Mortensen v. Berzell Investment Company

429 P.2d 945, 102 Ariz. 348, 1967 Ariz. LEXIS 269
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1967
Docket8405
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 429 P.2d 945 (Mortensen v. Berzell Investment Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mortensen v. Berzell Investment Company, 429 P.2d 945, 102 Ariz. 348, 1967 Ariz. LEXIS 269 (Ark. 1967).

Opinion

WILLIAM A. HOLOHAN, Superior Court Judge.

The Appellees, purchasers under a real property sales contract, filed action against the vendors, Appellants, to have the con *349 tract rescinded. The Superior Court of Maricopa County heard the case, decided the issues in favor of the purchasers, ordered the contract rescinded, and granted judgment to the purchasers for the amount of their payments to the vendors under the contract. The vendors filed a timely appeal from the judgment.

A short review of the facts is necessary for a determination of this cause, and, considered in the light most favorable to sustaining the findings of the trial court, the record discloses that in December, 1959, the purchasers and vendors entered into a contract for the sale of approximately 108 acres of land owned and used by the vendors as a farm. The contract was subject to two conditions, namely, that the land be zoned industrial and that there be a trust agreement providing for release of parcels for sale to third parties free of the main obligations between the vendors and purchasers.

An escrow agreement was signed by the parties in early January, 1960, which provided for a closing date of March 31, 1960. Thereafter the escrow agreement was amended a number of times to extend the closing date to allow the vendors more time to secure the necessary zoning.

Believing that industrial zoning would not be granted by Maricopa County, the vendors, with the knowledge and consent of the purchasers, contacted representatives of the City of Tempe about the possibility of industrial zoning if the property were annexed to that city. Meeting with sympathetic response the vendors, again with the knowledge and consent of the purchasers, joined with other land-owners to have the area, including the land in question, annexed to the City of Tempe.

The purchasers had received possession of a portion of the land from the vendors in approximately the middle of January, 1960, and in March, 1960, the purchasers moved equipment to the land to pursue their business operation which consisted of melting aluminum airplane parts into aluminum ingots. In May, 1960, the area was annexed to the City of Tempe. A demonstration of their operation was given to representatives of the zoning board of the City of Tempe to satisfy that group that the planned operation would not be offensive to neighbors or detrimental to the city.

The required industrial zoning was finally secured in July, 1960; the trust agreement was prepared and signed in the latter part of July, 1960, and the escrow was finally closed in August, 1960.

The purchasers conducted their aluminum furnace operation from about March, 1960, to and including August, 1960, some five months. In January, 1961, the purchasers advertised the land for sale, but no sale was secured.

The purchasers made the necessary payments required under the contract, and, since they were using only a portion of the land, the vendor leased from them for the year 1961 some 70 acres for farming, the house on the premises and another two acres adjacent thereto. The vendors agreed to pay $4,500.00 for the farm land and an additional $300.00 for the use of the house. A total of $3,800.00 was paid by the vendors to the purchasers, and the remaining $1,000.00 was to be paid by December 31, 1961.

In June, 1961, the purchasers learned that the Superior Court of Maricopa County had declared the ordinance which annexed the subject property void. The purchasers confirmed this information through officials of the City of Tempe, who also advised that the city intended to appeal the decision. In June, 1961, the purchasers gave notice to the sellers that the property would have to have industrial zoning within 60 days or they would rescind. There was no response from the vendors, and in August, 1961, a cancellation notice was sent by the escrow company, at the direction of the purchasers, declaring the agreement and trust cancelled in 13 days unless the sellers complied with the requirement for zoning. Finally, in the early part of October, 1961, the purchasers offered to return the property, refund all monies received *350 from the vendors, and the purchasers demanded that the sellers return to them all monies paid by them as purchasers. The vendors failed to respond, and on October 31, 1961, the purchasers filed the present action seeking rescission of the contract.

The City of Tempe did in fact appeal from the decision of the Superior Court declaring the annexation invalid, and the appeal was pending at the time the purchasers demanded rescission and filed the present action. The appeal was pending until May, 1962, at which date the city dismissed its appeal in the annexation case.

While the purchasers’ rescission action was pending, the vendors in January, 1962, gave notice of forfeiture through the title company for failure of the purchasers to pay the first installment of the 1961 taxes, the mortgage payment assumed under the contract and the annual installment on the contract. The described payments not having been cleared up within the time set forth in the notices, the vendors treated the interests of the purchasers as forfeited, and thereafter in 1963, the vendors re-sold the land to a third party, who applied for and received industrial zoning from Mari-copa County in June, 1963.

The able trial judge concluded that the facts in the case disclosed a mutual mistake of fact and failure of consideration to the purchaser which entitled the purchaser to rescission of the contract. We agree that there was a mutual mistake by the parties in this case and we further agree that the matter of zoning was an essential part and condition of the contract. Thomas v. Krug, 139 Cal.App.2d Supp. 941, 294 P. 2d 785. The problem essentially in the case is whether the purchasers are entitled to the equitable remedy of rescission. Ordinarily a mutual mistake of material fact or a failure of consideration of an essential part of the contract will justify rescission. 91 C.J.S. Vendor and Purchaser § 157c. Fish v. Valley Nat. Bank of Phoenix, 64 Ariz. 164, 167 P.2d 107. Mahurin v. Schmeck, 95 Ariz. 333, 390 P.2d 576. Rescission, however, is an equitable remedy, and he who seeks equity must do equity. Sandia Development Corp. v. Allen, 86 Ariz. 40, 340 P.2d 193. Arizona Coffee Shops, Inc. v. Phoenix Downtown Park. Ass’n, 95 Ariz. 98, 387 P.2d 801.

The purchasers, soon after learning of the decision declaring the annexation ordinance invalid and with knowledge that the matter was being appealed, demanded that the vendors secure industrial zoning, and further they demanded that the zoning be secured within 60 days of their letter of demand. Needless to say no other county or municipal authority would take jurisdiction over the land in question much less grant zoning while the annexation matter was on appeal. The vendors could not comply with the demands of the purchasers because what they required was impossible of accomplishment within the time limit set by the purchasers.

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Bluebook (online)
429 P.2d 945, 102 Ariz. 348, 1967 Ariz. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mortensen-v-berzell-investment-company-ariz-1967.