This suit wаs brought by appellant Dunlap-Swain Tire Company, Inc. against ap-pellees A. Pollard Simons and The West-gate Company, a corporation, for damages in excess of $100,000 for alleged breach of cоntract. The trial court sustained appel-lees’ motion for summary judgment and rendered judgment that appellant take nothing.
A. Pollard Simons was the owner and developer of a suburban shopping center known as Wеbb Royal Shopping Center which is approximately 10.22 acres in extent. On March 20, 1966 Simons leased to Dunlap-Swain Tire Company, Inc. certain property on which a service station was thereafter constructed. By the terms of Art. XXIV of the lease contract it was provided that the lessee should have “First refusal” to lease certain other property in the shopping center, said other property being described аs “the North West Corner of New Webbs Chapel Road and Royal Lane.” * The lessee was to have the
The lease contract does not describe “the North West corner” by metes and bounds, or by lot and block number. Its dimensions are not given. The contract does not refer to any map or plat or other document in which the subject property is described in such detail that it can be identified. There is a plat attached to the lease contract, but it shows an undivided strip of land running from Old Webbs Chapel Road to New Webbs Chapel Road. There is no description or showing of a tract whiсh could be described as “the North West corner.”
On June 13, 1966 the City of Dallas zoned for business purposes a tract 128.66 feet wide and approximately 518 feet long along the entire southern end of Webb Royal Shopping Center. This is the tract which is shown in the plat attached to the lease contract as undivided acreage. It is in the shape of a parallelogram extending a distance of an entire block from Old Webbs Chapel Road to New Webbs Chapel Road. Its southern boundary line begins at the northeast corner of the intersection of Old Webbs Chapel Road and Royal Lane and ends at the northwest corner of the intersection оf New Webbs Chapel Road and Royal Lane.
Simons did not construct a service station on the newly zoned tract. But he did subsequently sell the entire newly zoned tract to The Westgate Company. A portion of the tract wаs leased by Westgate to Mobil Oil Corporation and a service station constructed thereon.
In its first, second and third points of error appellant asserts that the court erred in granting appellees’ motiоn for summary judgment because (1) under the terms of the lease contract appellees were required to give the right of first refusal to appellant; (2) Art. XXIV identified with reasonable certainty the property in question; and (3) if the property in question was not identified with reasonable certainty by the terms of the lease agreement parol evidence was admissible to identify the site.
Appellees contend that Art. XXIV is void and unenfоrceable because it does not sufficiently describe the real property involved and parol evidence is not admissible to make the description sufficient since such evidence would be in violation of the Statute of Frauds, Art. 3995, Sec. 4, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. of Texas.
Appellant argues that there was on file in the county records in April 1956 a map and plat and dedication which does divide the strip of land along the southern edge of the present shopping center into six lots, one of which, Lot 6, includes the northwest corner of New Webbs Chapel Road and Royal Lane. The plat was prepared and filed by William R. McKee De
We quote from Matney v. Odom,
“The reasons why the plat and parol evidence are not admissible are clearly and succinctly expressed in Jones, Cyclopedia of Real Property Law, Vol. 1, p. 329 as follows: ‘Since the description, or the key thereto, must be found in the language of the contract, the whole purpose of the statute of frauds would be frustrated if parol proof were admissible to supply a description of land which the parties have omitted from their writing. So, while a defect in description may be aided by the description shown on a map, in such case the map must be referred to in the contract, and it is not sufficient to show that the parties consulted a map at the time of their negotiations, since this zvould be an attempt to refer to the map by parol instead of by a contract recital, a referencе which would not meet the requirement of the statute.’ ” (Emphasis ours.)
See also Pfeiffer v. Lindsay,
Appellant’s fourth point charges that apрellees selected the wording of the property description, therefore they cannot use the statute of frauds to perpetrate a fraud. Appellant has not cited any evidence in the record before us indicating that appellees selected the wording of the challenged description and we find no such evidence. The fourth point is overruled.
Appellant in its fifth point says that a plat, which shows that property described as Lot 6 is located at the northwest corner of New Webbs Chapel Road and Royal Lane, was in existence and on file at the time with the Dallas County Clerk; and failure to refer to such plat in the lease contract was a mutual mistake of fact. Appellant is referring to the McKee plat which was described in our discussion of appellant’s first three points.
We see no merit in the fifth point. Therе is not the slightest indication that the parties to the lease contract intended to refer in the contract to the McKee plat in any way. They did attach to the contract a plat of Webb Royal Shoрping Center, but it is a complete blank so far as referring to any description of “the North West corner.” Mistake in order to afford relief must be mutual. There is nothing in the record to suggest that the parties, or either of them, inadvertently failed to attach or refer to the McKee plat instead of the plat they did attach, or that they had in mind Lot 6 of the McKee plat when they signed the lease contract. Even if they both knew of the McKee plat such knowledge would not remove the contract from the statute of frauds. See Matney v. Odom,
Following submission of this appeal appellant with our permission filed a supplemental brief in which it presents an additional point of error. In this point appellant asserts that the right of first refusal was a valid and enforceable contractual right not involving any application of the statute of frauds or any application of the parol evidence rule.
There is no merit to the point. The case chiefly relied on by appellant, Gochman v. Draper,
Our Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and rendered judgment in favor of petitioner in Draper v. Gochman,
In the case now before us appellant does not sue fоr equitable title to the lease. Appellant sues for damages for alleged violation of its right of “first refusal.” But the statute of frauds is applicable and the insufficiency of the property description makes the contract unenforceable in a suit for damage. In Wilson v. Fisher,
“If the contract is insufficient it not only precludes recovery for specific performance but also for damages for the breach therеof. This is true because an ‘action for damages for the breach of a contract is, in effect, an action for its enforcement, and the statute, in denying an action for its enforcement, likewise denies an action for damages for its breach.’ Alworth v. Ellison, Tex.Civ.App.,27 S.W.2d 639 , 640, writ refused.”
See also Robertson v. Melton,
Appellant’s supplemental point is overruled.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
