payment of such indebtedness, she indorsed and assigned to him the said notes of Snell and George "W. Johns, and the mortgage securing the latter.

The plaintiff prays a decree declaring a rescission of the bond or contract of sale, for the recovery of the part of the consideration paid, and for an accounting and rebovery for expenditures made in improving the premises. The court below decreed, in accordance with the prayer of the defendants, a foreclosure of the bond and of the mortgage subsequently executed, and directed that the proceeds arising from a sale of the premises under such foreclosures be applied: First, to the payment of the costs of suit; second, to the payment of the said indebtedness of Julia A. Johns to the defendant John Hughes; third, to the payment of the Salem Improvement Company’s claim for costs in the former suit; and, fourth, to the payment of the balance due on said [565]*565bond to Julia A. Johns, after deducting the foregoing claims, and the overplus, if any remains, to the plaintiff. To reverse the decree, the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal, wherein two questions are presented for our consideration : (1) Was plaintiff’s alleged tender of payment in writing sufficient; and ( 2) was he entitled to a rescission of the contract by reason of the inability of George W. and Julia A. Johns to convey a good title to a small portion of the premises described in the bond.

As it pertains to the first, the defendants tender a distinct issue in their answer, in the following language : “Admit that plaintiff, on or about the nineteenth day of June, 1896, made to the defendants George W. Johns and Julia A. Johns an offer in writing, substantially as pleaded in their complaint, but these defendants say that the said offer in writing was not made in good faith, and the said plaintiff was not able at said time to pay the sums of money due upon said bond, or any part thereof.” The plaintiff’s own testimony disposes of this question, as it shows a failure to establish a valid tender. He says, in substance, that he engaged the money of John Savage ; that Savage was to let him have $30 per acre upon the bottom land, provided the title was good; but, when informed that the title was bad, he refused to make the loan. This clearly shows that plaintiff was not prepared to make his tender good, if the defendant had accepted the offer and been prepared to have complied with his demand in its minutest detail. The statute (§ 852, Hill’s Ann. Laws) has provided that “an offer in writing to pay a particular sum of money is, if not accepted, equivalent to an actual production and tender of the money ’ ’; but it was not the intention of the legislature thereby to dispense with the readiness and ability on the part of the one making the tender to pay in substantial accord with its terms. It was so held [566]*566in Ladd v. Mason, 10 Or. 308, and the rule there established is decisive of the question here. From the fact that the plaintiff knew, at the time of the alleged tender, that the defendants Johns could not comply with the conditions of the bond by conveying a good title to all the premises described therein, it is evident he had no intention of having the money ready for acceptance on the part of the Johnses, nor was he able at the time to make good the terms of bis written tender.

This brings us incidentally to another question.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P. 601, 33 Or. 561, 1898 Ore. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccourt-v-johns-or-1898.