delivered the opinion of the court.
On July 17, 1905, the parties to this suit entered into a contract wherein the respondents, for a valuable consideration, sold to the appellant all the timber growing upon a certain tract of land situated in Missoula county, upon the condition that the timber be cut and removed on or before July 17, 1910. In the fore part of May, 1910, the appellant, having done nothing toward cutting or removing the timber, and realizing that the contract would soon expire, requested one Fairbanks to see Mr. Arnold and ascertain from him upon what terms an extension for one year could be procured. Fairbanks saw Arnold, who said he would grant such extension for $500, adding'that he was anxious to have the land cleared up, that he would rather have the timber taken off than to have the money, and that “to run over a month or two over the present year there would be no extra charge.” Fairbanks wrote at once to the appellant, advising him to see Arnold. Between June 4th and 8th, appellant went to Plains to see Arnold, but failed to do so,' learning that Arnold was at St. Regis. ' Upon June 27th the appellant sent his bookkeeper, Mr. Keith, to Plains to get Mr. Burleigh to go to Arnold and get an extension. Keith went to *420Plains and saw Mr. Burleigh, but nothing was done because Arnold was out of town. A few days later Mr. Burleigh'saw, Arnold and talked with him. Touching this conversation, Mr. Burleigh testifies: “He (Arnold) never denied that he had agreed to grant an extension for a year on the basis of $500, but complained and said that he had of course expected that he would see Mr. Donlan, that Mr. Donlan had not showed up or anybody else had not showed up. # * * I asked Mr. Arnold what he would take if the timber could be cut off sooner than a year. He seemed to be anxious to have the timber cut off, and there was no satisfactory understanding arrived at. I think Mr. Arnold told me he would consider the matter.” In the last of June or first part of July appellant himself went to Plains to see Arnold, but Arnold was at Camas Springs. On July 12th Keith sent a check for $500 to Mr. Burleigh, and within.a day or two appellant himself went to Paradise to see Mr. Burleigh and have him close up the deal, which he promised to do if Arnold was at home. Mr. Burleigh saw Arnold on the 13th or 14th and spoke to him about the matter of terms for a shorter extension, and Arnold “said he had come to a conclusion about it, and that the only conditions upon which he would allow Mr. Donlan to cut that timber was * * * a stumpage basis at the same rate as paid to the state. ’ ’ Whereupon Mr. Burleigh, deeming it useless to tender the check, simply kept it and quit the negotiations without making any tender. At no time after the interview between Fairbanks and Arnold was any tender made to Arnold or anything written to him; nor was anything said to him indicative of an acceptance of his terms, save as above set forth.
The foregoing facts, constituting the substance of all the evidence in the ease, were presented under an amended complaint which declared upon two causes of action, viz.: (a) To quiet appellant’s title as owner of the timber; and (b) to compel respondents to “execute a sufficient grant” to the appellant of the right to enter the premises and cut and remove the timber. Issue was joined by the answer, which denied the essential allega*421tions of the amended complaint, which affirmatively asserted title to any right of possession of the timber in the respondents, which alleged the expiration of the original agreement, and which assailed the validity of the alleged extension upon various legal grounds connected with the oral character of the same. In the reply it is pleaded that the failure to have the extension reduced to writing was due wholly to the acts of respondents, and that the respondents are by their acts estopped to claim the timber or to question the right of the appellant to enter the lands in question and remove the timber therefrom. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, there was an order of nonsuit, upon which a judgment was thereafter given and entered, denying relief to the appellant and granting the prayer of respondents’ answer. From that judgment this appeal is taken.
The appellant, conceding that under the decision of this court in Hollensteiner v. Missoula Lumber Co., 37 Mont. 278, 96 Pac. 420, no right remained in him to cut the timber left when the contract of July 17, 1905, expired, makes the following contentions: (1) That the evidence discloses an enforceable oral contract between the parties for a year’s extension; and (2) assuming that no such contract was made, the rule of Hollensteiner v. Lumber Co. works a forfeiture which should not be enforced in this case, in view of the equities disclosed by the record. Of these in their order.
1. It is impossible to extract anything more from the conduct [1] of Arnold than a mere offer to extend for a year for a certain consideration. Instead of accepting this offer, the appellant, through the agent chosen by him, asked terms for a shorter extension. No pretense is made that the appellant ever accepted Arnold’s offer until the cheek was sent to Burleigh, on July 12th, and instructions were given him by the appellant on July 13th to close the transaction. This assumed acceptance was purely subjective and of no effect, because the agent chosen by the appellant did not communicate the acceptance nor tender the consideration. On the contrary, he inquired concerning the terms for a shorter extension, and, being met by a flat refusal to *422grant any extension, departed without further ado. If we imagine the respondents seeking to recover from the appellant the price of this alleged extension, some notion may be gained of the utter infirmity of the claim that a contract was entered into therefor. A contract is not created by a mere offer, even though kept open for nearly two months, which is revoked before acceptance. The principles involved are too fundamental and too elementary for discussion. (Rev. Codes, sec. 4992; Brophy v. Idaho P. & P. Co., 31 Mont. 279, 78 Pac. 493; State ex rel. Henderson v. Board of State Prison Commrs., 37 Mont. 378, 96 Pac. 736; Monahan v. Allen, 47 Mont. 75, 130 Pac. 768.)
2. Assuming that the application to this case of the rule of Hollensteiner v. Lumber Co. involves a loss in the nature of a [2] forfeiture, the views of this court, as recently expressed upon this subject, become pertinent. In Clifton v. Willson, 47 Mont. 305, 132 Pac. 424, attention was called to the rule at common law which denied recovery for payments made or acts done by one who has stopped short of full performance of his contract, and to the circumstance that whenever relief was attainable. it became so by virtue of the rule of equity against forfeitures; that the rule against forfeitures, so far as this state is concerned, is expressed in section 6039 of our Codes, and a party seeking its benefit must by his pleading and proof bring himself within it. It is not enough to say on appeal that a loss in the nature of a forfeiture may be incurred by enforcing the terms of a contract which the parties themselves have made; 'but, to secure the protection of section 6039, it must be invoked, and “the very minimum requirement is that the party invoking the protection afforded by that section must set forth facts which will appeal to the conscience of a court of equity. ’’ (Fratt v. Daniels-Jones Co., 47 Mont. 487, 133 Pac. 700.) A concrete application of these rules illustrating some circumstances authorizing relief from a loss in the nature of a forfeiture is furnished by the case of Cook-Reynolds Co. v. Chipman, 47 Mont. 289, 133 Pac. 694. The effect of all these cases is that relief from forfeiture cannot be *423awarded to one who' fails to show that his breach of duty was not grossly negligent, willful, or fraudulent.
The respondents vigorously and with some reason contest the sufficiency of the pleadings as a basis for relief from for-' feiture. But, passing that, we are without warrant for such relief in the facts established on the trial. The appellant, holding a five-year contract, the expiration of which he must have known would leave him without any right, waited four years and ten months before taking any action, either toward removing the timber or toward securing an extension. About sixty days before the end, he authorized an agent to negotiate for terms of an extension. At that time he could have removed the timber by going to some extra expense. The agent sent to negotiate for terms of extension secured an offer which he communicated to the appellant without delay, and the appellant could by a prompt acceptance of the offer have settled the matter beyond question. Presumed to know that the law afforded the privilege to Arnold to revoke his offer at any time before notice of acceptance, the appellant nevertheless delayed even his subjective acceptance until within a few days of the end of the contract, and then through his agent failed to communicate that acceptance before the offer was revoked. In explanation it is suggested that Arnold’s statements that he would rather have the timber taken off than have the money, and that “to run over a month or two over the present year there would be no extra charge,” lulled the appellant into a false security. Whether these statements, if communicated to the appellant, would have justified his course we do not determine, because the appellant does not prove that he ever heard of them or that they ever misled or influenced him in any way. The only rational inference is to the contrary. It is true that he says, “I relied absolutely on anything Mr. Arnold said to Mr. Fairbanks and anything Mr. Fairbanks would say to me”; but he could not rely on anything said to Fairbanks unless Fairbanks communicated it to him, and the only communication from Fairbanks to him was the letter sent immediately after Fairbanks had talked *424with Arnold. This letter “was to the effect that he went down and seen Mr. Arnold and Mr. Arnold would give an extension for one year for $500 and for me to see Mr. Arnold.” The endeavors of appellant, in person and through Mr. Burleigh, evince to our minds, not reliance upon the statements now urged as an estoppel, but a desire to secure other terms than those offered, as well as an appreciation of the necessity to get into written form whatever might be ultimately agreed upon. When all is said for appellant that can be said, still the record does not make any adequate excuse for his failure to protect his interests under the contract, nor disclose wherein the conscience will be shocked by permitting the matter to rest where his neglect has placed it. (Fratt v. Daniels-Jones Co., supra.)
The order of nonsuit was correct, and the judgment founded thereon is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Me. Chief Justice Bkantly and Me. Justice Holloway concur.