69 S.W.2d 985 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1934
Reversing.
We are confronted with a motion to dismiss this appeal. A motion to dismiss the appeal as to the Consolidated Realty Company and John S. Akers, trustee in bankruptcy of the Consolidated Realty Company, has been heretofore acquiesced in and the appeal dismissed as to them. The cause of action involves a contract and bond, executed and delivered by the Consolidated Realty Company, as trustee of, and for, Mrs. Lillian W. Foos (formerly Mrs. Lillian W. Theophanis), George Theophanis, Belle Walker, and Jennie Walker Held, to which we shall hereafter give more particular attention. Since their execution and delivery, and the trial of this action in the circuit court, the Consolidated Realty Company was adjudged a bankrupt and John S. Akers appointed its trustee. In the statement filed herein, in accordance *465
with section 740, Civil Code of Practice, the names of Lillian W. Foos (formerly Lillian W. Theophanis), Belle Walker, and Jennie Walker Held were named appellants. Neither of them was a plaintiff or defendant, in the caption of the petition. However, it discloses that, in agreeing on the terms and provisions of the contract and bond which are the basis of the cause of action set forth therein and in the execution and delivery of same, the Consolidated Realty Company was the trustee of Lillian W. Foos (formerly Lillian W. Theophanis), George Theophanis, Belle Walker, and Jennie Walker Held. They are the real parties in interest or the cestuis que trust, for whom the Consolidated Realty Company was acting as trustee in the execution and delivery of the contract, and the acceptance of the bond, and in the filing of this action in the circuit court. The rule that a party for whose benefit a contract is made may sue thereon, in his own name, although the undertaking is not directly to or with him or in his own name, is too well recognized to need authority or reason to sustain it. However, see Allen v. Thomas, 3 Metc. 198, 77 Am. Dec. 169; Smith v. Smith, 5 Bush, 625; Bryant v. Jones,
Considering, without determining that the bankruptcy of the Consolidated Realty Company terminated its right to prosecute the appeal, the right of the beneficiaries of the trust to do so is conferred by section 21 of the Civil Code of Practice. Gregory v. Harlan H. C. Co.,
The Consolidated Realty Company, as trustee of the parties hereinbefore named, and the Richmond Hotel Building Company, a corporation, T.H. Collins, and Burton Roberts, S.J. McGaughey, and J.S. Sewell and Dan Walker, copartners, on January 23, 1930, executed and delivered a contract, the one to the other, containing reciprocal agreements, whereby the Consolidated Realty Company, as trustee, agreed to dedicate to the city of Richmond, a municipal corporation of the fourth class, for street purposes, 50 feet in width of certain described land, and the other parties to the agreement agreed to dedicate to the city, for the same purpose, a strip 50 feet in width over and on certain other land. T.H. Collins, the Richmond Hotel Building Company, Burton Roberts, S.J. McGaughey, J.S. Sewell, and Dan Walker, by a provision in the writing, agreed, on the conditions recited therein, to pay to the Consolidated Realty Company, as trustee, the "sum per foot equal to the average price realized at an auction sale to be held September 18th, 1928, per front foot of the lots fronting on the south side of South Lawn of Wellington Sub-division, plus 20% of the price of the number of feet to be paid for." It was further stipulated that the latter parties were to execute and deliver a bond to the Consolidated Realty Company, as trustee, its successors and assigns, to "secure the faithful performance of this contract" and to guarantee the extension of Third street, over, through, and across the Collins and Irvine property. It was also stipulated the sum they agreed to pay in the event Third street was not dedicated over and through the Collins and Irvine property, or extended to College street, as provided in the contract, should be considered as liquidated damages, *467 and that this stipulation was the essence of the contract. The bond which they agreed to execute and deliver was executed and delivered by them to the Consolidated Realty Company, as trustee, in accordance with the terms and provisions of the contract. By a provision of the bond they "promise and agreed to pay the trustee a sum per foot equal in the average price realized at the auction sale to be held September 18th, 1928, per foot of the lots fronting on the south side of South Lawn of Wellington Subdivision plus 20% of said price per foot, if their contract was not carried out"; but if they shall faithfully perform the contract by the dedicating and opening, or having dedicated and opened, a strip of land 50 feet in width, to the city of Richmond, over, through, and across the Collins property and Irvine property to College street, for street purposes, within 12 months from the date of execution of the contract and bond, the obligations thereunder shall be null and void, "otherwise to remain in full force and effect."
It is set forth in the petition that the Consolidated Realty Company, as trustee, held its auction sale of the property on the south side of South Lawn, and that lots thereon, 257 7/10 feet in width, sold for $3,125, or an average price of $12.12 6/10 per foot, and, when the 20 per cent. was added thereto, amounted to $14.55 per foot for the 50 feet, or $727.50, and the terms of the contract and bond had been carried out by it, but that the 50 feet over the Collins property and the Irvine property to College street had not been dedicated nor extended by the defendants; thus the contract and bond had been breached, entitling it, as trustee, to recover the $727.50 in accordance with the terms of the contract and the bond. To the petition the circuit court sustained a demurrer.
The Richmond Hotel Building Company, T.H. Collins, Burton Roberts, S.J. McGaughey, J.S. Sewell, and Dan Walker are here insisting it was legally impossible for them to comply with the contract and bond, and therefore there is no legal consideration for either the bond or the contract. To sustain this position, they cite 13 C. J. 330, and Hall v. Fisher,
It is set forth in the petition that the Consolidated Realty Company had fully executed its obligation evidenced by the contract and had dedicated the 50 feet of the Walker property to the city of Richmond for street purposes. If it should be conceded that either the contract or the bond was unilateral, the Consolidated Realty Company having executed its obligation, as imposed by the contract and bond, the contractees may not invoke the rule forbidding the decreeing the enforcement of an unexecuted unilateral contract. Neither the *469
bond nor the contract expressly discloses the parties thereto were the owners of the Collins or Irvine properties at the time of their execution and delivery. This fact in no wise affected their validity. It was not essential to the validity of either that the respective parties at the time of the execution of same were the owners of the land they respectively thereby agreed to dedicate to the city for street purposes. Schmidt v. Martin,
The judgment of the court sustaining the demurrer to the petition is not in harmony with our views; therefore it is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.