Radach v. Prior

297 P.2d 605, 48 Wash. 2d 901, 1956 Wash. LEXIS 438
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1956
Docket33519
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 297 P.2d 605 (Radach v. Prior) 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
Radach v. Prior, 297 P.2d 605, 48 Wash. 2d 901, 1956 Wash. LEXIS 438 (Wash. 1956).

Opinion

Ott, J.

June 10, 1947, William Prior and his wife entered into a contract with J. L. Langdon and his wife for the purchase of five lots in Warden, upon which property is located the Warden Hotel and Cafe. The purchase price was nineteen thousand dollars. A five-thousand-dollar payment was made upon the execution of the contract. The balance was to be paid in stated monthly installments, on or before the tenth day of each month, to the Grant County State Bank, the named escrow holder. The contract provided, among other things, that the vendees should keep the premises in good repair and pay all taxes, and that, should the vendees fail to perform any of the conditions in the *903 contract, a forfeiture could be declared by the vendors. The contract granted a thirty-day grace period within which time the vendees could comply with the conditions or permit a forfeiture.

April 30, 1951, Mrs. Langdon conveyed her interest in the property to her husband. August 16, 1951, Langdon sold and assigned the contract to Fred Radach. The Priors made ho monthly payments between the dates of May 23, 1952, and December 18, 1952.

When the vendees were unable to make the monthly payments, they conveyed a one-half interest in the property subject to the contract to the firm of Cunningham and Ries. Funds were thus provided on December 18, 1952, to pay the delinquent taxes and the monthly installments through November 10, 1952. The December 10th installment remained delinquent.

March 16, 1953, Radach sent notice to the Priors declaring a forfeiture unless the monthly installments, which were delinquent from December 10, 1952, were paid within thirty days. April 20, 1953, a payment was made which, if applied on the contract, would have paid the delinquent installments through March 10, 1953.

May 28, 1953, a second notice of forfeiture, as provided for in the contract, was sent to the vendees. June 2, 1953, Radach authorized the escrow holder to credit upon the contract the installment payment received April 20, 1953. The April and May installments then remained delinquent.

On June 28, 1953, the thirty-day grace period having expired, there remained delinquent the 1953 taxes and three monthly installments totaling three hundred seventy-five dollars. June 30, 1953, the vendees tendered two hundred fifty dollars upon the contract, and paid the first half of the taxes. Upon notification that the partial payment on the delinquent installments had been tendered, Radach instructed the escrow holder to return it, which was done July 8, 1953. The tenders made thereafter of the amounts due were refused and returned. Likewise, an offer to pay the full amount of the contract balance was refused.

*904 July 10, 1953, Radaeh sent a formal written declaration of forfeiture and demand for immediate possession to the Priors. September 25, 1953, Radaeh commenced this action to obtain a decree declaring the contract forfeited, to obtain possession of the premises, and to quiet the title in him. Subsequently, the Priors conveyed their remaining one-half interest in the property to Lena McConnell as security for certain loans previously made.

After the issues were joined, the cause was tried to the court, and judgment was entered declaring a forfeiture unless, within thirty days, the defendants paid into court the balance due on the contract. The plaintiff has appealed.

The principal assignments of error are that the trial court erred in failing to grant an immediate forfeiture, and in granting a thirty-day grace period to the respondents.

Forfeitures are not favored in the law, and equity will seize upon "any inequitable circumstance arising from the contract or the conduct of the parties in order to avoid a forfeiture. Moeller v. Good Hope Farms, 35 Wn. (2d) 777, 215 P. (2d) 425 (1950).

There was no specific clause in the contract of sale making time of the essence. Time, however, may be made essential where one of the. parties delays in making a payment and, thereafter, the other party, by a notice, prescribes a reasonable period within which there must be compliance with the contract. 4 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (5th ed.) 1054, § 1408.

In the case at bar, as in the case of Moeller v. Good Hope Farms, supra, the contract vendor accepted payments after they had became delinquent, thus indicating that strict performance of the contract would not be insisted upon. In such instance, we stated that, before the vendor could declare a forfeiture for failure to make current or future payments when due, he must give notice of his intention to do so, with a reasonable time within which the vendee could perform.

The appellant sent a notice to the Priors on May 28, 1953, to the effect that, if the delinquent installments were not paid within thirty days, a forfeiture would be declared. *905 Thus, although he previously had accepted payments after they were due, and after the time had expired under the earlier forfeiture notice, time became the essence of the contract by the terms of the May 28th notice. The grace period which the contracting parties had determined to be reasonable was given. The respondents failed to comply with the terms of the contract within that time and, by so doing, forfeited their interest therein, unless the application of equitable principles prevents such a result.

Respondents contend that acceptance of the five-hundred-dollar payment on June 2, 1953, effected a waiver of the May 28th notice.

The notice constituted a demand for payment and, in effect, required that the appellant vendor accept and credit on the contract all sums tendered prior to midnight June 27, 1953. Such acceptance of partial payment within the grace period does not constitute a waiver of the notice of forfeiture. See Cassiday v. Adamson, 208 Iowa 417, 224 N. W. 508 (1929); Moore v. Elliott, 213 Iowa 374, 239 N. W. 32 (1931); Swanson v. Miller, 189 Minn. 158, 248 N. W. 727 (1933); 107 A. L. R. 366.

In Moeller v. Good Hope Farms, supra, we held that, although the notice of forfeiture was not waived, a period of grace would be granted by the court where the equities of the particular case warranted it.

Respondents contend that, because of the delay in returning the two-hundred-fifty-dollar payment tendered to the escrow holder on June 30, 1953, they were misled, and paid taxes which they cannot recover and from which the appellant will benefit. In support of this contention, they urge that, in failing to return promptly the tendered payment, after it was refused by the appellant, the escrow, holder was acting as the appellant’s agent.

The rule with reference to the agency relationship of an escrow holder in this type of situation is as follows:

“On consummation of the contract and deposit, however, the escrow holder, is generally considered the agent of both parties, at least for the limited purpose of the escrow, and he has also been denominated a trustee for the parties, *906

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Bluebook (online)
297 P.2d 605, 48 Wash. 2d 901, 1956 Wash. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radach-v-prior-wash-1956.