Levin v. Grant , 238 Wis. 537 ( 1941 )


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  • Action by Rose Levin, as executrix of the last will of Max Levin, and individually, against Sam Grant and others. From parts of an order entered after judgment of strict foreclosure of a land contract, denying plaintiff a writ of assistance to place her in possession and bar all claims of the defendants for failure of defendants to comply with terms of a conditional agreement made subsequent to judgment for extension of time beyond the original period fixed by the judgment for payment of the amount due and relieving the defendants from their defaults under said agreement on condition of their making payment of all sums due within a period fixed by the court, the plaintiff appeals.

    In October, 1929, Max Levin and Rose, his wife, executed to the defendants Grant a land contract whereby the Levins sold and the Grants purchased premises described for $41,000, $10,000 payable on a first mortgage existing on the property, $10,000 in cash, and the remainder within seven years in principal sums of not less than $250 per month, with interest at six per cent per annum on unpaid principal. The Grants were also to pay taxes against and insurance upon the property. Action to foreclose the contract was brought by the Levins and judgment of strict foreclosure was entered therein *Page 539 on May 27, 1936. This judgment determined the amount due and unpaid on the contract from the Grants and the defendant, the A. L. M. Corporation, to whom the Grants had assigned, and further provided that unless that amount and stipulated attorney fees and costs of action, aggregating $9,320.48, together with taxes and insurance the plaintiff might subsequently pay, with interest on said sums, be paid before May 18, 1938, —

    "The defendants and all persons claiming under them shall be deemed to have abandoned and surrendered to the plaintiffs all right, title, interest and equity of redemption in and to the premises described in the complaint, . . . and all right of action upon or growing out of said contract, and that said defendants, and all persons claiming under them shall be absolutely barred and foreclosed of and from all right, title, interest and equity of redemption in and to said premises, and the plaintiffs, upon application to the court, may have such remedy by way of writ of assistance as shall put the plaintiffs into possession of said premises."

    The period of substantially two years above mentioned and periods of extension thereof will be hereinafter referred to as periods of redemption.

    The judgment further provided that the plaintiffs should have the right to apply to the mediation board of the county for an order terminating the period of redemption in case the defendants should default in the monthly payments which had been agreed upon by the parties in proceedings theretofore had before said board in said action.

    Shortly before the period of redemption incorporated in the judgment was about to expire, the plaintiffs and the parties obligated to pay under the judgment entered into a stipulation in writing wherein the plaintiffs agreed that they should not "take any action by writ of assistance or otherwise to enforce said judgment for a period of one year from and after May 18, 1938, upon condition and provided that the said *Page 540 defendant the A. L. M. Corporation shall regularly and promptly pay to the plaintiffs the sum of $200 each month to apply on the amount due under said judgment," which amount was recited in the stipulation and was at the time about $300 less than the sum stated in the judgment, and should pay the taxes upon the premises and make all payments of interest due on said mortgage. If the defendant should perform these conditions then the plaintiffs would on May 10, 1939, further agree not to take any action "by way of writ of assistance or otherwise to enforce said judgment" for a year from May 18, 1939, upon condition that the defendant corporation should make monthly payments of $200 per month and pay taxes and make mortgage interest payments. And the stipulation further provided that upon default of any payments provided for by the stipulation the plaintiffs should "forthwith have the right to such remedy by writ of assistance as shall put the plaintiffs into possession of said premises, to bar all further rights of the defendants therein, and for such other relief under said judgment, or otherwise to enforce the same, as to the plaintiffs shall seem appropriate or desirable."

    Subsequently plaintiff Max Levin died. The defendant Rose Levin is the duly appointed executrix of his will. One Sam Shumow has purchased all the stock of the A.L.M. Corporation, and the corporation and the Grants have assigned their equities under the contract to him and he agreed to pay the amounts due the plaintiffs. The defendants made no monthly payments pursuant to said stipulation after January, 1940; defaulted in city and county tax payments the years 1937, 1938, and 1939, on all which interest and penalties have accrued; and failed to pay interest on the mortgage due July 1, 1940, when the principal of the mortgage became due.

    On August 29, 1940, the plaintiffs by petition recited the above facts, and that the agent of plaintiff Rose Levin duly *Page 541 demanded of the defendants that they surrender possession of the premises and that the defendants refuse to comply with the demand. On this petition Rose Levin moved for revival of the action in her name as executrix as successor to Max Levin; that Shumow be made a party defendant; and that the plaintiff "be granted a writ of assistance or such other order or remedy as may be deemed just and equitable to remove said Sam Shumow or anyone claiming under him and all of the other defendants from possession of said premises and to put the plaintiffs in possession thereof."

    The defendants A. L. M. Corporation and Shumow answered the petition and moved the court to revive the action and make Shumow a party; to deny a writ of assistance to the plaintiff; requested the court to order the plaintiff to accept a tender of the defendants of an amount claimed by the defendants to be the amount due to the plaintiff and to issue to the defendant corporation a deed to the premises; requested the court to determine the exact amount due the plaintiff, and to give the defendant A. L. M. Corporation a reasonable time, to be fixed by the court, to pay the amount, if any, found due in excess of said tender; and asked such other relief as might be equitable.

    The court held three hearings on these motions, on September 13, September 30, and December 13, 1940. The trial judge made no formal findings of fact but filed a written opinion from which it appears that on August 15, 1940, Shumow by contract with the A. L. M. Corporation and the Grants acquired their interests; that on the first hearing a certified check for $5,500 was tendered to the plaintiff in behalf of Shumow and the A. L. M. Corporation; and that these defendants offered to add thereto whatever sum the court found to be due in excess of said amount; that the plaintiff claims that the amount due, $9,193.69, was not in dispute except as to one item of $300 which plaintiff claimed *Page 542 defendants failed to pay as interest on the mortgage and which the defendants claimed had been paid; that the only evidence as to the value of the premises was contained in a report of the mediation board wherein the board stated its opinion that the premises were worth $27,500.65. Subsequent to the filing of this decision the hearing of December 13th was had to determine the amount due to plaintiff. After this hearing the court made and filed the order from which the plaintiff appeals. That order provides that the defendants A. L. M. Corporation and Shumow "be permitted to redeem by paying to the clerk of the circuit court $5,818.81 and the further sum of $322.91, interest from January 17, 1940, to December 20, 1940, the above sums being the entire balance of the principal on the land contract and interest thereon at six (6%) per cent." The order further provides that said defendants pay "all delinquent taxes, interest and penalties" against the premises on or before December 20, 1940; and that the defendants pay $25 as costs of motion. The order further expressly denies plaintiff's motion for relief by writ of assistance or otherwise. The following opinion was filed May 20, 1941: From the foregoing statement of facts it appears that after judgment of strict foreclosure of a land contract was entered which gave to defendants nearly two years in which to make payments as required by the judgment or stand barred from all claims under the contract, the parties, near the close of the redemption period, by written stipulation, agreed upon a further period of redemption on condition of defendants making payments according to the stipulation, and expressly agreed that in case of failure of defendants to *Page 543 comply with said conditions the plaintiff might have possession of the premises and the defendants be barred from all claims thereto, and that the plaintiff might have a "writ of assistance" from the court to be put in possession on application therefor. The stipulation further provided that in case the defendants should comply with the conditions of the stipulation the plaintiff would grant to the defendants a further redemption period of one year, upon similar conditions. After the termination of the one-year extension first provided by the stipulation the plaintiff upon petition showing gross defaults by defendants in making payments as required by the stipulation applied to the court for a writ of assistance to be put in possession. The court denied this motion and granted to the defendants on their motion an order reviving the action, making Shumow a party defendant, and relieving the defendants from their defaults and permitting them to make payment into court forthwith of the amount of principal and interest found due on the original land contract, and within seven days to make payment of all delinquent taxes. The plaintiff appeals from these provisions of the order.

    It appears from the written opinion of the circuit judge that he was of the view that under the rule of St. Joseph'sHospital v. Maternity Hospital, 224 Wis. 422,272 N.W. 669, 273 N.W. 791, the court had the power under its equity jurisdiction to permit redemption notwithstanding the failure of the defendants to perform the conditions of the stipulation for a further period of redemption made after entry of the judgment. The court treated the situation precisely as it would have treated it had it resulted from failure to make full payment within the time provided by the original judgment, instead of its resulting from a failure of the defendants to comply with the terms of the stipulation.

    Under the rule of the St. Joseph's Hospital Case above cited the ruling of the court would have been correct had the court been faced with an application by the defendants to *Page 544 extend the period of redemption fixed by its own judgment. But in the instant case the court is faced with an application by the plaintiff to grant to her rights secured to her by the stipulation of the parties made after entry of judgment. The plaintiff contends that this stipulation was a valid contract, as it manifestly was, and that being such the court was without power to deny the plaintiff the rights and remedies secured to her by that contract.

    It is urged by counsel for plaintiff that the general statement of the procedure in strict foreclosure in the opinion in the St. Joseph's Hospital Case, page 430, is inconsistent with the decision on demurrer in Loehr v. Dickson, 141 Wis. 332,124 N.W. 293. In the latter case there was a general demurrer to the complaint for failure to state facts constituting a cause of action. The plaintiff contended that the complaint stated a case in tort. The court held that it did not state such a case but that it did state a case on contract. The crucial fact stated was that the defendant by maliciously and purposely concealing himself prevented the plaintiff from making payment within the period of redemption provided by the judgment on foreclosure of a land contract. The court held that the allegations respecting this fact did not constitute a tort but did constitute a breach of duty to perform contractual obligations and therefore stated a cause for nominal damages at least for violation of that duty. But as appears from the opinion on page 338, the court considered that the plaintiff, besides having the right of action pleaded, also had the right to relief in equity either by moving at the foot of the judgment in the foreclosure action to be permitted to redeem, or by commencing an action in equity for such relief. The decision does not conflict in any way with the statement as to practice made in the opinion in the St. Joseph's Hospital Case. So far as it is in point here it tends to support the action of the court in the instant case.

    Without going into details, we will say that on the affidavits before the court upon the hearings had on the motions of the *Page 545 parties the court did not abuse its discretion in permitting the defendants to redeem. The question before us is, Did the court, as a court of equity, under the rules of courts of equity relative to granting relief from forfeitures, have power to grant a right of redemption after expiration of the period that the parties by contract entered into after entry of judgment had themselves fixed when the defendants who were bound to perform the stipulated conditions had failed to perform them?

    The general rule undoubtedly is, as stated in the opinion inLoehr v. Dickson, supra, that a court of equity ordinarily has power, when a party has breached his contract, to protect him against forfeiture resulting from that breach, by motion at the foot of a judgment if that method is available. The question therefore simmers down to whether the rules respecting relief from forfeitures applied by courts of equity, apply to failures to perform contracts made expressly conditional when the party asking for relief has failed to perform the conditions imposed upon him by the contract.

    The rule is as well settled that courts of equity will not grant relief from every forfeiture resulting from a breach of a condition in a contract, as that it will generally grant relief from such a forfeiture. Whether such relief will be granted depends on whether the condition which the party has failed to perform is a condition precedent or a condition subsequent. If it is the former, relief will not be granted, but if it is the latter it will be.

    "When the contract is made to depend upon a condition precedent, — in other words, when no right shall vest until certain acts have been done, as, for example, until the vendee has paid certain sums at certain specified times, — then, also, a court of equity will not relieve a vendee against the forfeiture incurred by a breach of such condition precedent. But when, on the other hand, the stipulation concerning payment is only a condition subsequent, a court of equity has power to relieve the defaulting vendee from the forfeiture caused by his breach *Page 546 of this condition." 1 Pomeroy's Eq. Jur. (4th ed.) p. 866, § 455.

    It is said in 4 Kent's Commentaries (14th ed.), 143 (*125), that a court of equity "cannot relieve from the consequences of a condition precedent unperformed." The condition of the original instant contract so far as the contract may be considered conditional, was of course a condition subsequent. That was the basis for the granting of the period of redemption in the judgment herein. By the execution of the original contract the vendees acquired an interest in the land. But by the stipulation here involved the vendees acquired no interest in the land. All interest in the land they had, had already attached. That interest was subject to forfeiture by default in future payments upon the land contract itself, but a court of equity had power to relieve from the effect of those defaults, and this power was exercised by the court in entering the original judgment herein. What the defendants acquired by their stipulation after judgment was a conditional right to an additional year in which to redeem, and a conditional right to a second additional year for redemption by making payments during the first additional year according to the stipulation for payments during that year. The condition attached to the right to the second additional year for redemption was clearly a condition precedent. But the condition attached to the first one-year redemption period granted by the stipulation was a condition subsequent. Nonperformance of the conditions for payment worked a forfeiture of that right, but a court of equity had the power to relieve from a forfeiture at any time during that period. But the period of redemption granted by that stipulation expired May 18, 1939, and the defendants by breach of the condition precedent attached to the right to yet an additional time for redemption forfeited such right and from that forfeiture a court of equity cannot relieve them. The defendants never acquired the right to the second period of redemption that was granted to them *Page 547 by the stipulation only on condition that they made the payments during the first period of redemption. The court could not grant to the defendants a right that they never acquired. By its order the court attempted to grant the defendants a right that they never acquired and from which they were barred by nonperformance of the conditions upon performance of which that right could only vest. By so doing the court made a contract for the defendants instead of merely relieving them from a forfeiture of rights which they had by contract acquired but had lost by nonperformance of the conditions upon which continuance of that right depended, to the latter of which its power was limited. We consider that the court had no power to do this, and that its order must be reversed. This decision in no way conflicts with the rule of the St. Joseph's Hospital Case, supra, or the general statement in the opinion therein relating to the practice in ordinary cases of strict foreclosure of land contracts.

    Defendants contend that by not moving for relief according to the stipulation promptly when the defendants defaulted in their payments the plaintiff waived the rights and remedies accorded to her by the stipulation. They cite two cases in support of this contention: Godwin v. Miller, 199 Wis. 497,226 N.W. 954, and Phillips v. Carver, 99 Wis. 561,75 N.W. 432. These cases appear to us not in point. There is no finding by the trial court that the plaintiff expressly waived any rights that accrued to her by the stipulation, or a finding of any conduct on her part that operated as a waiver. The court based its decision entirely on its opinion that it deemed its decision "proper, under the equitable powers of the court to relieve from forfeitures." Such power not existing under the rules of courts of equity forbidding relief for breaches of conditions precedent, the decision of the court was erroneous and must be reversed.

    By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the record is remanded with directions to grant the motion *Page 548 of the plaintiff for a writ of assistance and such other relief as may be equitable.

    ROSENBERRY, C. J., and WICKHEM, J., concur in the result.

    A motion for a rehearing was granted on July 7, 1941.

    The following opinion was filed October 7, 1941:

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 300 N.W. 169, 238 Wis. 537

Judges: FOWLER, J. (<italic>on rehearing</italic>).

Filed Date: 9/12/1941

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2023