McKown v. Davis

285 P.2d 1048, 47 Wash. 2d 10, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 303
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1955
Docket33041
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 285 P.2d 1048 (McKown v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKown v. Davis, 285 P.2d 1048, 47 Wash. 2d 10, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 303 (Wash. 1955).

Opinion

Donworth, J.

May the vendee named in an earnest money agreement, who has been unsuccessful in a prior action to rescind that contract on the grounds of fraudulent representations, subsequently maintain an action for specific performance of that contract?

On May 3, 1951, plaintiffs (Charles McKown and Henrietta McKown, his wife) as vendees, and defendants (Floyd Davis and Frances Davis, his wife) as vendors, executed a written contract of sale, denominated “Earnest Money Agreement,” wherein “the terms and conditions of this agreement and sale” were set forth in detail, and receipt was acknowledged, by vendors, of two thousand dollars as “earnest money in part payment of the purchase price” of a dairy farm, consisting of certain real and personal property (but not including dairy cattle) situated in Mason county near Shelton.

This contract, prepared by an attorney retained by the real-estate agent, provided in part:

“Total purchase price is Thirty Thousand and no/100ths Dollars ($30,000.00), to be paid as follows: Upon delivery of policy of title insurance by Seller to Purchaser showing merchantable title, Purchaser will pay an additional sum of Five Thousand Three Hundred and no/100ths Dollars ($5300.00) in cash to purchaser, and in addition will pay off and satisfy a certain chattel mortgage now in effect covering the above described personal property, in favor of the Elma Feed Co., in the sum of $5000.00; Purchaser further will convey his equity, hereby valued at $2,200.00, to Seller, in certain real property at Kent, Washington, particularly described as follows ...
“Purchaser further will assume and agree to pay, according to its terms and conditions, a real estate mortgage covering said property hereby purchased, in favor of the Pru *12 dential Life Insurance Co. of America, the balance of which is $15,500100.
“Sellers agree to furnish and deliver to purchaser as soon as procurable a policy of title insurance covering the real property hereby agreed to be sold. If title is not insurable and cannot be made insurable within 30 days from issuance of said title policy or first title report, this agreement shall be considered terminated and of no effect, and the earnest money refunded to Purchaser. ” (Italics ours.)

Without waiting for the receipt of the policy of title insurance, plaintiffs, upon the request of defendants’ agent, deposited with this agent (in whose office the transaction was to be closed “within ten days after issuance of title insurance policy”) the five thousand three hundred dollars cash payment above mentioned and conveyed to defendants, through this agent, plaintiffs’ equity in the Kent realty. Thereupon defendants vacated the farm and notified plaintiffs thereof. On June 4,1951, plaintiff husband, after having liquidated his holdings in California, moved his family from that state and went into possession of the farm.

A short time after moving to the farm, plaintiffs were advised by a veterinarian that the farm was infested with Bang’s disease, and that for their health’s sake they should remove their children and vacate the premises. On July 18, 1951, after a consultation with defendants, who were living in Shelton, plaintiffs wrote defendants that they were that day leaving the farm and requested them to meet them at the farm the next day to check the items of personal property which were to be included in the sale. At the time designated, defendant husband was physically present at the farm and took possession of, and responsibility for, the personal property items which plaintiffs left on the farm.

Alleging that the presence of Bang’s disease on the farm whs inconsistent with the vendors’ representation that the farm was a “good A-l dairy farm,” plaintiffs commenced an action in Mason county on September 22, 1951, against, defendants to rescind the contract of sale on the ground of fraud. In that action, defendants answered and cross-complained, alleging that plaintiffs, by vacating the premises, *13 had abandoned the contract and thereby forfeited all rights under the contract. At the conclusion of the trial, the court found (a) that plaintiffs had failed to produce clear, cogent, and convincing evidence in support of their claim of fraud, and (b) that defendants had failed to produce any evidence in support of their cross-complaint. Judgment was entered on October 17, 1952, dismissing both the complaint and the cross-complaint.

On October 28, 1952, defendants conveyed the farm property to other parties, thereby putting it beyond their power to perform their earnest money agreement with plaintiffs. Defendants retained the $9,500 previously paid them by plaintiffs pursuant to that agreement.

On October 29,1952, plaintiffs wrote to defendants’ agent, through whom they had paid the $9,500, as follows:

“As a result of the recent decision by Judge Wright in the action of rescission of an Agreement that we had with you for the purchase of the dairy ranch near Shelton, we, at this time, make demand upon you for the return of the said premises to us, by you, pursuant to the Agreement which we had entered into.
“Under the terms of this Agreement, we are prepared, and do at this time, offer to pay to you the entire balance due and owing to you under the terms of this Agreement. We will do so immediately upon the receipt of a Title Policy covering the aforementioned property.
“Kindly let us hear from you.”

On November 19, 1952, plaintiffs commenced the present action in Pierce county, which was later removed to Mason county, seeking specific performance of the same contract involved in the prior action. Defendants answered, setting up as defenses (a) that plaintiffs, in the prior action, had elected their remedy and were bound by that election, that the matter was res adjudicata; and (b) that plaintiffs had abandoned the contract and are now precluded from asserting rights under the contract by seeking its specific performance.

Defendants are in this position: They have never procured or delivered to plaintiffs the policy of title insurance mentioned in the contract; in addition to the original earnest *14 money payment of $2,000, they have obtained from plaintiff the $5,300 cash payment and the $2,200 equity in the Kent property (both of which were payable only after policy of title insurance had been delivered); they have conveyed this interest in the Kent property to their real-estate agent in lieu of commission (and that agent has since deeded it away); and, during the thirty-day period following the entry of judgment in the prior action, they conveyed to a third party the real and personal property which were the subjects of the earnest money agreement with plaintiffs.

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Related

Fines v. West Side Implement Co.
352 P.2d 1018 (Washington Supreme Court, 1960)
McKown v. Driver
337 P.2d 1068 (Washington Supreme Court, 1959)
Mading v. McPhaden
308 P.2d 963 (Washington Supreme Court, 1957)
Brillhardt v. Ben Tipp, Inc.
297 P.2d 232 (Washington Supreme Court, 1956)
Ferris v. Blumhardt
293 P.2d 935 (Washington Supreme Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P.2d 1048, 47 Wash. 2d 10, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckown-v-davis-wash-1955.