Carpenter v. Thornburn

Decision Date21 October 1905
Citation89 S.W. 1047
PartiesCARPENTER v. THORNBURN.
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

In December, 1896, Joseph Thornburn, being the owner of 445 acres of land in Arkansas, entered into a contract with W. N. Carpenter by which he agreed to lease the land to Carpenter for five years, for a specified rent for each year, to be paid on the 1st day of November of each year, commencing with the year 1897 and ending with the year 1901. The aggregate amount for all the years was nearly $900. The contract, among other matters, contained the following stipulations: "Time being of the essence of this contract, it is especially agreed and understood that if either of said rent notes and the sums to be paid as rent be not promptly paid at maturity, or if the taxes due for any one of the years above mentioned be not promptly repaid to said lessor, then this lease, including the option to purchase hereinafter mentioned shall, without notice, terminate and cease, and the lessor shall be entitled to immediate possession of the leased property and said lessee shall be liable to said lessor for such of said rent notes as may have matured and remain unpaid," etc. "If the said lessee shall have paid the rent notes above mentioned, together with any additional sums above provided for, as rent, and any attorney's fees that said lessor may have to pay for collecting said notes after their maturity, then said lessee shall have, for the period between November 1, 1901, and January 1, 1902, the option to purchase said lands for the sum of $768, * * * of which $8 shall be paid in cash." Then follows a statement showing that the balance was to be paid in 10 annual installments of $76 each, with interest added. The lessor also stipulated that upon the payment of the five rent notes, as provided in the contract, and the further sum of $8, he would execute a warranty deed to the lessee conveying the land to him, taking a trust deed from him securing the payment of the notes for $760 and interest. Carpenter paid the first four rent notes as they fell due, but failed to pay the last rent note for $190.70, which fell due on the 1st of November, 1901. Thornburn elected to declare that the option to purchase had been forfeited, and in February, 1902, brought an action at law on the unpaid rent note to recover the amount due on same and interest. In April, 1902, Carpenter filed an answer alleging that the contract was in fact an agreement to purchase, not to rent, land; that he had paid all of the five notes designated as rent notes in the contract, except the last, and that he would have paid that note but for the fact that plaintiff had failed to execute and tender to him a deed as required by the contract; that he had entered upon the land under his contract, and made valuable improvements thereon; that he was then, and had been at all times, ready and willing to pay the $190.70 and the further sum of $8 to plaintiff, as required by the contract, and would have done so had a deed been tendered by plaintiff. He tendered the money in court and offered to pay the same at any time a deed was delivered to him. He asked that the case be transferred to the equity docket, that his answer be taken as a counterclaim, and that plaintiff be compelled to specifically perform...

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