Yost v. Wills

102 S.E. 728, 86 W. Va. 71, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 80
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 S.E. 728 (Yost v. Wills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yost v. Wills, 102 S.E. 728, 86 W. Va. 71, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 80 (W. Va. 1920).

Opinion

POEEENBARGER, JUDGE:

The bill dismissed by the decree appealed from in this cause sought a decree for payment to the plaintiff, of a sum of money' deposited in a bank, under a contract of sale of real estate, upon the theory that it was a sum agreed upon by the parties to the contract, as liquidated damages, to be paid to the vendor, in the event of a breach of the contract by the vendees. Alleging tender of full and complete performance of the contract, on the part of the defendants, the bill prays for a decree adjudicating title to the fund, $13,800.00, and the accumulated interest thereon, in the plaintiff, and requiring the bank to make payment thereof to him.

[73]*73The contract was for the sale of several tracts of land, having an aggregate area of 6,895.26 acres, in 3,781.17 acres of which the surface and minerals were both included, and in the balance of which only the minerals were included. The price agreed upon was $40.00' per acre, making a total of $275,810.40, of which $75,810.40 including the deposit of $13,800.00 was to be paid July 1, 1917, and the balance in four annual installments of $50,000.00 each. The contract was dated, April 7, 1917, and the provisions thereof upon which the solution of the problem presented here largely depends read as follows:

“And the parties of the second part have this day deposited in the Bank of Raleigh the sum of $13,800.00 to be held by the said Bank of Raleigh, subject- to the order of McGinnis & Hatcher, attorneys, until the conditions hereinafter mentioned shall be complied with. That is to say, the said Yost promises and binds himself to be ready to tender within • a period of thirty (30) days from this date, to the firm of the -firm of Mc-Ginnis & Hatcher attorneys of the parties of the second part, a good and sufficient title which shall be approved by them, and upon thé approval -of such title by the said attorneys, the $13,800.00, deposited in The Bank of Raleigh, as aforesaid, shall be paid over to the said Yost by the said-MeGinnis & Hatcher, to be credited by the Yost on the payments for the said property hereby agreed to be sold and conveyed as hereinafter set forth; and the said parties of the second part shall have until the 1st day of July, 1917, to complete the first payment on said property, the said land and minerals this day purchased to be paid for as follows

The sum of $75,810.40, including the $13,800.00 above mentioned, to be paid on the 1st day of July, 1917, and the residue ■of said payments to be made in four (4) annuals payments of $50,000.00 each, dated July 1st, 1917, with interest thereon at 6% payable semi-annually on the 1st day of January and July, said deferred payments to be evidenced by bonds signed by the purchasers of said property and secured by deed of trust on the property above mentioned.”

“It is nevertheless understood and agreed that if the title to the said property is not approved by the Attorneys for the said parties of the second part on or before the said first day of July, [74]*741917, then this contract is to be null and void, and the said money so deposited in the Bank of Raleigh shall be paid over to the said parties of the second part.”

“It is further distinctly understood that if the party of the first part fails to tender to the Attorneys for the said parties of the second part a good and sufficient title to the property, free from all incumbrances, within the thirty (30) days herein-above referred to, then the said parties of the second part shall have the right to elect whether they take the said property here-inabove described upon the terms herein set forth, or refuse to take it, and if the said parties of the second part refuse to take said property under this clause of this agreement, then the deposit hereinabove referred to shall be repaid to them upon said refusal and this contract shall be at an end. If, however the said party of the first part fails to secure the necessary signatures, corrections and other things necessary to perfect the said title within the said thirty (30) days and the said parties of the second part elect to take the said property after the expiration of said thirty (30) days, then any number of days after the expiration of said thirty (30) days which the said Yost may require to perfect said title, as aforesaid, shall be added to the time and the final day of purchase and consummation of this sale shall be extended correspondingly for the same number of days, subject however, to the following understanding between the parties. That is to say: any time after the expiration of the said thirty (30) days the said parties of the second part may refuse to take the said property and collect from the said Bank the money deposited with it as aforesaid, by giving to the said party of the first part ten (10) days written notice of their intention so to do said notice to be mailed to the said party of the first part at his address at Staunton, Virginia, by registered mail.”

“It is further understood that should title be tendered by the party of the first part and approved by the Attorneys of the parties of the second part, and the parties of the second part thereafter fail to comply with the other terms of this agreement by the purchase property, under the conditions heretofore set forth, that the $13,800.00, to be delivered to the party of the [75]*75first part upon the approval of title shall he forfeited to the said party of the first part, and this contract shall be at an end.”

In the resistance of the effort to reverse the decree, and as ground for its support, lack of jurisdiction in equity is urged. Since the bill treats the money in question as a sum deposited under an agreement that it should stand and be treated as liquidated damages, in case of a breach of the contract by the vendees and depositors, and be paid over to the vendor, as such, in such case, the bill does not seek enforcement of a forfeiture. Its purpose is procuration of a decree for payment of a fund which, by contract, belongs to the plaintiff. Hence, the authorities denying jurisdiction in equity to enforce forfeitures are not applicable. Equity jurisdiction in cases of the kind alleged in the bill was acknowledged and exercised in Bucklen v. Hasterlick, 155 Ill. 423. It was held in that case, that the demand asserted by the vendor was not predicated upon the theory of forfeiture and that his title to the fund did not accrue by forfeiture. In this view of the nature of the demand, the court was fully sustained by Depree v. Bedborough, 4 Giff. 479 and by the text in Ery on Specific Performance, 3rd Ed. 1460. In all decisions dealing with stipulations for payment of liquidated damages, such demands are held not to be penalties nor forfeitures. They are treated as demands for money agreed upon as compensation for injuries. Such compensation is in no sense a. forfeiture or penalty, when it makes good a property or pecuniary loss.

The remedy at law is not adequate, nor appropriate. If the vendor’s claim is well founded, he has right to a specific fund, not in the hands of the real defendants. He cannot obtain it by suing them at law, though he might obtain an equivalent sum. The alternative, however, is not the measure of his right. He is entitled to the particular fund deposited conditionally for his benefit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.E. 728, 86 W. Va. 71, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yost-v-wills-wva-1920.