Shaw v. Morrison

260 P. 666, 145 Wash. 420, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 915
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1927
DocketNo. 20764. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 260 P. 666 (Shaw v. Morrison) 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
Shaw v. Morrison, 260 P. 666, 145 Wash. 420, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 915 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The plaintiffs, Mrs. Shaw and husband, commenced this action in the superior court for King county seeking a decree adjudicating a forfeiture of all rights of defendants, Mrs. Morrison and husband, under a contract whereby the plaintiffs agreed to sell, and the defendants agreed to purchase, a six-acre tract of land, including the abutting tide land, fronting on Magnolia Beach, in that county, for an agreed purchase price of ten thousand dollars, payable in installments extending over several years. The theory upon which the plaintiffs rest their claim for- relief is that the defendants have forfeited all rights under the contract by their default in payment of the agreed purchase price installments in accordance with the terms of the contract.

The defendants, by. answer and cross-complaint, prayed for a decree awarding them rescission of the contract and return of the amounts paid by them upon the agreed purchase price, and the amounts paid by them for taxes against the premises, and for insurance upon the dwelling house situated thereon; and, also, prayed for “such other and further relief as to the court may seem proper.” The theory upon which the *422 defendants rest their claim for affirmative relief is that the plaintiffs have rendered it impossible for them to convey or vest in the defendants good title to the whole of the premises, particularly in that the plaintiffs have conveyed by deed to Bung county a considerable portion of the land for a highway.

The case was duly transferred to the superior court for Pierce county for trial; and being of equitable cognizance, proceeded to trial in that court sitting without a jury. The. trial resulted in findings and decree denying to the plaintiffs their claimed present right of forfeiture of the contract rights of the defendants; also denying to the defendants their claimed right of rescission of the contract; but awarding to the defendants, in compliance with their prayer for general relief, two thousand dollars damages against the plaintiffs as a credit upon the unpaid portion of the purchase price, because of the conveyance by the plaintiffs to Bung county of a portion of the premises for a highway, which rendered it impossible for them to fully perform the contract'. Prom this disposition of the case in the superior court, the plaintiffs have appealed to this court.

The controlling facts, we think, may be fairly summarized as follows: On September 15,1921, the plaintiffs entered into a contract of sale of the premises to the defendants for an agreed purchase price of ten thousand dollars, the defendants paying fifteen hundred dollars at that time, and agreeing to pay five hundred dollars at the expiration of every six months’ period thereafter. The contract contained forfeiture conditions, one of which was failure on the part of defendants to make payment of installments as agreed, such failure giving to the plaintiffs the right to declare the contract void “without any declaration of forfeiture,” and without any right in the defendants to a *423 return of any portion of the purchase price which may have been paid by them. The contract contained general covenants of warranty of title; that is, that upon full payment of the purchase price, the plaintiffs would convey to the defendants good title accordingly.

On October 17, 1921, the plaintiffs conveyed to King county for a highway a strip of land, forty feet wide, clear across the water front of the premises, so as to separate the beach and water front from the main upland portion of the premises on which the dwelling house was situated.

On December 21, 1922, the parties executed a new contract, exactly of the same tenor and effect as the one of September 15,1921, except that the six months ’ installment payments were reduced to two hundred fifty dollars. This new contract, manifestly, was intended to take the place of the former contract.

The evidence is in conflict as to when the defendants first learned of the making of the plaintiffs’ conveyance to King county of the strip of land for a highway. However, we adopt, for present purposes, the findings of the trial court upon that question that the defendants were notified in the summer of 1924 of the making of that conveyance. It is, at all events, plain that, up to that time, there was not upon the ground any evidence of the existence of a public highway along the course of the then conveyed strip, or elsewhere across the premises, and that the defendants had no knowledge of any such conveyance being made to King county,-

Thereafter the defendants continued to make numerous payments upon the purchase price installments, most of which were made and accepted by the plaintiffs after the due dates of the agreed installments and in amounts less than the agreed installments. Sometime in the fall of 1926, King county com *424 menced construction, of a road upon the granted strip, and it was nearly completed at the time of the commencement-of this action. The road was so graded and constructed that the. waterside edge of its grade was some three or four feet above the beach, being so held in position by piles and cribbing, while prior thereto the. beach, had a practically uniform, gentle slope from the.upland to the water’s edge. -

. On November 9,1926,.the plaintiffs made written demand upon the defendants as follows: ■

“Please be advised that we hereby make a demand on yon for the sum of $792.80, together with interest on overdue payment, which amount represents payments past due on your contract.” '■■■■,

No other notice or demand indicating an election on the part of the plaintiffs to forfeit the contract rights of defendants. was given prior to the commencement of this action;. On November 16, 1926, the defendants notified the plaintiffs of their claim of. rescission of the contract,- and made demand for a return of all sums paid by them upon the purchase price, for taxes and for insurance, aggregating some five thousand dollars, offering to surrender the premises and quitclaim all their interest therein. Thereafter, in December, 1926, the plaintiffs commenced this, action. Thereafter, the defendants filed therein their answer and cross-complaint, and thereafter the trial proceeded to final, decree, as above noticed. . . • :

Were the plaintiffs entitled to a decree forfeiting the contract rights of the defendants because of their default in payment of past due installments at the time of the demand above quoted? It seems plain to us that that demand was not a notice of the plaintiffs’ intention-to exercise their right of forfeiture; and that, because of the indulgences evidenced by their repeated acceptance of prior payments upon past due in *425 stall meats, they could, in no event, successfully claim a forfeiture of the contract rights of the defendants until they had first clearly notified the defendants of Such a claim, and given to the defendants an opportunity of making full payments of past dne installments within a reasonable time. This alone is sufficient, we think, to support the court’s refusal to award a decree of forfeiture in favor of the plaintiffs. Our decision in Wadham v. McVicar, 115 Wash. 503, 197 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 666, 145 Wash. 420, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-morrison-wash-1927.