47 W. Va. 238 | W. Va. | 1899
■ At the November rules, 1897, W. F. Boyd and A. P. Boyd, partners as Boyd Bros., and A. J. Malarky and G. B. McMillen, partners as Malarky & McMillen, filed their bill in chancery in the circuit court of Tyler County against W. J. Brown, alleging- that in the month of June, 1897, said plaintiffs, W. J. Brown, U. F. Randolph, H. W. Roberts, M. R. Seal, C. C. Marsh, J. L. Thompson and O. Hickok, were the owners of an undeveloped lease for oil and gas purposes, situate in Ellsworth district, Tyler County, dated August 8, 1897, made by D. W. Snider and Sarah J., his wife, to J. L. Thompson and II. W. Roberts, on a tract of thirty and forty-seven one-hundredths acres of land, and held the same in the following proportions: Boyd Bros, one-fourth, Malarky & McMillen, one-twelfth, W. J. Brown,
From this decree defendant appealed to this court, and says that the court erred in overruling his demurrer to the bill; that the demurrer should have been sustained because the bill contains no equity and discloses no ground of equitable jurisdiction; that the contract, if any, was a verbal contract for the sale of real estate, or an interest therein, and was absolutely void; and cites authorities to show that real estate can only be conveyed by deed, and that the contract sued upon here is such as is inhibited by the sixth clause of chapter 98, Code. Courts of equity do not hesitate to enforce even verbal contracts for the sale of real estate where there has been part performance in good faith. In Lowry v. Buffington, 6 W. Va. 249, — a suit brought to enforce a parol contract, — it is held that: “When there has been part performance of a contract for the sale of land by the purchaser being put in possession of the property and payment of the purchase money, or part thereof, and an offer to pay the residue according to contract, and valuable improvements’ have been made on
Appellant’s second and third assignments are of the same character,— that the court erred in entering any decree against appellant, none being warranted by the evidence; and that it erred in decreeing in favor of plaintiffs upon their evidence taken and filed because the matters alleged and the proof do not agree. It is claimed that the bill alleges a contract with Boyd Bros, and Mala'rky & McMillen, while the proof — at least a part of it — speaks of a contract with Boyd Bros., and then it is claimed that the whole work was not done under the verbal contract, but that there was a written contract, signed by a part of the owners; and hence the fourth error assigned, —that the court erred in not reciting in its final decree what, in its opinion, the contract really was between complainant and defendant. About the time, or a little while before, the well was completed, the contract was reduced to writing, assigning the one-half of the several interests in the lease to Boyd Bros, and Malarky & McMillen in pursuance of the verbal contract, and was signed by all except defendant Brown and Hickok. The paper was presented to Brown to assign his one-half interest soon after the well came in, when he refused. The contract is about as clearly proved as a contract could well be. The witnesses testifying in regard to the contract, it is true, sometimes mentioned the contract as let to Boyd Bros., and yet I believe every one of them somewhere in this testimony mentioned Boyd Bros, and Malarky & McMillen as the contractors, and it was clearly understood by all that it was a matter between Boyd Bros, and Malarky & McMillen, and that Ma-larky was to do the drilling as far as the work and superintendence was concerned, Boyd Bros, and Malarky & Me-
The fifth assignment is that the court erred in decreeing defendant should execute and deliver to plaintiffs a division order for the one-sixteenth of the oil produced and belonging to the working interest in said lease, without also providing that the proportionate share of the expense of producing same be ascertained and deducted from said interest. As the matter now stands, appellant has paid all costs and expenses proportionate to his one-eighth interest; and under this decree — if it is a decree for specific execution — ■
The sixth and seventh assignments have been disposed of with some of the foregoing assignments. The eighth is that the court erred in decreeing in favor of plaintiffs, because the contract was not mutual in its obligations and its remedy, and could not, under any circumstances, have been specifically enforced by the defendant against the plaintiffs, as both the plaintiffs and defendant had an adequate remedy at law. “Want of mutuality in the inception of the contract may be remedied by the subsequent conduct of the parties, or by the execution of the agreement.” 7 Am, & Eng. Enc. Law (3d Ed.) 115. In Willetts v. Insur
Affirmed.