Dinsmoor v. Thomas
Dinsmoor v. Thomas
Opinion of the Court
Appellee filed her bill against;'appellant alleging that she had purchased a house and lot' frdm" ^appellant on the installment plan, that she had paid the príée,fiuct: wanted a deed. Appellant answered by averring that appellee -had not paid the installments as they fell due and that he, in pursuance of a provision of the written contract between them, had declared a forfeiture and applied the payments made as rent for the.<time the premises had been occupied by appellee. This appeal followed upon a decree for complainant.
(1) After the evidence had been taken appellee was allowed to amend her bill by alleging that the controversy between the parties as to whether appellee had discharged all the obligations assumed by her when entering into the contract had been adjudicated in her favor in ah action of unlawful detainer brought against her by appellant in the year preceding the filing of the bill in this cause. Appellant now objects that the submission was not had upon this amendment, and therefore that it and the evidence offered in its support should have no consideration in the cause. .The record shows that the first submission of the cause on the pleadings and the proof, in which the “bill of complaint” was noted for appellee, was set aside in order that the amendment could be made, after which the cause was marked by the register as “submitted for decree on the pleadings and the proof and objections as noted by the register in the former note, now refiled.” In the next place the transcrip shows this: “Refiled note of evidence. See transcript, pages 16, 17” — where the original note is set out. It is not required that pleadings be noted by the register, unless they be relied upon as admissions or as in some other way tending to prove the contentions of the parties as to the facts in the cause. We consider that chancery rules 75 and 76 were substantially complied with in this case, and that the amendment and the evidence' offered in support of it may be considered for what in a legal sense they may be worth.
(2) It was made to appear in the proof that on the trial of-the unlawful detainer case a number of receipts given by appellant •or his agent to appellee upon payments made were offered in evidence. These reecipts had been lost from the custody, probably, of the court stenographer. But several memoranda of the amounts shown by these receipts had been made at the time of the trial, where they were introduced in evidence, and these
(3, 4) Our opinion is that we cannot refer to the judgment in the unlawful detainer action as an adjudication of the issues upon which the result in this cause must turn. It does not certainly appear upon what determination of fact the court proceeded to a judgment for the defendant in that case. Non con-stat, that case may have been determined upon an issue of fact not conclusive of the case at bar. However, we find upon the evidence that payments made by appellee to appellant prior to the trial of the unlawful detainer action and the amount then and there tendered by appellee were equal, to the amount appellee had agreed to pay for the house and lot, insurance and interest charges included. True, the parties contested in that suit the question whether appellant had ever declared a forfeiture of appellee’s rights under the contract, and that contention had been renewed in this cause. But a decision of that question is not necessary to a proper conclusion in the present case. The evidence shows that appellant, acting by his attorney in that case, after it had been determined against him, accepted and applied to his own use the amount tendered therein by appellant as in completion of the payments due under the contract. Notwithstanding appellant had been defeated in the possessory action, and even though it be now assumed that he had previously declared a forfeiture, his acceptance of the .amount tendered operated as a waiver of such forfeiture, a restoration of appellee’s' rights under the contract, and a receipt of that amount as a payment upon the contract. For the effectuation of these purposes, as far as made necessary by the facts of the case, whatever those facts may have been, the tender was made, and, being so made, appellant could not accept and use the tender, thus made, without binding himself by its very necessary intendment. Assuming then that there had been a forfeiture, appellant’s acceptance of the amount tendered — an amount, as we have said, sufficient to make up the
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.