194 S.W. 443 | Tex. App. | 1917
Appellants herein, as trustees of Trinity Methodist Church, instituted suit against Alfred Vander Stucken for specific performance of a certain agreement in writing on his part to purchase certain property belonging to appellants in the city of San Antonio, consisting of a lot and the church and parsonage located thereon. Vander Stucken filed a general demurrer and general denial, and afterwards C. L. Blandin intervened, alleging that he was jointly interested with Vander Stucken in the contract. Special issues were submitted to a jury, and upon the answers judgment was rendered for appellees.
The contract was appended to and made a part of the petition, one clause of which provided that appellants should "furnish a complete abstract brought down to date showing merchantable title to the abovedescribed property, and will deliver the same within 30 days from date." It was also provided that appellees should point out, in writing, any defects in the title within 60 days from date, a reasonable time being allowed in which to cure the same, but if such defects could not be cured the contract should be canceled. Having alleged the contract and the suit being based thereon, in order to require specific performance, it devolved upon appellants to show that it had complied with the terms of the contract, among the number being the agreement to furnish a complete abstract showing a merchantable title to the land.
The word "Merchantable" is not accurately used in connection with a title to land, it being used more correctly in connection with commodities or materials, as merchantable flour, merchantable hay, or merchantable logs or wood. The word "marketable" would not only include all commodities and materials mentioned, but is also applied to a title to land. We shall, however treat the word "merchantable" as it is treated by the parties, as being synonymous with "marketable." A title that is open to reasonable doubt, such as would affect the market value, is not a marketable title. Words and Phrases, pp. 4388, 4389; Adkins v. Gillespie,
Incumbrances upon premises concerning which a purchase contract has been made, which do not appear by the record to have been satisfied will render the title doubtful and consequently unmarketable, even though the vendor be able to show satisfaction aliunde the record. They are a cloud upon the title which should be removed before the purchaser is called upon to complete the contract. Although there may be an extreme improbability that a mortgage lien will ever be enforced, still the title will be subject to objection. Whenever the abstract or record shows that an incumbrance exists, specific performance by the purchaser will not be enforced on the ground that it is doubtful whether the incumbrance will ever be foreclosed. Maupin, Marketable Title, §§ 306, 307; Brooklyn Park Co. v. Armstrong,
"If there arises either on the face of the pleadings, or from the examination made during the progress of the suit, a reasonable doubt concerning the title to be made and given by the vendor, the court, without deciding the question between the parties before it — which decision might not be binding upon other persons, and, therefore, might not prevent the same question from being subsequently raised by other claimants to the land — regards the existence of this doubt as a sufficient reason for not compelling the purchaser to carry out the agreement and accept a conveyance."
In Waterman on Specific Performance, § 412, the following pertinent and correct proposition of law is quoted from Dobbs v. Norcross,
"Every purchaser of land has a right to demand a title * * * which shall protect him from anxiety, lest annoying, if not successful, *445 suits be brought against him, and probably take from him or his representatives, land upon which money was invested. He should have a title which should enable him, not only to hold the land, but to hold it in peace, and, if he wishes to sell it, to be reasonably sure that no flaw or doubt will come up to disturb its marketable value."
For a thorough decision of this question we refer to the opinion of this court, rendered through Associate Justice Nell, in the case of Greer v. Stock Yards,
The facts of this case show that there were several mortgages on the land sought to be conveyed, and no releases were shown in the abstract. These defects were sufficient to justify a refusal on the part of appellees to pay for the land.
The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to admit in evidence a purported release of the mortgages against the property. The contract of sale of the land was entered into on April 17, 1914, in which it was agreed that the appellants would furnish appellee Vander Stucken an abstract of title "showing merchantable title" to the property, and deliver the same in 30 days. The abstract furnished did not contain the release, and in fact it was not executed until May 15, 1915, about 13 months after the contract was made, and over a year after the attorney for Vander Stucken had advised him that the unreleased mortgages caused a defect in the title, and long after he had refused to proceed further with the purchase. A release properly executed at the time the one in question was signed would not have complied with the terms of the contract. A reasonable time was allowed in which appellants could cure any defects pointed out by appellees. Thirteen months were not a reasonable time in which to obtain the releases of the mortgages.
The release in question purports to have been executed by "The Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church, by Charles M. Boswell, Corresponding Secretary," and it is recited in the instrument that the board which executed it was "formerly Board of Church Extensions," whereas the mortgages were all in favor of the "Board of Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church." How the mortgages were transferred from one board to another was not shown, nor was it attempted to be shown that a corresponding secretary had the power and authority to execute the release for the board. It is the claim of appellants that the release "was executed in full accordance with the discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church," but neither the court below knew, nor can this court know, that assertion to be well founded, in the absence of any proof thereof. A certain provision is quoted from the "Book of Discipline," making corresponding secretaries "executive officers of the board, and co-ordinate in authority;" but this court cannot recognize such provision, in the absence of proof of its existence, even if it tended in the least to show authority in one of the secretaries named to execute such an instrument as a release of mortgages. While being the law of the Methodist Episcopal Church, it is not a statute, and of course cannot be Judicially known to this court. There is certainly no authority found in article 1173, Rev. Stats., for a corresponding secretary to execute a release. The corresponding secretary is not the "president or presiding member or trustee" named in the statute, even if the discipline did make the three corresponding secretaries executive officers of the board, for a president and five vice presidents were provided for, and it cannot be supposed that the secretaries were to displace those officers, even if the statute permitted it. The case of Ballard v. Carmichael,
The letter written by Vander Stucken was an offer of compromise and was properly rejected. The whole letter hinges upon the offer of compromise, and no statement of a fact is made, which is not so bound up with the offer as to render it impossible to separate them. As stated by this court in Sanford v. Finnigan,
"It is the rule that, when any fact stated in an offer of compromise can be separated from the offer and still convey the idea in the writer's mind, it is admissible in evidence."
The whole object in writing the letter offered in evidence in this case was a compromise, and no fact is stated that is disconnected therefrom.
It was alleged in the petition that appellants had fully complied with every provision of the contract, one of which was to furnish an abstract showing a marketable title. Appellants failed to show a compliance with the contract in that regard, its abstract showing, not only unreleased mortgages on the land, but a pending suit for taxes and penalties, and, if they desired to depend upon a waiver of the defects in title, they should, in the alternative, have pleaded such waiver. This was not done. The letter could only have been intended to show a waiver because Vander Stucken did not testify, and it was not admissible for purposes of impeachment. If it were intended to show fraud on the part of appellees, neither had fraud been alleged. It is well settled that, if a party relies upon waiver to destroy a defense, he must allege and prove it. *446
Scarbrough v. Alcorn,
We cannot see what bearing the receipt signed by Vander Stucken and two others to appellants for commissions for selling the land had upon the issues in this case. Appellants state that it was an admission that appellants had the right to execute the contract. There was no issue remaining after verdict as to the authority of the trustees to execute the contract. The jury found that they were so authorized. The receipt would not have shown that appellees were estopped to deny that the title was imperfect; but, if it had estopped him, it could not be of avail to appellants because not pleaded. The bill of exceptions is not sufficient to sustain the assignment, because the objections urged to the admission of the evidence are not mentioned therein. Green v. White,
The court properly rejected the record of a deed purporting to have been made by Edwin H. Terrell and Mary M. Terrell to George W. Brackenridge and others. No effort was made by appellants to comply with article 3700, which allows certified copies of a lost instrument to be used as evidence. There was no affidavit of loss; no certified copy was filed among the papers or notice given to the opposite party. Strict compliance with the statute is required in order to use a copy of a deed. Pennington v. Schwartz,
The necessity of an affidavit of loss might possibly be dispensed with, if the evidence of a witness is offered who testifies to diligent search and inquiry made of the proper person and in the proper places. Hill v. Taylor,
The fifth assignment is overruled. The jury found that the trustees of Trinity Church had authority to sell the property, and the admission of the written consent of James W. Hervey to a sale would not have made the verdict on that point any stronger or more effective. The bill of exceptions fails to show the grounds of objection to the instrument.
For the same reasons hereinbefore given, under the fourth assignment of error, the sixth assignment is overruled.
The seventh and eighth assignments of error are overruled. Not only did the abstract of title show unreleased mortgages on the property, but showed that there was a suit for taxes pending and that the mechanic's lien of Martin Nason had not been properly released, and the abstract failed to connect the title with the sovereignty of the soil. The abstract failed to show any facts upon which to base a title by limitations. Appellee could not know what appellants might be able to show as to title by limitation. The abstract did not show, as appellants promised it should, "a complete abstract brought down to date showing merchantable title." Bowles v. Umberson (Tex.Civ.App.)
The judgment is affirmed.