Timmins v. Russell

99 N.W. 48, 13 N.D. 487, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 12
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 N.W. 48 (Timmins v. Russell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timmins v. Russell, 99 N.W. 48, 13 N.D. 487, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 12 (N.D. 1904).

Opinion

Morgan, J.

This action was brought for the cancellation of a contract for the sale of real estate, and for the immediate possession of such real estate, on the- alleged ground that the -defendant has failed to comply with the terms of the contract of -sale. The contract was entered into between plaintiff’s husband, since deceased, and defendant, on the 11th day of August, 1898. The husband’s estate was duly probated, and the land involved in this suit was adjudged by the county court to be conveyed to the plaintiff, who is now the owner thereof, subject to the defendant’s rights and possessions under the contract. The plaintiff claims that the defendant has forfeited -his rights to the land by failure to comply with the contract in the following particulars: (1) Failure to crop said land in seasonable time; (2) failure to harvest said crop in seasonable time .and in a husbandlike manner; (3) failure to crop the required number of acres of wheat on said land during the season of 1902; (4j [489]*489failure to deliver to plaintiff the one-half of the wheat raised on said land during the year 1900; (5) failure to pay the taxes on said land for the year 1900. These are the defaults alleged in the complaint as a basis for a cancellation of the contract. The answer of the defendant is a general denial, but alleges that the plaintiff has waived the right to insist on a cancellation of the contract by his agreement with the defendant as to payment of the taxes in the year 1900, and by retention by plaintiff of the one-half of the wheat raised in the year 1900 and other years. The district court, found for the defendant, and dismissed plaintiff’s action. From the judgment of dismissal plaintiff appeals, and) demands a trial de novo under section 5630, Rev. Codes 1899.

At the trial it appeared that the contract in suit was made by the defendant with one Robert S. Timmins, since deceased-; that his estate was duly probated, and his real and personal property duly distributed by the county .court to his heirs, and that the land involved in this suit was by said court ordered conveyed to the plaintiff, and that the administrator has been discharged and released as administrator; that defendant went into possession under the, said contract, and has remained in possession ever since. It further appeared on'the 'trial that the contract sued upon was indefinite in its terms so far as the number of acres to be cropped in wheat each year was concerned, and indefinite in its terms as to the number of acres of crop plaintiff was to receive the one-half of during each year. As to this indefiniteness of the contract, it stated in three places that 300 acres were to be sowed each year, and in one place that 250 acres were to be sowed. Without extrinsic evidence, it would be impossible to say what number of acres the defendant was obligated to sow each year. But the evidence shows that there were but 258 acres broken on the place, and the contract contains no provisions obligating the defendant to do any breaking on the land. So that it is clear the parties could not have intended that 300 acres were to be sowed to wheat each year. Further, the plaintiff’s testimony is. directed solely toward establishing that 250 acres were not cropped to wheat each year. Then, too, the answer alleges that 250 acres were cropped to wheat in 1902. It is therefore clear that the parties to the contract intended to contract in reference to 250 acres as the number of acres to be sowed each year. No objections or motions were made at the trial directed towards reformation of the contract in this particular. The com[490]*490plaint was treated, so far as the answer is concerned, as claiming defaults by reason of not sowing 250 acres of wheat, and alleged that 250 acres were sowed in 1902. Under such circumstances we will treat the contract as the parties have done, as a contract to sow 25Ó acres of wheat each year, and to turn over one-half of the wheat raised each year in payment of the purchase price — 10,000 bushels of clean wheat. This renders it unnecessary to determine the questions raised whether defendant could give testimony in regard to conversations with the deceased as to what was said by them as to the number of acres to be sowed to wheat each year, and whether such testimony was admissible under a general denial. The record, therefore, presents two questions for determination: (1) Was the defendant in default as to the terms of the contract on March 27, 1902? (2) If in default, was such default waived by the plaintiff by her acts and conduct prior to that date?

The evidence establishes, without material contradiction, the following facts pertaining to these questions: In the year 1899 defendant did not sow 250 acres of wheat, and sowed only about 230 acres. With knowledge of this fact, the one-half of the wheat raised was accepted by plaintiff without objection, or any protest to indicate that the contract was not being complied With. In 1900, defendant sowed only about 220 acres of wheat, and about 38 acres of oats, flax and rye. The wheat raised was not marketable on account of being injured by continued rains, but plaintiff made no objeción or protest that the required number of acres of wheat was nor sowed, although she had knowledge that such was the fact. In 1901 other grain was raised on the land than wheat, and less than 250 acres of wheat raised thereon. The plaintiff accepted her share without objection. The evidence also shows that during each year prior to 1902 the defendant had not fully complied with the contract in regard to sowing 250 acres of wheat on the land in question, and that no objection was made by the plaintiff to such noncompliance with the contract, although she knew that the contract was not complied with. In the fall of 1901 the defendant plowed about 200 acres of land preparatory to raising a crop thereon in the year 1902. On March 27, 1902, plaintiff served notice on defendant that she elected to cancel the contract for failure on his part to comply with it. In the notice no specific grounds are set forth as constituting the failure to comply with the contract, but simply a general allegation of default. On May 14th, defendant was again [491]*491informed by verbal notice that he was in default, and that the plaintiff elected to declare the contract null and void, and that an action would be commenced unless he surrendered the premises to plaintiff. When this last notice was given, defendant had nearly completed the cropping of the land. The action was commenced on August 14, 1902. In 1902 defendant sowed but 215 acres of wheat on the land in question. Plaintiff, after notice, has not accepted one-half of this crop. Defendant deposited the same in an elevator, subject to plaintiff’s order. It is claimed by plaintiff that the undisputed fact that but 215 acres of wheat was sowed in 1902 warrants a decree canceling the contract for noncompliance therewith. The contract provides that failure to comply with any of the provisions of the contract shall render it void at the election of the party of the first part, and that time is of the essence of the contract. Was the plaintiff warranted under these circumstances in declaring the contract at an end and canceled on March 27, 1902? We think not.

First, as to the alleged failure to sow 250 acres each year. The evidence -shows that this provision of the contract had not been complied with in any year since the contract was made. It shows also that no objection was ever made that the contract had not been complied with by reason of sowing a less number of acres of wheat than was specified.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Anderson v. Olson
260 N.W. 407 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)
Hanson v. Hanson Hardware Co.
135 N.W. 766 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1912)
Kicks v. State Bank
98 N.W. 408 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 N.W. 48, 13 N.D. 487, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timmins-v-russell-nd-1904.