Newton v. Canty

203 P.2d 910, 119 Colo. 381, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 279
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 21, 1949
DocketNo. 16,181.
StatusPublished

This text of 203 P.2d 910 (Newton v. Canty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Canty, 203 P.2d 910, 119 Colo. 381, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 279 (Colo. 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jackson

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties appear here in reverse order of their positions in the trial court, and we will refer to them as they were there designated.

Under date of July 9, 1947, the parties entered into an agreement for sale and purchase of a tract of several acres and two houses in Arapahoe County—executed on a printed form in common use—for a total consideration of $4,250. Defendant-purchaser made the two lump sum payments for which provision was made in the agreement, totaling $750, and also made three ensuing monthly payments of $65 each, due respectively August, September and October 15, 1947, out of which monthly payments all accrued interest was first to be paid and the remainder was to be credited on principal. Thereafter defendant refused to make the November and December 1947 and subsequent monthly payments, on the ground that plaintiffs had failed to live up to one of their undertakings under the contract relating to the completion of a well. This provision, typed in the printed agreement, appears as follows: “(First parties agree to finish well now being dug on said premises, to case same and to install a hand pump, on or before July 14, 1947.)”

*383 Defendant, in elaboration of her position, indicated that the property was useless to her without a water supply of quality and quantity sufficient for her family, consisting of her husband, herself and their five children. At the time of the signing of the agreement, the well in question had been dug to a depth of several feet. Defendant’s testimony indicated that by reason of the failure of plaintiffs to complete the well and make it a serviceable one for household uses, it became necessary for her to employ a driller who, at a distance of four feet from the place where plaintiffs had started the dug well, drilled a well to a depth of 152 feet to the first artesian water at a cost to defendant of $429.60.

The evidence shows that defendant instituted suit against plaintiffs for the cost of this artesian well; then later abandoned the suit and refused to make further payments under the sale and purchase agreement on the theory that plaintiffs owed her for the cost of drilling the well. Plaintiffs, after defendant had failed to make the November and December 1947 monthly payments, thereupon, on December 29, 1947, first gave notice of cancellation of the contract and on January 30, 1948, served notice to vacate, and then March 4, 1948, brought suit for restitution. After a trial without a jury on June 15, 1948, the court made a finding that there was due the sum of $3,578.56 under the contract (plus interest on $3,441.40 from June 15, 1948 to the date of payment). This amount due also included an item of $70.25 for an insurance premium and one of $13.01 for one-half taxes for the year 1947.

The court further adjudged that the payment by defendant of the sum of $945 upon said agreement and the cost of drilling a well upon said premises, $429.60, gave the defendant an equitable interest in the property, and thereby provided for a foreclosure in equity of her interest and allowed an equity of redemption for a period of six months from June 15, 1948. Accordingly, the trial court ordered the agreement terminated and *384 cancelled and plaintiffs to deliver to the clerk of the court their warranty deed, conveying to defendant the above described property, together with proper abstract—said documents to be delivered to defendant if the latter paid into court on or before December 15, 1948, the principal sum above mentioned together with interest and other items due under an ordinary redemption. The court further decreed that defendant should retain the right of occupancy during the six months period of redemption.

The court further found that:

“The provision in the agreement that first parties (plaintiffs) agree to finish well now being dug on said premises, to case same and to install a hand pump, on or before July 14, 1947, is an independent covenant, that plaintiffs have not completed the well in accordance with said contract and in accordance with the understanding of the parties, but that such breach cannot be set up as an equitable defense to plaintiffs’ cause of action.

“That the cost of drilling a well upon said premises is not the measure of damages for the violation of the provisions of the agreement to complete the well then being dug, and that defendant has failed to offer any proof by which the Court can compensate her in damages for the failure of the plaintiffs to complete the well, and that defendant’s counter-claim should be dismissed.”

The court order further provided that in the event redemption was not made by defendant by December 15, 1948, plaintiffs should be entitled to a decree of restitution and a further decree quieting title in them.

May 15, 1948, about the time of the trial, defendant deposited in court $455.00, being seven monthly payments of $65 each, to be applied as such if plaintiffs would dismiss their complaint, and reinstate the contract without interest from the time of default. The court in its decree provided that this amount could be used as *385 part payment toward the amount of redemption and pro tanto stop interest on the amount necessary to redeem. From the briefs that have been filed since December 15, 1948, we are informed that defendant did not redeem within the six-months period, nor has she withdrawn the sum of $455 so deposited, but in accordance with court order she has allowed it to remain in court in lieu of bond as security for any damages plaintiffs may sustain by reason of a sixty-day stay of execution beginning December 15, 1948.

The court found the issues in favor of plaintiffs and against defendant, and also found in favor of plaintiffs and against defendant on the latter’s counterclaim for damages incurred by reason of having to drill an artesian well.

Defendant, appearing here by writ of error, has filed the following specification of points: “1. The Court erred in striking the eighth paragraph of the third defense from the Answer. 2. The Court erred, on the evidence and the law, in holding that the provision as to the well was an independent covenant and that performance thereof was not a condition precedent to bringing an action on the contract. 3. The Court erred, on the evidence and the law, in holding that the cost of drilling a well was not the measure of damages and that Defendant has failed to offer any proof of damages. 4. The decree of the Court, on the evidence, is unduly harsh and oppressive.” These specifications we discuss in the order set forth above:

1. In the eighth paragraph of the third defense, which was stricken by the court at pretrial conference, defendant set up the fact that she had previously commenced an action for damages for breach of the covenant to complete a well and her inability to obtain service on plaintiffs by reason of their then nonresidence, and her subsequent dismissal of that action. We are not inclined to believe that the striking of this paragraph was prejudicial to defendant, inasmuch as the *386 complaint in the prior case, which was dismissed, apparently was based on the same grounds as those alleged in defendant’s counterclaim in the instant case.

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Bluebook (online)
203 P.2d 910, 119 Colo. 381, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-canty-colo-1949.