On tbe argument it was chiefly urged for error: (1) That the contract was not one coming within our registration laws, .and there being no evidence of notice ultra at the time of j.ts purchase, the Hilton Lumber Company is not bound. (2) That the consideration of $5 paid by plaintiff is not sufficient to’justify or uphold the remedy by. specific performance. (3) There is no evidence of any tender'of performance within' the specified time, made to the defendant lumber company, but, in our opinion, on. the facts in evidence, neither position may be allowed to affect plaintiff’s-recovery.
These contracts, by which one acquires, for limited period, the right *to buy another’s property, have a recognized place and fill an ’important purpose in our business life, and it is now very generally held, here and elsewhere, that in proper instances the remédy by specific performance' is available to the holder. Winders v. Kenan, 161 N. C., 628; Gaylord v. McCoy, 158 N. C., 325; Bateman v. Hopkins, 157 N. C., 470; Timber Co. v. Wilson, 151 N. C., 154; Hardy v. Ward, 150 N. C., 385; Watts v. Kellar, 56 Fed., 1; Boss v. Parks, 93 Ala., 153; Ide v. Leisar, 10 Mont., 5; Pomeroy on Specific Performance,' see. 168. And in reference to the status or obligation of the proposed vendor, while it is frequently said' and held that it constitutes only an offer to sell on his part, and does not amount to a contract to convey, this must be understood to refer to a complete or perfect contract to convey, for when the agreement concerns real property, both in its terms and purpose, it amounts to conditional contract to sell, and, in its spirit -and meaning, comes well within our statute of frauds and of our registration laws, giving priority of right to him who first registers his instrument.
In Pomeroy on Contracts, sec. 169, the author, in speaking of options, said: “The contracts of this kind are really eondi- . tional agreements. Hpon the happening of the conditions, that is, upon making the request or declaring the option, they become absolute,” etc.
In 39 Oye., p. 1232, it is said: “An option, in the proper sense, is a contract by which the owner of property agrees with another that he shall have the right to purchase the same at a *222fixed price within a certain time. It is in legal effect an offer to'sell, coupled with an agreement to hold the offer open for acceptance for the time specified, such agreement being supported by a valuable consideration, or, at common law, being under seal, so that it constitutes a binding and irrevocable contract to sell if the' other party shall elect to pur chase within the time specified.” And in Watts v. Kellar, supra, Judge Caldwell, in delivering the opinion, referred generally to these contracts as follows: “An option to buy or sell land, more than any other form of contract, contemplates a . specific performance of its terms; and it is the right to have them specifically enforced that imparts to them their usefulness and value. An option to buy or sell a town lot may be valuable when the party can have the ' contract specifically enforced, but, if he cannot do this, and must resort to an action at law for damages, his option in most cases will be of little or no value. No man of any experience in the law would esteem an option on a lawsuit for an uncertain measure of damages as of any value. The modern, and we think the sound, doctrine is that when such contracts are free from fraud, and are made upon a sufficient consideration, they impose upon the makers an obligation to perform them specifically, which equity will enforce.”
In reference to the $5 paid by plaintiff as the consideration for his interest, it is the accepted position, in this State, that a “binding contract to convey land, where there has been no fraud, mistake, undue influence, or oppression, will be specifically enforced, and, as a rule, the mere inadequacy of price, without more, will not affect the application of the principle” (Combes v. Adams, 150 N. C., 64, citing Boles v. Candle, 133 N. C., 528, and Whitted v. Fuquay, 127 N. C., 68); and where the contract has been perfected by acceptance within the time or proper tender of performance, on suit for specific performance, the real consideration is the contract price, which must be paid before the interest is finally acquired, in this instance the $1,000, and, as to the option itself, which only provides for holding the privilege open for a short period of time and involving also the opportunity to effect á sale by the potential vendor, the $5 paid *223may very properly be held as a sufficient consideration to bind tbe party (Alabama Ry. v. Long, 158 Ala., 301; Ross v. Parks, supra; Smith v. Bangham, 156 Cal., 359; Elliott on Contracts, see. 232); and there is high authority for the position that, in States where this matter has not been regulated by statute, the seal itself conclusively imports a consideration. Watkins v. Robinson, 105 Va., 269; Willard v. Taylor, 75 U. S., 557; Adams v. Canal Co., 230 Ill., 469. And on the failure to make tender to the Hilton Lumber Company, the authorities, as far as examined, seem to hold that, when the .property, the subject-matter of the agreement, has been conveyed to a third person, and the fact is known to the purchaser, the tender required by the contract should be made to the assignee. McLaughlin v. Boyce, 108 Iowa, 254.
The question, however, does not necessarily arise in this case, for all the authorities are to the effect that, “Where a party has disabled himself from performance, or has openly taken position denying’ the other’s right, a formal tender is not required.” In such case the injured party need only show a readiness and ability to perform. Bateman v. Hopkins, 157 N. C., pp. 470-474; Bradford v. Foster, 87 Tenn., 4; Sharp v. West, 150 Fed., 458; McLeod v. Hendry, 126 Ga., 167; Pomeroy on Contracts, sec. 361; 28 A. and E., p. 5.
In the citation to Pomeroy, it is said: “An actual tender by the plaintiff, before suit brought, is unnecessary when, from the acts of the defendant or the situation of the property, it would be wholly nugatory, a mere useless form. If, therefore, before or at the time of completion the defendant has openly or avowedly refused to perform his part or has declared his intention not to perform at all events, then the • plaintiff need not make a tender or demand before suit; it is enough that he is ready and willing and offers to perform, in his pleadings.”
On careful examination, we find no error in the record, and the judgment for plaintiff is affirmed.
No error.