Tapp v. Nock

12 S.W. 713, 89 Ky. 414, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 19, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 12 S.W. 713 (Tapp v. Nock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tapp v. Nock, 12 S.W. 713, 89 Ky. 414, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 142 (Ky. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

JUDGE BENNETT

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, having seen the real estate in controversy advertised in. the Courier-Journal for sale by Stratton & Co., real estate agents, on the 28th day of March, 1887, applied to them for the purpose of purchasing it. The application resulted in the following agreement:

“Louisville, Ky., March 28, 1887.
“ Mr. Samuel L. Nock:
“We will give you six thousand seven hundred and twenty dollars, payable one-third cash, balance in one •and two years, six per cent, and lien, for your property, ninety-six by two hundred feet, situated on the east side of First street, the south line of which is ninety-six feet north of Caldwell street. You to make a good title and give general warranty deed.
“[Signed] W. J. Tapp,
“L. S. Parsons.”

To which offer the appellee, in writing, replied very .soon on the same day, as follows :

“Louisville, Ky., March 28, 1887.
“Messrs. W. J. Tapp and L. S. Parsons:
“ I will take six thousand seven hundred and twenty dollars.for my property, situated on the east side of First street, the south line of which is ninety-six feet north of Caldwell street. The above amount, payable one-third cash, balance in one and two years, with six per cent, and lien. Will make you a good title, and give general warranty deed.
“[Signed] Samuel L. Nock.”

[417]*417These two writings — one an offer to bny the specific property at a specified price, and the other an unqualified acceptance of the offer — constituted a valid and enforceable executory sale of the lot. These writings . also obliged the appellee to convey to the appellants a , good title to said lot by a general warranty deed, and also. bound the appellants to accept such conveyance . and deed. But the writings were silent as to the time in which such conveyance and deed should be made. .Hence equity, as well as law, allowed a reasonable time in which to make the conveyance and deed.

On the 6th day of April, 1887, the appellants wrote .to Stratton & Co. that the original and new deed had not been furnished them, according to the understanding that they should be furnished, in order that they might have the title investigated, and that the memorandum of title furnished them to enable them to have the title investigated, was not sufficient for that purpose ; that they, therefore, receded from the offer made • on the 28th day of March preceding.

The appellants, on the same day, received a reply to the effect that there was no agreement to furnish the appellants with old and new deed; that it was not customary for agents to do so; that the memorandum was sufficient; that, unless by special agreement, the seller was not bound to furnish abstract of title; that appellants would be held to the performance of the contract, &c. On the 28th day of May following the appellee tendered to the appellants a general warranty deed to this property, which the appellants refused to . accept, upon the ground that they had theretofore receded from the proposition to purchase the property, [418]*418which they had the right to do, because oí the fact that the appellee had. unreasonably delayed to make-a clear title to said land, time being of the essence of' the contract.

As the question presented by this record is well settled by this court, any extended legal argument is unnecessary. In Cotton v. Ward, 3 Mon., 313, it is .said: “Where a contract for the conveyance is merely executory, and a time fixed for the conveyance-to be made, if there be a delay beyond that time in completing the title, which has been occasioned by the fault of the vendor, the purchaser will not, in. general, be compelled to accept the title. Even in. such a case, however, where the delay has been occasioned by the state oli the title, and not by the negligence of the vendor, a court of equity, considering the-time of performance not of the essence of the contract, unless expressly made so by the stipulation of the-parties, will compel the purchaser to accept the title. The invariable inquiry of a court of equity, when about to pronounce a decree in such case, is not whether the vendor was able at the time when he entered into the contract, but whether he is able to do so, and a purchaser can not, it is said, insist upon being released from his purchase upon the master’s report of a defective title, if the same is capable of being made good in a reasonable time.”

In Woodson’s Adm’r, &c., v. Scott, 1 Dana, 471, it is said: “In determining (referring to the discretion of the chancellor) that question, whilst he must ever feel it a duty to discountenance unnecessary delay of the party seeking his aid, and espee[419]*419ially where it has been prejudicial to the other party, yet he can not but discriminate between that species of delay which has been the result of mere indolence or neglect, unaccompanied, as here, by any injury to the party complaining of it, and that other which is willful and designed, or at all indicative of a vasciilation of purpose as to a bona fide fulfillment of the contract. A knowledge of the want of that active vigilance and strict punctuality in fulfilling such con tracts on the part of the community generally must compel him to overlook the delay in the one case, whilst his anxiety to discountenance fraud, or any semblance of bad faith, will cause him to refuse his aid in the other.”

The proof is, that at the time of sale the appellee had no deed to the property; that he owned it by ex-ecutory purchase from Shouse; that a part of the purchase price remained unpaid; that he perfected his title as soon as he could; that there was no unnecessary delay in doing so; that the recital in the deed from Shouse that the land was incumbered with a lien for a part of the unpaid purchase money was not prejudicial to the rights of the appellants; for the reasons, first, that the incumbrance had, in fact, been discharged; second, because the appellants owed on the land a sum sufficient to discharge said incumbrance, which they could not only have withheld from the appellee, but have discharged the incumbrance by paying the money to the proper parties/ Also, there is no proof tending to show that the appellee or agent represented, or even intimated, to the appellants that they owned, at the time of the sale, the legal title to said land. Re did, however, have such title as he [420]*420could make a valid and binding sale of, and this was all that was required. Also, there is not as much as a scintilla of proof in the case that time was to be of the essence of the contract; nor does the written agreement even intimate such a thing; nor is there any proof that the appellee knew, or had reason to believe, that the appellants were purchasing said property for the purpose of an immediate speculation, or of any speculation at all. The direction to Stratton & Co. to sell the property at eighty dollars per foot was given after the purchase, and had the effect to retain said company as their agent; therefore, it carried no implied knowledge home to the appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W. 713, 89 Ky. 414, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tapp-v-nock-kyctapp-1889.