Pearce v. Hubbard

135 So. 179, 223 Ala. 231, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 14, 1931
Docket6 Div. 590.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 135 So. 179 (Pearce v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearce v. Hubbard, 135 So. 179, 223 Ala. 231, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 160 (Ala. 1931).

Opinion

*233 SAYRE, J.

Action for damages for the alleged breach of a contract — a so-called lease-sale contract, —for the sale by defendant, appellant, to plaintiff of two lots in Tarrant City. The complaint alleges that the parties entered into the contract May 27, 1924. In addition to a cash payment of $40, plaintiff agreed to make payments of $20 each on the 1st day of each of the succeeding seventy-three months. Plaintiff alleges payment of thirty-four of the notes, whereupon defendant sold and conveyed the property to one Gooch. It is alleged that the notes were made payable at the office of the Tarrant City Savings Bank, ¿nd ■provided that, upon default in any payment, the. payee, defendant, should have the right to re-enter and annul the contract. The breach alleged is that defendant failed and refused to surrender two notes which matured March 1, 1927, and April 1, 1927, upon payment thereof by plaintiff, and failed and refused to “present said notes given for the purchase price of said real estate at the office of the Tarrant City Savings Bank for payment when and as the same became due.” And the further allegation is that, although plaintiff “has complied with all the provisions of said contract on his part and has at all times been ready, able and willing to pay said notes therein (in the contract) mentioned when due upon presentation at the place of payment therein named, the defendant has failed to comply with said contract on her part and has breached said contract in this: she has failed and refused to present said notes mentioned in said contract or any of them at the place of payment so that the plaintiff might pay the same,” and, on March 1, 1928, sold and conveyed the lots to one Gooch.

The foregoing statement of the complaint along with the ground of demurrer to be noted will suffice to disclose the main point at issue between the parties. By demurrer, defendant made objection to the complaint that it counted on an anticipatory breach of contract. Prof. Williston expresses the opinion that to hold a party to a contract liable on what is known as an anticipatory breach is to hold him to a promise he never made. 3 Williston on Contracts, § 1321. This action was commenced approximately two years prior to the time when defendant was to make title, provided plaintiff in the meantime made monthly payments according to the stipulation of the contract. It is enough to quote the text of 13 Corpus Juris, 651, where a great'number of adjudicated cases is cited, as follows: “Where a party bound by an ex-ecutory contract repudiates his obligation before the time for performance, the promisee has according to the great weight of authority, an option to treat the contract as ended so far as further performance is concerned, and to maintain an action at once for the damages occasioned by such anticipatory breach. The rule is the same whether the contract is wholly executory or has been partially executed.” And further in the same text it .is stated that, where there has been a renunciation of an ex-ecutory contract by one party, the other may elect “to treat the renunciation as an immediate breach and sue at once for any damages which he may have sustained.” In the case alleged in the complaint, defendant had put it beyond her power to. perform lier contract with plaintiff. Prof. Williston, 3 Contracts, § 1326, speaking of Ford v. Tiley, 6 B. & C. 325, says: “One of the first cases relied on as establishing the doctrine of anticipatory breach involved prospective inability to perform because of a lease to a third person of land contracted to be leased to plaintiff,” and seems to concede the propriety of the doctrine in such case at least by saying further in immediate connection: “In such case, however, the inability was caused by a voluntary act of the defendant, and this act indicated intention not to perform as well as inability to perform.” We note further that in 6 R. C. L. p. 1024, it is written in the course of a rather elaborate discussion of the question now presented for decision: “A majority of the courts have reached the conclusion that a renunciation which amounts to a refusal to perform the contract at any time gives the adverse party an option to treat the contract as broken, and to'sue immediately, notwithstanding the fact that under the terms of, the contract the time for performance has not arrived.” On the face of the complaint in this case, no sufficient reason appears why plaintiff should continue to perform nor any why he should defer his action for a wrong otherwise beyond remedy.

We find nothing to the contrary in McCormick v. Badham, 191 Ala. 339, 67 So. 609. The Suit, there involved the sale of corporate stock. The court seems to have held that the complaint was defective, in that there was no averment of any fact wherefrom relief of plaintiff from performance of a condition precedent resulted. In the case here under consideration, no sufficient reason appears why *234 plaintiff should continue to pay for property he could in no event acquire nor any why he should defer his action for a wrong otherwise beyond remedy. Hawkins v. Merritt, 109 Ala. 261, 19 So. 589; Chandler v. Wilder, 215 Ala. 211, 110 So. 306.

Mutual Loan Society v. Stowe, 15 Ala. App. 293, 73 So. 202,. holds nothing to the contrary of what has been here written. The opinion very clearly states, in one alternative, that the party injured by the repudiation of a contract to be performed in the future may treat the contract as rescinded and sue accordingly. This is not to deny that in such case an immediate action may be maintained as for a breach of contract.

No sufficient reason appears why the vendor who has voluntarily disabled himself to make title should have notice, other than by suit brought, of the vendee’s purpose to reclaim money paid or other damages incurred by the vendor’s breach of his contract.

The contract for breach of which appellee brought suit provides: “The party of the second part (plaintiff) agrees to pay all taxes on the above described property during said term”&emdash;the time in which payments were to be made&emdash;'“as the same becomes due; and also agrees to pay all assessments for street and sidewalk improvements, should any be made against said property.” In view of defendant’s act in putting it wholly out of her power to carry out the stipulation for title to plaintiff, as alleged, the allegation of the first count that plaintiff had “complied with all the provisions of said contract on his part,” and of the second count that “he has been at all times ready, able and willing to perform said contract and comply with all the provisions thereof on his part,” are considered to be a sufficient allegation of performance on plaintiff’s part, though he must have shown his readiness and ability to perform, even though defendant had put it out of her power to perform. At any rate, it appears to have been so decided in Moss v. King, 186 Ala. 482, 65 So. 180.

Plaintiff may have failed to prove payment of taxes and street assessments, as defendant, appellant, alleges in her brief, but that we consider to be of no moment on this appeal, for. the reason that there was no evidence on that point, and defendant based her action in declaring a forfeiture on a wholly different ground, to wit, ifiaintiff’s failure to pay the notes which he had given for the purchase money.

The judgment here is that plaintiff complied with the terms of his contract.

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Bluebook (online)
135 So. 179, 223 Ala. 231, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearce-v-hubbard-ala-1931.