150 Ark. 480 | Ark. | 1921
Appellees instituted this suit to cancel a contract for the sale of a certain house and lot in the city of Ft. Smith on the ground of usury. The complaint 'alleged that on March 20, 1910, appellant, John B. Edwards, was the owner of lot 5, in block 65, in the city of Ft. Smith, and that its then value was $1,500. That, in order to obtain an exorbitant rate of interest, Edwards fixed the price of the lot at $2,250, and contracted to sell it to William Wiley at that price, payments to be made at the ■ rate of $20 per month, payable quarterly, with interest at 8 per cent., and that this price was fixed as a subterfuge whereby usurious interest might be collected. This branch of the case may be disposed of by saying that all the testimony shows that the transaction between Edwards and Wiley was one for the sale of the lot. Neither of the parties intended or contemplated a loan of money, and it was not such in fact. This was a sale, and was so intended, and the exaction of a price, however exorbitant, cannot import into the transaction the characteristics of usury, as the element of lending and borrowing money is absent. Such was the express holding of Ellenbogen v. Griffey, 55 Ark. 268, and reaffirmed in the case of Blake Bros. v. Askew & Brummett, 112 Ark. 514, and the more recent case of Smith v. Kaufman, 145 Ark. 548.
Appellees amended the complaint to conform to the proof by alleging fraud in the procurement of the contract, in this, that Wiley was an illiterate negro, and unfamiliar with real estate values and business affairs, and that Edwards took advantage of his ignorance and imposed upon him by naming an unreasonable and excessive price for the property; that Wiley did not know that he was being thus imposed upon, and that therefore the minds of the parties never met upon the terms of the sale; and that, having been thus defrauded, Wiley should be held responsible only for the fair market value of the property, which did not exceed $1,500 for a credit sale; and there was a prayer that appellees be charged with that amount and a settlement be had on that basis.
Wiley died intestate in April, 1920, and left as his only heirs, two sons, one of whom conveyed his half interest to his half-sister, Rebecca Ellis, who, with the other son, are the plaintiffs in this suit.
Attached to the original complaint as an exhibit thereto is a copy of the contract between Edwards and William Wiley» which is signed by Edwards and by Wiley by mark without attestation of that signature.
Wiley appears to have had no fixed time for making his payments, nor were they of uniform amounts, but numerous payments were made extending up to the time of Wiley’s death and aggregating $2,358.70.
The testimony is in sharpest conflict as to the value of the property, and the court found the actual value of the property at the time of the sale to have been $1,700 upon the basis of a sale on time. Without setting out or reviewing here this testimony, we announce our conclusion to be that it does not appear that this finding is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence.
It is contended that the contract made an exhibit to the original complaint, which is a typewritten instrument, is not in fact the contract made by the parties at the time of the sale, and that the original and genuine contract between the parties was written out with pen and ink.
The court made no specific finding on this issue, but the finding made, ‘£ that no legal contract of the purchase was executed, and William Wiley was illiterate and unable to read the contract purported to have been signed in his behalf by the defendant or understand the purport thereof,” indicates that the instrument here referred to appears to be the writing made an exhibit to the original complaint and which was in fact there alleged to be the contract made between the parties.
The only testimony tending to show that the contract between Edwards and Wiley was written with pen and ink, and not with the typewriter, is that of a colored woman referred to by the witnesses as Mrs. Price. Her testimony was to the effect that the contract was executed on the dining table at her home, that there was no typewriter there, and that she cleared the table and got pen and ink and went out of the room, leaving the parties to their trade. This testimony would not support a finding that Edwards had substituted a typewritten contract for one written in ink -with a pen, and certainly not when it is remembered that the contract, of which a copy was attached to the complaint, was found in Wiley’s trunk after his death, where he had probably kept it during all the years preceding his death. Moreover, Edwards testified that he sold to Mrs. Price a lot adjoining the one in litigation, and when he did so he told her that he would take $2,250 for the unsold lot, and she thereupon opened the negotiations between Edwards and Wiley which terminated in the sale. Mrs. Price did not deny this statement, and was asked nothing by appellees in regard to her reputed conversations with Edwards.
Appellees discuss the effect of the failure of Edwards to have the signature of Wiley properly attested; but we think that omission is not of controlling importance. There was a contract and possession was taken under it. This possession was long-continued, and many payments of purchase money were made under it. Appellees predicate their original suit, as well as their amended cause of action, upon the allegation that there was a contract of sale, and that possession was taken pursuant to -thisf contract, and Edwards, the party sought to be charged with the contract to convey, admits that he signed it. Jones v. School District, 137 Ark. 414. It becomes unimportant, therefore, to determine the effect of the insufficient attestation of Wiley’s signature.
There is no proof here of fraud except that Wiley was unfamiliar with land values, and that advantage was taken of that fact to induce him to pay an excessive price for the home which furnished him shelter until the day of his death. No attempt was made to show that any false or fraudulent representations in regard to values were made. Upon the contrary, Wiley appears to have been satisfied with his bargain, and to have made a faithful effort to comply with its terms, and, while he appears from the beginning to have been tardy with his payments, constant indulgence, extending over a period of more than ten years, was shown him, although the contract contained the provision that failure to make payments as provided should have the effect to cancel and annul the contract and to forfeit all payments previously made.
We think the finding of the court below is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence.
The court below, having fixed the sale price of the property at $1,700, adjudged the balance due to be $102.36, which sum was declared a lien on the property, in satisfaction of which a sale was ordered if payment was not made within ninety days. This decree will be reversed, and the court ordered to compute the balance due upon the basis of the contract price of $2,250.
Appellant argues for reversal of the decree the failure of the court to sustain his demurrer to the original complaint and the action of the court in permitting the amendment of the complaint to be made; 'but, in view of the conclusion we have reached and have stated herein, it becomes unimportant to decide those questions.