delivered the opinion of the court:
The writing in this case was more than an offer, and the consideration was sufficient to support it as a valid аnd binding contract. It is important to distinguish clearly between an offer to sell something, which offer may or may not become a completed contract by acceptance in the future, and a cоntract to leave that offer open for a time, which, if accepted, becomes at once an executed contract. Only the last is an option. An option is a continuing offer, which the оfferer may not withdraw until the expiration of the time limited. (21 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.— pp. 925, 926.) The parties agreeing “to sell an option to buy for the sum of one dollar, there is no reason why such an express consideration is not an adequate one.” (Guyer v. Warren,
While it was formerly held, with some degree of strictness, that the want of mutuality would render a сontract for the sale of land incapable of specific enforcement, the doctrine of the earlier cases upon this subject has been considerably modified. “Where the party holding an option signifies his acceptance within the time limited and upon the terms stated, the obligation of thе contract becomes mutual and capable of enforcement at the instance of either party.” Guyer v. Warren, supra; see, also, Seyferth v. Groves and Sand Ridge Railroad Co.
The Peabody Coal Company, being the assignee of Francis S. Peabody, had the same rights as Peаbody. (Perkins v. Hadsell,
Counsel for appellant does not seem seriously to question the right of the court to enforce this contract against the heirs and devisеes of said Gavin R. Adams, but he does insist that the chancellor incorrectly held that upon the execution of the contract and the conveyance of the fee simple title to the coal land in quеstion by testator’s representative, the purchase money, when the same was paid over, was рersonal property. Appellant insists that this purchase money when paid over should be considered as real estate, and be held to pass, under the third and fourth clauses of the will, as real estatе. While numerous authorities touching this question from other jurisdictions have been cited, all counsel state in thеir briefs that this court has never decided the particular question involved in this case. In the recent case of Covey v. Dinsmoor,
That portion of the decree directing the execution and delivery of the deed by the executrix in accordance with the .contract, on the payment of the purchase money, will be sustained, and that portion of the decree which found that such purchase money was personal еstate and passed as such under the will must be reversed, with directions for further proceedings in harmony with the views herein expressed.
Reversed in part and remanded, with directions.
