Smead v. Lampher

86 A. 1005, 87 Vt. 1, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 86 A. 1005 (Smead v. Lampher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smead v. Lampher, 86 A. 1005, 87 Vt. 1, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 157 (Vt. 1913).

Opinion

Watson, J.

Before and on October 13, 1910, the orator lived in Wardsboro, this State, and was the owner of real estate there located, and described in the master’s report, it being his farm and homestead, also of the personal property enumerated therein, on said farm. At the same time, the defendant lived in Manorville, on Long Island, in the State of New York, and owned certain real estate there.

On the day named, at the orator’s said farm, the orator and the defendant entered into a verbal contract whereby the orator agreed to sell and convey his real estate and personal property above mentioned to the defendant for the sum of thirteen hundred fifty dollars. The defendant agreed to take the property at that price, then and there paying the orator the sum of one hundred dollars toward the purchase price and taking his receipt therefor. The master finds that the time when the balance of the purchase money should be paid, a deed and the possession of the property given, was not definitely agreed between the parties, but it was understood to be as soon as the defendant could dispose of his said property on Long Island. And such being the understanding, the law implied that the defendant should dispose of it within a reasonable time, and if he failed so to do the orator was entitled to the balance due him, notwithstanding this property was not sold. Capron v. Capron, 44 Vt. 410; Sears v. Wright, 24 Me. 278; Crooker v. Holmes, 65 Me. 195, 20 Am. Rep. 687; Nunez v. Dautel, 19 Wall. 560, 22 L. ed. 161.

The Statute of Frauds is set up as a defence in the answer, but we pass over that question since, as will be seen, the decree as rendered could not have been based upon that ground. Our consideration will be confined to the question of rescission or abandonment of the contract, and questions incident thereto.

On December 18, the orator by letter asked the defendant concerning the time of his coming, saying, ‘ ‘ I believe you thought it would be in February.” Defendant’s answer to this inquiry does not appear. On January 13, 1911, the orator in a second letter to the defendant said, “Of course I would like to close [4]*4the deal as soon as yon can, for it will be better for both of us. If you can come now soon I think we can fix it up some way so it will be satisfactory to both of us at as much as you can start with,” etc. On the 23rd of that month, the defendant came to the home of the orator on the farm in question. Though he had not sold his property on Long Island, he then paid to the orator on the purchase price of the property within the contract the sum of three hundred dollars, taking his receipt covering this payment, the one hundred dollars paid at the time of entering into the agreement, and twenty-five dollars received by the orator for the bull which he had sold from the personal property included in the sale to the defendant, total, four hundred twenty-five dollars. The receipt previously given for the one hundred dollars was then destroyed by mutual consent. • Remaining there, the defendant at first, and later, his wife and child with him, boarded in the orator’s family until April 24, when defendant’s household furniture arrived. The defendant and his wife then set up a part of the furniture in two rooms in the orator’s house, thenceforth boarding themselves. The rest of their furniture was stored in a chamber of the house. The defendant’s wife cooked their food on the orator’s stove until trouble arose between the parties about the 5th of May, after which she went to the house of some neighbor to do part of her cooking, claiming the orator’s wife would not let her build a fire in the stove in the afternoon. The defendant was not permitted, by the orator, to set np a stove in the house while there.

On April 10, the defendant paid the orator the further sum of two hundred dollars on the purchase price and took his receipt therefor. On the 19th of May, the orator notified the defendant that he must pay up or get out in thirty days. In consequence of this notice the defendant purchased another place and, on May 26, moved his furniture and his family away from the orator’s premises, without giving notice to the orator, and unbeknown to him. When the orator learned they were gone, he went to see the defendant to ascertain if he was not going to take the place according to the trade. The Long Island property had not then been sold and deeded by the defendant and was not until July 20, 1911.

It is clear that the parties were not acting upon their original understanding whereby time for completion was made de[5]*5pendent upon defendant’s sale of his said property, nor upon their legal rights under it. According to the orator’s letter of December 18, to which allusion has been made, the defendant, when making the agreement, mentioned February as the time when he thought he could come to complete the transaction. And with this in mind the orator, in the fore part of January, by letter to the defendant, expressed his desire to close the deal, and suggested that if the defendant would come up soon they could fix it up in some way satisfactory to both. "Within ten days thereafter the defendant went from his home to the orator ’s place, making another payment the day of his arrival, and still another, in April — the three payments aggregating six hundred dollars. And previous to the defendant’s leaving the premises in question he attempted to raise money with which to make final payment, but was unsuccessful. If time be considered as originally of the essence of the contract, such deviation from the original understanding with consequent legal implications, acquiesced in by both parties, operated to render it otherwise. Yet in these circumstances if the defendant was guilty of unnecessary delay, the orator had a right, by notice to the defendant, to limit a reasonable time, according to the circumstances of the case, within which complete performance must be had or the contract be rescinded. Thompson v. Dulles, 5 Rich. Eq. 370; Falls v. Carpenter, 1 Dev. & B. 237, 28 Am. Dec. 592; Green v. Sevin, 13 Ch. Div. 589; King v. Wilson, 6 Beav. 126; Taylor v. Brown, 2 Beav. 180. In the case last cited the Master of the Rolls said, that in eases where the contract and the circumstances are such that time is not in equity considered to be of the essence of the contract, “if any unnecessary delay is created by one party the other has a right to limit a reasonable time within which the contract shall be perfected by the other. It has been repeatedly so considered in this court; and where the time has been thus fairly limited, by a notice stating that within such a period that which is required must be done or otherwise the contract will be treated as at an end, this court has very frequently supported that proceeding; and bills having been afterwards filed for the specific performance of the contract, this court has dismissed them with costs.” Much to the same effect is Battell v. Matot, 58 Vt. 271, 5 Atl. 479.

[6]*6By the notice from the orator to the defendant, if valid,— and no claim is made that it was not, — time was made essential, and the latter had one of two courses to pursue: complete performance on his part within the time there specified or “get out,” the second alternative being by fair and reasonable construction, “or abandon the contract.” It should seem that for financial reasons the only course in fact available to the defendant was followed.

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Bluebook (online)
86 A. 1005, 87 Vt. 1, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smead-v-lampher-vt-1913.