Neves v. Wright

638 P.2d 1195, 1981 Utah LEXIS 896
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1981
Docket16910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 638 P.2d 1195 (Neves v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neves v. Wright, 638 P.2d 1195, 1981 Utah LEXIS 896 (Utah 1981).

Opinions

STEWART, Justice:

Plaintiffs initiated this action to rescind a uniform real estate contract for the purchase of a home and to obtain restitution of their payments. Defendants, as sellers, counterclaimed, seeking a declaration of plaintiffs’ default under the contract and a foreclosure of plaintiffs’ interest. The parties stipulated to a sale of the property, with plaintiffs retaining their right to pro[1197]*1197ceed pursuant to their complaint, and defendants reserving their rights under the counterclaim. The trial court granted plaintiffs’ demand for rescission and restitution of their payments, except for the reasonable rental value of the premises. Defendants’ counterclaim for damages was dismissed, and the defendants appeal. The issue is whether the sellers’ failure to disclose lack of title, at the time a land sale contract was entered into, constituted a fraud which warranted rescission.

Plaintiffs entered into a uniform real estate contract on April 19, 1977, to purchase from defendants a residence situated in Fillmore, Utah. On May 31, 1977, the parties executed a corrected contract and an escrow agreement. The defendants executed a warranty deed which was deposited with the contract in escrow. According to the -escrow agreement, the warranty deed was to be delivered to plaintiffs upon payment of the purchase price plus interest.

Eight days prior to the execution of the first contract, on April 11, 1977, the defendants conveyed by a quitclaim deed their interest in the premises to the parents of defendant, Bruce Earl Wright. The deed was recorded the same day. Bruce Earl Wright testified he had been engaged in litigation with Western General Dairies in April 1977. Although Western General Dairies had no security interest in the property, its counsel wrote Mr. Wright two letters threatening to attach the property to satisfy any judgment that might be rendered in its favor. According to Wright, defendants conveyed the property to his parents with the oral understanding that when the lawsuit with Western General was resolved, they would reconvey the property. In June of 1978 the Western General Dairies lawsuit was dismissed, and the property was reconveyed in December, 1978. Wilford Neves testified that had he known the facts, he would not have entered into the contract to purchase.

In February 1978, plaintiffs discovered the prior conveyance and sent a letter to defendants renouncing the sale as fraudulent and void. Plaintiffs notified defendants they were vacating the premises, tendered back the property, and demanded the return of their payments. Later, plaintiffs filed this action seeking rescission on grounds of fraud and breach of contract.

The trial court found that defendants had represented they owned property at the time of sale when, in fact, they had previously conveyed the property to another party by quitclaim deed, and that plaintiffs had acted promptly upon discovery of the facts. The trial court ruled that plaintiffs were entitled to rescind the contract and to a judgment in the sum of $5,755.44 plus interests and costs. This figure represented payments under the contract of $7,555.44 from which $1,800 was deducted as the reasonable rental value of the premises during plaintiffs’ occupancy of approximately nine months.

On appeal, defendants contend that the trial court erred in ruling that plaintiffs could rescind the contract on the ground that the defendants did not have title to the property at the time the contract was executed. Defendants maintain that a seller under a uniform real estate contract need not have marketable title until final payment is made or tendered.

As early as 1909, this Court established the fundamental rule that a seller need not have legal title during the entire executory period of a real estate contract. In Foxley v. Rich, 35 Utah 162, 99 P. 666 (1909), the seller, upon entering into a contract of sale with the buyer, placed a warranty deed in escrow until the buyer could make final payment. During the executory period of the contract, the seller executed and delivered a second deed to the same premises to a third party. That deed was intended as security for $3,500 which the seller still owed on the premises, but it was absolute in form and recorded. As a result of this apparent transfer of title, the buyer refused to complete the contract of purchase. The buyer alleged that the seller’s conduct constituted a rescission or abandonment of the contract. The seller was at all times willing to deliver the escrow deed upon payment of the purchase price. The Court [1198]*1198ruled that the governing principle was whether the title was beyond the control of the vendor so that his acts amounted to a repudiation of his contract, and held that the conveyance to the third party did not excuse the buyer from performing his part of the contract. The Court stated:

... If the effect of the conveyance is such that it places it beyond the power of the vendor to comply with the terms of his contract of sale, or amounts to a repudiation of it, or places a substantial burden upon the vendee not assumed by him in the contract, then the vendee need not further comply with his part of the contract, but may treat it as abandoned by the vendor, and sue and recover back any payments he has made upon the contract, in an action for money had and received by the vendor for the use and benefit of the vendee.... Upon the other hand, if the conveyance made has the effect of transferring the title to another, who has received it with knowledge of the existing contract, or where it is not beyond the power of the vendor to comply with the contract of sale, although a conveyance is made, or where, as in the case at bar, the title is transferred in the nature of security for the obligation assumed by the vendee, and the party to whom the title is transferred and the security given is at all times, able, ready, and willing to comply with the contract, and in all cases where the party to whom the title is transferred claims no right to the property, but holds it for convenience merely, and is willing to transfer the title when the vendee shall comply with his contract, then the vendee has no right to regard the contract abandoned, but in order to recover back any payment made by him must rely on some default of the vendor. [Emphasis added.] [Foxley v. Rich, 35 Utah 162, 171-72, 99 P. 666, 669-70 (1909).]

In Owens v. Neymeyer, 62 Utah 580, 221 P. 160 (1923), the seller, at the time the contract was entered into, did not have legal title to the land. His cousin, who had a claim against the land for $1,277.75 as part of the seller’s purchase price, held legal title. About the time an action was commenced by the buyer, the seller’s cousin conveyed legal title to the seller, enabling him to convey good title prior to the time established in the contract. The Court held that the purchaser was not entitled to rescission and recovery of the purchase price. See also Corporation Nine v. Taylor, 30 Utah 2d 47, 513 P.2d 417 (1973); Woodard v. Alien, 1 Utah 2d 220, 265 P.2d 398 (1953).

This Court reiterated the basic principle in Leavitt v. Blohm, 11 Utah 2d 220, 223, 357 P.2d 190, 192-93 (1960):

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Neves v. Wright
638 P.2d 1195 (Utah Supreme Court, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
638 P.2d 1195, 1981 Utah LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neves-v-wright-utah-1981.