McFadden v. Wilder

429 P.2d 694, 6 Ariz. App. 60, 1967 Ariz. App. LEXIS 510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJuly 3, 1967
Docket1 CA-CIV 116
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 429 P.2d 694 (McFadden v. Wilder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFadden v. Wilder, 429 P.2d 694, 6 Ariz. App. 60, 1967 Ariz. App. LEXIS 510 (Ark. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

*62 DONOFRIO, Judge.

Appellant Victorine McFadden, defendant below (hereinafter called defendant) appeals from a judgment entered against her for specific performance for the sale and conveyance of certain real estate involved in an action brought by plaintiffs Wilder who are husband and wife.

Plaintiffs Wilder and the defendant had been close friends since the defendant worked as a waitress for the Wilders in 1957 at Seligman, Arizona. They had met before that in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Inasmuch as a narration of the facts would become quite involved and unnecessary, we set forth in chronological order the following pertinent facts:

The realty involved had been jointly owned by the defendant and her former husband, Hall. She acquired this property, consisting of one large house and one small house, through a settlement in a divorce action with Hall in 1952.

In 1959, following a divorce from another husband, Seidel, defendant anticipated litigation with her ex-stepmother-in-law Seidel and at that time executed a promissory note for $4800 to the plaintiffs and secured it by a mortgage on the real estate. There was no consideration paid, however there had accumulated some small personal loans from plaintiffs to defendant. The mortgage was recorded.

In 1960, for a prior debt owed to her ex-husband Hall, the defendant executed in his favor a note and mortgage for $4500 on the same realty. Later in 1960 defendant agreed to sell the property to plaintiffs for $7500, $2300 of which was to be paid by a trade outside of escrow and the balance was to be handled through escrow. The $2300 was to be considered paid when a satisfaction of the 1959 mortgage to plaintiffs was deposited in escrow.

The trade consisted of $300 which was ■owed by defendant to plaintiffs, $1000 in cash, and an automobile, all of which the defendant received. Plaintiffs have not filed a satisfaction of the 1959 mortgage with the escrow agent which, according to the terms of the agreement, was to be evidence that the $2300 was paid, nor have they paid the $1000 annual installments on the balance. Plaintiffs later paid defendant another $100, making the balance due $5100.

Prior to the escrow plaintiffs had been renting the large house from defendant, paying her $50 per month. After the escrow they continued to live in the large house but ceased paying rent. Plaintiffs also rented out the small house, retaining the rents. They spent $2500 on improvements to both houses.

In 1961 the escrow agent wrote defendant and the plaintiffs’ attorney asking whether to proceed with the escrow or to cancel it. There was no answer from either party.

A complaint for foreclosure of the 1959 mortgage was thereafter filed by plaintiffs in 1962, naming defendant and her ex-husband Hall as defendants.

In 1963 the complaint was amended to ask for specific performance. That same year Hall filed a complaint against defendant and plaintiffs for foreclosure of his mortgage. The cases were consolidated for trial. At the end of plaintiffs’ evidence, the Court directed a verdict for Hall on both counts. Judgment was given in favor of Hall on his complaint and a decree for foreclosure and sale was issued. The Court granted defendant’s motion for dismissal of the foreclosure count of plaintiffs’ complaint, but granted specific performance to the plaintiffs on the agreement to sell. This appeal by defendant from the judgment against her for specific performance followed.

The appeal raises questions which can better be stated by setting forth defendant’s contentions which fall in four categories:

First, that the escrow instructions were not complied with and that breach should *63 relieve defendant. The satisfaction of the 1959 mortgage was not deposited;

Second, that the plaintiffs were guilty of laches. After the letter from the escrow agent to plaintiffs’ attorney, plaintiffs did nothing to complete the escrow;

Third, that there was abandonment. In support, the defendant notes that plaintiffs’ original complaint for foreclosure was not amended to include specific performance until it was obvious that foreclosure would fail; and

Fourth, that the trial court’s order to convey free of the Hall mortgage was contrary to the evidence. Plaintiffs had either actual or constructive notice of the Hall mortgage. Plaintiffs were to assume that mortgage.

Ultimately all of these questions are concerned with whether the trial court acted properly in granting specific performance. In analyzing each of these four questions, we keep in mind the proposition that the granting of specific performance is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial court. Ensign v. Bohn, 1 Ariz.App. 386, 403 P.2d 321 (1965).

We deal with the fourth question first. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit “3”, a handwritten self-styled receipt by defendant for down payment on the two pieces of property, stated that the full price is $7500. No mention is made of any mortgage. The escrow instructions state a sales price of $7500. In the section of the instructions titled MORTGAGE OF RECORD the word “none” is written. These escrow instructions were signed by the defendant. Plaintiffs’ testimony is that they did not know of the Hall mortgage until after it was listed on the preliminary title report received by plaintiffs’ attorney.

This Court will view the evidence in the light most favorable to sustaining the judgment of the trier of fact. Linsenmeyer v. Flood, 1 Ariz.App. 502, 405 P.2d 293 (1965). We hold that there was sufficient evidence for the trial court to conclude that plaintiffs did not intend to assume the Hall mortgage and that there was an agreement to convey the property free of any mortgage.

The question involved in the first category raises the defendant’s claim of a breach of the following portion of the escrow instructions:

“ * * * The sum of $2,300.00 shown on the face of these instructions shall be considered paid when buyer herein deposits a Satisfaction of that certain Mortgage as executed by seller herein to buyer herein, said mortgage being dated October 5, 1959, recorded October 6, 1959 in Book 166 of Official Records, page 80-81, records of Yavapai County, Arizona.”

The thrust of defendant’s argument is that this provision of the escrow instructions is a condition precedent; that therefore plaintiffs were required to deposit the satisfaction of mortgage in escrow before November 20, 1960, as stated in the instructions; that plaintiffs then could have made a demand on the defendant, and if defendant had failed to deliver marketable title she would have committed a breach, but until that time plaintiffs had not performed sufficiently to entitle them to specific performance.

The duty to deliver marketable title is also a condition precedent. Sabin v. Rauch, 75 Ariz. 275, 255 P.2d 206 (1953). When each party to a transaction is subject to mutual conditions precedent, then these mutual conditions are concurrent conditions. 17 Am.Jur.2d, “Contracts” § 321; Restatement, Contracts § 351.

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Bluebook (online)
429 P.2d 694, 6 Ariz. App. 60, 1967 Ariz. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfadden-v-wilder-arizctapp-1967.