Williamson v. Wanlass

545 P.2d 1145, 18 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1116, 1976 Utah LEXIS 746
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1976
Docket14076
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 545 P.2d 1145 (Williamson v. Wanlass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamson v. Wanlass, 545 P.2d 1145, 18 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1116, 1976 Utah LEXIS 746 (Utah 1976).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice:

Plaintiffs Don and Catherine Jodie Williamson brought suit to enforce an acceleration clause and demand for the entire balance on an installment note, given by the defendants Wanlass, as part of the payment on the purchase of the plaintiffs’ farm property near Paradise in Cache County.- A trial to the court resulted in findings and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for $18,023.50, plus interest, and also for attorneys’ fees of $2,000.

The defendants appeal, contending that they were not accorded their entitlement of reasonable notice and an opportunity to make payments currently due before the declaration of acceleration.

During the early part of 1971 the defendants negotiated with the plaintiffs to buy the latter’s farm. Both parties went to the same attorney, the late Charles P. Olson of Logan, who handled the preparation of the necessary documents. Insofar as material here, the contract which the parties executed provided for a purchase price of $110,975 to be paid by $1,975 in cash, $89,000 by the Wanlasses obtaining approval of a loan for that amount, and the remainder of $20,000 by the note here involved. It provided for payments of $162.-42 principal and interest on the first day of each month, beginning June 1, 1971, until paid; and was secured by a second mortgage on the property. The Wanlasses made the down payment of $1,975 and obtained the $89,000 loan, which was paid over to the Williamsons.

The provisions of the note pertinent here are:

That “if any installment is not paid at the time it becomes due, the holders of this note, at their option, may declare the whole due and payable . . . ”; and that “the makers . . . severally waive presentment for payment and notice of non-payment of this note.”
Commencing June 1, 1971, the defendants made their monthly payments by mail, until July of 1973, when the difficulties described below occurred. We follow the standard rule that we view any disputed evidence in the light favorable to the findings and judgment of the trial court. In doing so, we take certain important statements, those which are included within our quotation marks, as plaintiffs assert the facts in their own brief. “The evidence . ,. . shows that the sellers [plaintiffs] received ■ late payments on 15 of the 25 payments made, but the sellers never ac *1147 quiesced in or accepted the late payments.” Further, “The evidence is clear that at least on two occasions, Mrs. Williamson told Mrs. Wanlass that the payments were to be made on time . . . [and] . on February 20, 1973, a letter was sent by Charles P. Olson [attorney] . . .”
The letter stated:
Dear Folks:
I have just had a phone call from the Williamsons, and they are quite concerned over the fact that you have been somewhat late, sometimes as high as three months, in making your payments.
This inconveniences the Williamsons to no end and, as you know, they have certain remedies under their contract, such as declaring the full amount due and payable, which, if they are aggravated, they will pursue. In a spirit of harmony, it would be nice if the payments could be made on time so there would not be any further friction arise.
With kind regards, we are, [etc].

After this letter there does not appear to have been any further difficulty about the payments until five months later, in July, 1973. Mr. Wanlass testified that on July 9, 1973, he prepared a check, addressed to the Williamsons, and deposited it in the mail. The Williamsons say they never received that check. On August 3, 1973, the Williamsons went to Mr. Olson and had him prepare a notice of acceleration and demand for the entire balance, indicating that the July payment had never been received. The Wanlasses received the notice on August 7, 1973. Mr. Wanlass immediately attempted to telephone Mr. Williamson, but was unsuccessful. He then stopped payment on the July check and made out a new check for the July payment. He sent this with a letter of explanation to Mr. Williamson. In another envelope, postmarked August 7, 1973, Mr. Wanlass sent a check dated August 1, 1973, for the August payment.

With respect to the occurrence just delineated, the plaintiffs’ brief further states:

The buyers’ own check shows that the check, which was supposed to have been mailed for the July 1, 1973, payment, was not dated until July 9, 1973, which would be at least nine days late when made, by the evidence most favorable to the buyers.
The August payment was in an envelope post-marked August 7, 1973.

Every payment due, including those up to the date of the trial, had been tendered to the plaintiffs, or to their attorney, which tenders were refused. None of the checks after the one for June, 1973, had been cashed. This fact itself is something of a commentary on the plaintiffs’ assertion as to how badly they needed these payments exactly on the due date; and even more so when this is considered in conjunction with the fact that the $91,000 had been turned over to the plaintiffs as payment on their farm. Nevertheless, the plaintiffs refused the tender and caused this suit to be filed.

The clause which allows for acceleration in case of default, if strictly enforced, is a severe covenant, the invocation of which has similarity to other forfeitures. The imposition of such severe conditions is not favored in the law; 1 and one who seeks to impose them must not, either by acts or omission permit another to assume that the covenant will not be-strictly enforced, then “crack down” on the obligor by rigidly insisting on enforcement, without giving some reasonable notice and opportunity to comply. This is a doctrine of equity which is firmly established in our law by numerous decisions. A foundational case is Christy v. Guild 2 to the effect that when one has accepted overdue payments so that the payor has reasonably relied on such course of conduct and been led to believe that the payee will tolerate a failure of strict perform- *1148 anee, the latter cannot abruptly change course and insist upon strict adherence to the covenant imposed and enforce a harsh forfeiture. 3

The most recent pronouncement of this court on this subject is in Paul v. Kitt, 4 some of whose facts are closely similar to those here. It there appeared that the monthly payments on a contract had been made for over two years; that some of them had been made late; and that on prior occasions two phone calls and a letter had taken care of the difficulties when payment was not made' on the due date.

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Bluebook (online)
545 P.2d 1145, 18 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1116, 1976 Utah LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-wanlass-utah-1976.