Except for necessary changes in names, amounts, and contract stipulations, the allegations of this petition are identical with that considered in
Hunter v. Benamy,
The offer to purchase set out in the contract of sale was made and accepted on the same day. It is therefore immaterial that the part of the written contract indicating a maximum time for acceptance was not completed or that the petition does not allege that the broker notified the seller of the acceptance.
Robinson v. Tate,
The second objection to count 1 is that a stipulation in the sale contract called for a survey “to be furnished by the seller” to determine the total acreage; the petition alleges the result of the survey but fails to state that it was furnished by the defendant. If the defendant in fact failed to furnish the survey he can glean no comfort from his own breach of the contract. If he furnished a survey from which a different number of acres appears to be involved, this is a matter of defense; it would not render the contract void or count 1 subject to general demurrer.
It is also contended that certain provisions of the contract are too contradictory and indefinite to be enforceable: the balance of the purchase price over the down payment is first stated “to be evidenced by a note secured by a first mortgage on the property described herein,” but stipulation 5 provides that the “security deed given to secure note for the deferred portion
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of the purchase price shall contain a clause by which the seller agrees to release property from the lien of the security deed” in a described manner. It is contended that the security instrument may be either a deed or a mortgage but not both, and that the contradiction in terminology voids the instrument. “In this State a deed to secure a debt is not the same as a mortgage. Such a deed conveys title; a mortgage is only a lien.”
Loftis v.
Alexander,
It is contended that count 2 fails to state a cause of action because it is based on an oral listing agreement which was merged in the written sales contract. The rule, as stated in
Langenback v. Mays,
Judgment affirmed on main bill of exceptions; reversed on cross bill.
