provision for payment of purchase money required the purchaser
to pay a cash deposit of £75, and the balance at the end of three
years, with interest in the meantime at the rate of 5 per cent.
payable quarterly, and with the option of paying off the whole
at any earlier period. That portion of the contract is in writing,
and, in accordance with the rule stated by my learned brother
the Chief Justice, and followed time after time in the Courts
both in England and America, that must have greater weight
than any printed provision inconsistent with it. Well, the
reasonable and ordinary implication from such a provision is
that the conveyance is to be concurrent with the payment in
full of the purchase money. The appellant relies upon the first
clause of the printed conditions, and he says that that entitles
him to a conveyance of the property, notwithstanding the
ordinary and legal presumption referred to, and notwithstanding
that no portion of the purchase money has been paid except the
deposit of £75. That clause provides that the purchaser shall,
not may, but shall, within 7 days after the receipt of particulars
of title, at his own expense, tender for execution a transfer in
conformity with the Real Property Act, and from the com-
pletion of the purchase the purchaser shall be entitled to the
rents and profits. There is no express provision in that
that the vendor shall immediately execute and hand over to
the purchaser this transfer duly executed and permit him to
take it away and register it, notwithstanding the non-payment
of the purchase money, and it does not in its terms profess to
give the purchaser any benefit at all except the right to the
rents and profits of the land after completion of the purchase,
whatever that means. But it puts an obligation upon the
purchaser. It limits him as to his freedom of action. He must,
within 7 days after receipt of particulars of title, tender for
execution 2 memorandum of transfer. If he is going to accept
the title he must accept it in that way. He has to tender a