150 Va. 672 | Va. Ct. App. | 1928
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Madison county. Decree for plaintiff. Defendants appeal.
The parties to this litigation, plaintiff and defendants, will be designated as they were in the trial court.
The following statement in the petition for appeal gives us a fairly comprehensive view of the situation here:
“L. P. Butler filed a bill in equity to recover of the executors of F. M. Colvin, deceased, $1,300.00, paid by Butler to said F. M. Colvin in his lifetime on a contract of sale of land by said Colvin to said Butler, the said $1,300.00 being a part of the purchase money. The bill alleges there was a verbal contract, under which Butler, vendee, could at any time he desired abandon his purchase and receive back any money he had paid; that he decided he did not want the land, and so notified .said Colvin through Colvin’s son, January 5, 1921; that Colvin died on the 8th of January, 1921; that Butler, subsequently, repeatedly requested a return of his money, etc., etc.; and in his prayer for relief he alleges that the verbal agreement under which he purchased was void, for whichreason the $1,300.00 should be returned to him. To this bill the defendants filed their demurrer and answer. The answer denied the right of the complainant to recover, stating the reasons, and alleging that if complainant was permitted to recover.*676 he should be required to pay the damages set- up in the answer. The cause came to hearing on the demurrer, demurrer was sustained, and complainant given leave to amend, which was done, but no very material change was made. Consequently there was a demurrer to this amended bill, and the judge in vacation, of his own motion, ordered the case to be transferred to the law side of the court, and plaintiff was given leave to amend to ‘conform to the practice of law in such cases.’ The declaration was filed, bill of particulars and pleas, and the ease went to trial before a jury. But after the examination of the plaintiff, the court, of its own motion, transferred the case back to the ‘chancery side of the court, with leave to the plaintiff to amend his amended and supplemental bill heretofore filed.’ To this action of the court defendants excepted. This amendment was made by writing it on the bottom of the ‘amended and supplemental bill.’ Defendants then moved to dismiss the said amended and supplemental bill so amended, but such motion was overruled. Then was filed a demurrer thereto, but the bill was retained and defendants held to answer, etc. Whereupon, defendants filed their demurrer and answer, denying complainant’s right to recover, giving reasons for such denial, and setting up defendants’ right to damages and rents and profits, in case complainant be held to have the right to recover the said purchase money.”
As a matter of fact, plaintiff notified Colvin of his desire for rescission in the latter part of 1920. The farm in controversy contained about 224 acres and the price agreed upon was $7,500.00. It was situate in Madison county, and at the time of sale the plaintiff, who was Colvin’s son-in-law, lived at Warrenton, in Fauquier county.
The cause then came on to be heard upon its merits,
The defendants’ position in short form is this: They say that the decree which transferred the cause to the law side of the court was a final one and that it is now too late to question that order. They further say that the court was in error when it undertook to re-transfer this litigation from the law docket to the chancery docket for the reason that when the case went back it was met with a finding to the effect that equity had no juris iiction, which finding was final and amounted to an adjudication of that proposition. The net result of this, if the defendants are right, is that plaintiff’s case can never be heard upon its merits, foi the cause is plainly one which addresseditself to equity. Such a construction of section 6084 of the Code would be unlooked for and curious. This attempt of the trial court to conform to the provisions of a statute highly remedial would result in denying to the plaintiff any hearing at all. If the statute in issue had never been enacted, and if the plaintiff had first brought a suit in equity which the court, of its own motion, erroneously dismissed for want of jurisdiction, an action at law might after-wards have been properly dismissed for the same reason, and he, the plaintiff, would have been without remedy had he not appealed from the first order in time. It was to prevent such a miscarriage of justice that the statute was passed.
In Hodges v. Thornton, 138 Va. 112, 120 S. E. 865, the court said:
“Was the decree under review an appealable decree?
“The question must be answered in the affirmative.
“It is argued that inasmuch as the decree did not*678 dismiss the case, but merely transferred it to the law side of the court, it was not a final decree and hence not appealable as such.
“We think that it was a final decree in that it denied the whole of the relief prayed in the bill and in effect dismissed the bill and remanded the plaintiffs to another forum, namely, the law side of the court. But if it was not a final decree, it certainly adjudicated the principles involved, and hence was an appealable decree. Johnson v. Mundy, 123 Va. 730, 97 S. E. 564.”
If this be construed to definitely state that the order first transferring the cause was, technically speaking, a final decree, then that statement was dictum and not necessary in any decision of the matter then in judgment. All that the court had to decide was that the decree under review was an appealable decree, and it is in fact manifest that the court did not desire to commit itself definitely further. All statements of law applicable to a ease must be read in connection with the facts.
Final decrees are appealable and interlocutory decrees sometimes are, but in the latter ease the party aggrieved is not bound to appeal within six months, but where the requisites therefor exist may do so within six months after a final decree has been entered in the cause. Barton’s Chancery Practice (3rd ed.) 949; Southern Ry. Co. v. Glenn, 98 Va. 309, 36 S. E. 395.
Thomas Branch and Company v. Riverside and Dan River Cotton Mills, Inc., 147 Va. 522, 137 S. E. 614, is very much in point; that was a suit in equity afterwards transferred to the law side of the court. The statute of limitations was pleaded but the court said that it was obvious that the amended pleading related back to the date of the filing of the original bill, and that
We should, of course, in dealing with a statute, follow its purpose whenever it is possible to do so and it is likewise manifest that it would here be in the interest of justice to give to it a liberal and not a technical construction. This can readily be done by dealing with this entire record as part and parcel of one transaction. If we treat the decree as appealable and not final, then it may still be brought under review. Such error as was committed when the cause was transferred from equity to law was corrected when it was transferred back from law to equity. This we hold is reasonable. It does no violence to the language of the statute and it does what should be done whenever it is possible to do it. It gives to the plaintiff one fair trial, something to which he is entitled in good conscience and under the statute. If this be not true then a statute designed as a buckler becomes a sword.
What of the contract which permitted the vendee to receive back his payments? It has been clearly and satisfactorily proven. In the circumstances it was not unreasonable. Butler, the son-in-law, lived at Warrenton, in Fauquier county. Mr. Colvin lived in Madison county and wanted his daughter to live near him. It was to accomplish this purpose that this somewhat unusual inducement was incorporated into it. i'" As a further defense it is said that even if there was such a contract it is unenforceable upon its merits and invalid under the statute of frauds. It might have been performed within a year and so if invalid at all it is because it wás an unenforceable oral agreement for the sale of land and its rescission.
“If the vendor is not in default and is willing and able to perforin, and the purchaser refuses to complete the transaction, he cannot as a general rule recover what he may have paid towards the purchase money; and this according to the better view is true though the contract of sale is oral and for such reason cannot, on account of the statute of frauds, be enforced by action against the purchaser.” 27 R. C. L. section 378.
This statement of the law has been approved by Mr. Minor:
“It may be asserted with confidence that a party who has advanced money, or done an act in part performance of an agreement, and then stops short, and refuses to proceed to the ultimate conclusion of the agreement, the other party being ready and willing to proceed and fulfill all his stipulations, according to the contract, has never been suffered to recover for what has been thus advanced, or done. * * * * It would be an alarming doctrine, to hold, that the plaintiffs might violate the contract, and because they chose to do so, make their own infraction of the agreement the basis of an action for money had and received. Every man who makes a bad bargain, and has advanced money upon it, would have the same right to recover it back that the plaintiffs have. The defendant’s subsequent sale of the land does not alter the case. * * * * The plaintiffs cannot, by their own wrongful act, impose upon the defendant the necessity of retaining property which his exigencies may require him to sell. This would be most unreasonable and unjust, and is not sanctioned by any principles of law.” 2 Min. Inst. (2nd ed.) 781.
Suppose the vendor had brought a suit to enforce this contract. At the hearing it would have appeared that it was oral and it would have further appeared that he had in substance solemnly promised to institute no such suit, for it would have been shown that one of its express provisions was that the vendee might rescind it at any time he desired to do so. It is plain that the vendor could not recover without proving what the entire agreement was. He would not have been permitted to prove one part of it and then stop.
If an unconditional contract for sale can after-wards be set aside by an oral agreement, then for a stronger reason a contract which in the beginning provided that such might be done should be upheld.
“It is a rule announced in a number of cases that a parol discharge of a contract for the sale of land is valid.” 38 A. L. R. 295.
In Ely v. Jones, 101 Kan. 572, 168 Pac. 1102, the court said:
“The statement in the opinion in Carr v. Williams [17 Kan. 575], supra, that such an agreement falls within the statute of' frauds, and is void unless in writing or fully executed, is disapproved, and we hold, with what we consider to be the weight of authority and sound reasoning, that such a contract is not required to be in writing, and may be established by the same kind of proof as other simple contracts.”
“It has been held in some of the earlier cases that an agreement to rescind is as much an agreement concerning land as the original contract,, and hence should*682 be in writing; but all tbe later eases, both in England and the United States, are unanimous in affirming that a contract in writing, and by law required to be in writing, may in equity be rescinded by parol, and this even though the contract may have been under seal. Such rescission may be effected not only by an express agreement, but by any course of conduct clearly indicating a mutual assent to the termination or abandonment of the contract. It may consist either of words or acts, and all the circumstances attending the transaction may be shown to prove intention; but if evidenced by acts alone they must be such as to leave no doubt as to such intention.” 2 Warvelle on Vendors (2nd ed.) section 826.
In 39 Cyc. 1355, it is said:
“A written contract for the sale of land, while still executory, may be rescinded by a subsequent oral agreement between the parties. However, proof of the rescission by parol of a contract for the sale of land should be clear and convincing and should satisfy the mind that a rescission was intended by the parties. * * * * When the contract rests only in parol, either partial or full performance is necessary to the validity of the agreement.”
See also Maupin on Marketable Title (2nd ed.), section 236; and Flaherty v. Goldinger, 249 Mass. 564, 144 N. E. 374. If a contract in writing may be revoked by parol, then a fortiori, a contract by parol may be revoked by parol.
In the case in judgment, the situation as we have seen was reasonable and understandable. The challenged stipulation was one of the major inducements, of purchase. If the arrangement should prove unsatisfactory, the parties were to be placed in statu quo.
We, therefore, are of opinion that the contract set
As is usually the case in contracts within the family, this was doubtless preceded by many informal discussions and so it is not easy to say upon just what date a definite conclusion was reached. We believe, however, that it is fair to assume that it was on January 7, 1920, the date of the first payment, in amount $400.00, evidenced by two checks. And for a like reason there is some doubt as to when Butler notified Colvin that he had decided not to keep the place. In any event this notification was very shortly before Colvin’s death, which occurred on January 7, 1921. Colvin did nothing when this notice was received beyond suggesting to his son, Elmer, that he take Butler’s place. Colvin died and five or six months thereafter Butler renewed his request that the place be taken back, this time to the executors. They also did nothing.
Since Butler had possession of the place during 1920 he should be charged with interest on the purchase money debt, by agreement to bear four per cent. He paid on January 7, 1920, $400.00, and on July the 28th, the same year, $900.00. If we charge him with interest and credit him with these payments and deal with the year in which he was in possession as running from January 7, 1920, to January 7, 1921, there would be due to him as of this last name date $1,030.31 with interest at the rate of four per cent. We adopt this rate in this case as reasonable, since it was the rate that the parties themselves seems to have agreed upon as fair. He should not be charged with interest after he had attempted to return the place, for his indebtedness in equity stood cancelled as of that date, nor was it his duty to continue to look after the farm. He did do this in a half-hearted way during the year 1921,
Decree modified and affirmed.