23 S.W. 260 | Tex. App. | 1893
Mrs. Foster, plaintiff in error, sued the New York and Texas Land Company, limited, to enforce specific performance of an alleged written contract to convey three sections of land in Galveston County, and joined C.E. Angell as defendant, averring that he had made a contract to purchase the lands from his codefendant subsequent to the agreement sued on, and with notice of its having been entered into. Prayer was made for specific performance and cancellation of Angell's contract; and in the event that for any reason this relief could not be had, plaintiff recover as damages the value of the three sections of land. The cause was tried before a jury, and a verdict and judgment rendered for defendants; and a motion for a new trial being overruled, plaintiff made one assignment of error, and has brought the case here by writ of error.
No questions are raised upon the pleadings, and it is unnecessary to state them.
The documentary evidence offered by plaintiff to establish the contract the enforcement of which is sought consisted of the following letters and telegrams. P. Whitty was the local agent of the land company at Houston, for certain purposes. Ira H. Evans was its president and A.B. Langerman its chief clerk.
"Ira H. Evans, Esq., President, Austin, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — Mrs. Corra Bacon Foster, real estate agent of this city, makes an offer of $2.90 per acre for the unsold portion of the Alvin land, one-fifth cash, the balance in four years, four annual payments, with 8 per cent interest. I told her I would mention the offer, but I did not think you would entertain one less than some advance on $3 per acre for the whole. I think there is some one in Galveston that has gotten her to give an offer. I think I can at least net $10 per acre cut up, even if it should take two or three years to do it.
"Yours truly,
"P. WHITTY." *509
"P. Whitty, Esq., Houston, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — Your favor of the 20th instant to hand. Major Evans left the city for a trip North, and is not expected to return before the first of the year, and we had better postpone the matter of Mrs. Corra Bacon Foster until his return. We certainly will not sell for less than $3 per acre, if we sell at all around Alvin for the present.
"Yours truly,
[Signed] "A.B. LANGERMAN, Chief Clerk."
"P. Whitty, Esq., Houston, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — I am just advised by Major Evans that he is willing to take $3 per acre for Galveston County lands, on terms proposed by Mrs. Corra Bacon Foster — that is, one-fifth cash, balance in four equal annual payments, with 8 per cent interest per annum.
"Yours truly,
[Signed] "A.B. LANGERMAN, Chief Clerk."
"To A.B. Langerman, Chief Clerk New York and Texas Land Company, Austin:
"Mrs. Foster will take the land, agreeable to your terms. Letter by mail.
"P. WHITTY."
These are papers which, in connection with parol evidence offered, are claimed by plaintiff in error to form a complete contract for the sale of twenty-five sections of land, including the three sections in controversy, situated in Galveston County, in the neighborhood of the town of Alvin.
Other correspondence, consisting of other letters and telegrams immediately following the above, were also offered by plaintiff, as follows:
"HOUSTON, TEXAS, December 27, 1889.
"A.B. Langerman, Esq., Chief Clerk, Austin, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — I wired you this a.m. that Mrs. Corra Bacon Foster is willing to take the Alvin land on the terms indicated in your letter of the 23d instant, which I handed her to read. She wishes a sketch of it prepared, to be attached to the contract, and intimates that she will have her first payment ready in about a week from now; that is, she wants to *510 take a few days to satisfy herself about the title. I told her that Mr. Masterson, of Galveston, had satisfied Mr. Angell on the subject of title, and that she could no doubt get all required information from him on that subject.
"Yours,
"P. WHITTY."
To which Evans replied as follows:
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, December 28, 1889.
"Mr. P. Whitty, 19 Main Street, Houston, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — Your favor of 27th instant, advising me that Mrs. Corra Bacon Foster is willing to take our Alvin land at $3 per acre, on terms stated in your letter of the 23d, came to hand. Before closing this contract, we would like to have Mr. Giraud's survey made, and I write to him to-day. I hope we can have him go down there after New Year. This will also give Mrs. Foster time to have our title investigated. As she wishes to cut up the land into small tracts, we can not afford to make the contract before we know just how our lands lie.
"Yours truly,
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS, President."
January 2, 1890, Whitty wrote Evans as follows:
"HOUSTON, January 2, 1890.
`Ira H. Evans, Esq., President, Austin, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — Will you kindly wire Mr. Giraud to come down as soon as possible. It is quite an object to Mrs. F. to get the land on the market as soon as possible. Should there be much delay on our part, the Alvin boom may die out, causing her to change her mind.
"Yours truly,
"P. WHITTY."
To which Evans replied:
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, January 3, 1890.
"Mr. P. Whitty, Houston, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — Your favor of the 2d instant, urging the necessity of Mr. Giraud doing the work in Galveston County as soon as possible, came to hand. I write him to-day, and expect he will be able to go down to do this work early next week.
"Yours truly,
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS, President. *511
February 3, 1890, Whitty wrote as follows:
"HOUSTON, February 3, 1890.
"Ira H. Evans, Esq., President:
"DEAR SIR — Replying to yours of the 1st instant, I called to see Mrs. Foster yesterday, to tell her that I am having other inquiries about the Alvin land, and that the party to whom I had already sold, Mr. Angell, wanted three sections more. I also told her that I had been to Galveston with some of the papers, and that all the field notes and maps would be ready in a few days. I wanted to see if she was still in the notion of buying. She says she is fully determined to make the purchase. She has a full abstract of the title, and her lawyer pronounced it all right.
"Yours truly,
"P. WHITTY."
To which Evans replied:
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, February 3, 1890.
"Mr. P. Whitty, Houston, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — Your favor of the 3d instant, advising me that Mrs. Foster is still anxious to purchase some of our land in Galveston County, came to hand. I wish you would push her to close this trade, if you can possibly do so, and also advise me what lands she wants to buy. It is my understanding that she desires to purchase the land off the west end of our block, at or near Alvin.
"As you are aware, Mr. C.E. Angell has purchased surveys 16, 17, 19, and 20. He will also soon close the trade for survey 18, and probably purchase in addition surveys 14, 15, and 21.
"Please advise me as soon as you can what Mrs. Foster will do.
"Yours truly,
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS, President.
"P.S. — If Mrs. Foster will not immediately close her trade, is it not possible to get an advance over $3 per acre on these lands?
[Signed] "I.H.E."
February 4, 1890, Whitty wrote as follows:
"HOUSTON, TEXAS, February 4, 1890.
"Ira H. Evans, Esq., President:
"DEAR SIR — Yours of the 3d instant at hand and contents noted. Just as soon as you have contract and sketch ready for Mrs. Foster, I will push her to close.
"If there is a chance of much further delay in fixing the maps and field notes, it might be well to ask her to deposit her first payment subject to your order on delivery of the papers; but as it has gone so far *512 now, it may be as well to wait and draw upon her through the bank as soon as the papers are there. I notice that she has advertised in last Sunday's `Post' 12,000 acres of land at Alvin, at $6 per acre. Mr. Giraud will give you an idea of the character of the Alvin land. God only knows how it may be made habitable. Nevertheless, I think if we don't close it out at once to Mrs. Foster and Angell, we can sell it before the end of this year at an advance.
"Yours truly,
"P. WHITTY."
To which Evans replied:
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, February 5, 1890.
"Mr. P. Whitty, Houston, Texas:
"DEAR SIR — Replying to your favor of yesterday, I have to say, that we expect to be able to send you corrected field notes by the close of this week for all surveys in Galveston County requiring correction.
"Upon return of these field notes, properly signed, we shall be prepared to furnish Mrs. Foster a sketch, by which she can purchase any of these surveys she may desire to obtain.
"I should not care to have her make a deposit, or to draw a draft upon her through the bank on account of this business, inasmuch as we expect to be prepared so soon to act definitely upon the matter.
"In view of this strawberry boom, it begins to look as if we need not be in any very great haste to push the sale of this land. What do you think of the chance of getting better prices for it?
"Your remark with respect to this land, `God only knows how it may be made habitable,' occasions me no little surprise, in view of the fact that when you were proposing to subdivide, you recommended me to buy some of it for a country residence. Will you kindly explain?
"Yours truly,
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS, President.
Subsequently the following correspondence took place:
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, February 22, 1890.
"P. Whitty, Houston, Texas:
"Ready to make contract. Describe property and terms wanted.
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS."
"HOUSTON, February 22, 1890.
"Ira H. Evans, Austin, Texas:
"Mrs. Foster's offer, which you have, is for all the Galveston County land outside the Angell purchase.
"Yours, P. WHITTY." *513
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, February 26, 1890.
"P. Whitty, Houston, Texas:
"Mrs. Foster must decide immediately about Galveston lands. Angell wants more. See her, and wire me.
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS."
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, February 26, 1890.
"P. Whitty, Houston, Texas:
"Can not do anything different with Mrs. Foster either as to terms or amount of land. Must know immediately if she will close trade on contract sent you. Your letter received.
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS."
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, February 26, 1890.
"P. Whitty, Houston, Texas:
"Wish you to come up with Mrs. Foster without any failure.
[Signed] "IRA H. EVANS."
The plaintiff read in evidence the depositions of Evans and Whitty, setting out the above correspondence, and stating the history of the negotiations and of the sale of the three sections in controversy to Angell, and the subsequent conveyance of the remaining twenty-two sections to plaintiff.
Plaintiff was then about to proceed further with the introduction of oral testimony, when the trial judge inquired if plaintiff had any more documentary evidence tending to show the existence of the contract; and on being informed in the negative, instructed the jury to find for defendant, plaintiff offering to show by parol evidence other facts stated in her bill of exceptions.
The substance of the parol evidence thus introduced and offered by plaintiff, as far as its statement affects our decision, can be more conveniently given in connection with the several points discussed.
It is claimed by plaintiff, that by the letters which passed between Whitty and Langerman of date December 20, December 23, and the telegram of December 27, 1889, with the legitimate parol evidence introduced and offered, a complete and binding contract is shown for the sale of all of the twenty-five sections of land.
The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the transaction lacks many of the essential qualities of a valid contract for the sale of land, and amount to nothing more than a negotiation.
We think the case may be disposed of by an answer to the question, Was there a distinct offer in writing on one side to sell absolutely, and on the other an unconditional acceptance, sufficient to meet the requirements of the law? *514
It may, for the present, be conceded that Langerman's second letter to Whitty of December 23, 1889, contains an offer to sell the land in controversy sufficient, if properly accepted, to make a binding contract. The first question which then arises is, Must such acceptance have been in writing?
There is no pretense that Mrs. Foster did accept in writing. Whether an oral acceptance of such an offer is sufficient, is a question about which there is elsewhere a conflict of authority.
The weight of authority is said by elementary writers to be in favor of the affirmative, but it is admitted that there is strong reason and high authority to sustain the opposite view.
We consider that we are concluded by the decision of the Supreme Court of this State in Patton v. Rucker,
This is not in conflict with nor modified by the decisions in the cases of Crutchfield v. Donathon,
The first case was a suit on a note which was a contract complete in itself; and in the last, the offer and acceptance were both in writing. So that the question herein involved was neither presented nor discussed. These, and the case of Morris v. Gaines,
There was no complete contract in this case without acceptance of the offer. The decision in Patten v. Rucker holds, that in such cases the acceptance must be in writing in order to complete the contract. That case involved a discussion and decision of the question, for there was a verbal acceptance of the offer to sell conclusively shown. The court virtually held that insufficient, and then decided that the writing relied on was sufficient. We do not think that the passage which we have quoted can be treated by us as a mere dictum.
But there is a further objection to the alleged acceptance in this case. There was no offer to show that Whitty had any authority to bind the company, and there was positive evidence that he had none. An acceptance, *515
to bind the company, must therefore have been communicated to those officers who had such authority. The telegram relied on from Whitty to Langerman stated that plaintiff would take the land, agreeably to proposed terms, but referred to a letter, evidently for fuller expression. That letter repeated the statement, that plaintiff was willing to take the land, but added that she wished a sketch of it prepared, to be attached to the contract, and that she would have her first payment ready in about a week; "that is, she wants to take a few days to satisfy herself about the title." The letter and telegram must be taken together, and must evidence an unconditional acceptance of the offer. Instead of that, they seem to suggest a modification of the terms of the trade, in asking time in which to make a payment which was to be made in cash, and in which to satisfy herself of the soundness of the title. See Corcoran v. White,
An acceptance, to complete a contract, must be the unconditional and absolute agreement to the very terms of the offer. This letter suggested modifications which necessitated further negotiations and further agreements. This is rendered evident by the reply of the company to this letter, in which the following language occurs: "Before closing this contract, we would like to have Mr. Giraud's survey made, and I write to him to-day. I hope we can have him go down there after New Year. This will also give Mrs. Foster time to have our title investigated. As she wishes to cut up the land into small tracts, we can not afford to make the contract before we know just how our lands lie."
It appears from the correspondence, that the completion of the contract was deferred on both sides. Mrs. Foster, according to Whitty's letter, asks for time to satisfy herself about the title, and the company wants to have a survey made before making the contract. It seems to us that the parties up to this point were negotiating, and that their minds did not meet in a binding contract, on the part of the seller to sell, and the buyer to buy, in presenti and unconditionally. The expressions used indicate that they intended to close the trade by a full contract when the necessary preliminaries were settled.
The expression of willingness on the part of Mrs. Foster to take the land may be interpreted, in connection with all the letter contains, to mean that she was willing to so take it when she should have satisfied herself of the title and prepared herself to make the first payment. The company was authorized to put that interpretation on it, and evidently did so.
The obstacle here presented to plaintiff's right to recover is not merely that she did not perform the contract, but that she did not accede to the proposition in a binding way. The plaintiff, after having introduced these letters in evidence, offered to show, that in her conversation with *516 Whitty she stated that she accepted the offer unconditionally, and did not authorize Whitty or any one to change it, and that knowledge of her acceptance in this manner was brought home to defendant company immediately thereafter. But there was no claim that any other communication was made to the company than the written ones in evidence. But it was stated that there was no other documentary evidence. If there was any evidence in the possession of plaintiff showing such communication, it should, in view of all that had been offered, have been specifically pointed out to the court.
Plaintiff further offered to show on this point, "that the defendant company, with the knowledge brought home to its officers at Austin, permitted the plaintiff Mrs. Foster to go ahead and sell portions of the land as belonging to her under this contract, and that she actually made such contracts for sale. That in pursuance of this contract of sale the defendant company ordered a survey of the land to be made, in order to ascertain the exact number of acres embraced in the contract, and for which plaintiff was to pay $3 per acre. * * * That until the completion of the survey and the tender to Mrs. Foster on the 27th day of February, 1890, of the instrument described in appendix B, the defendant company permitted Mrs. Foster to believe that she had contracted for and was to have all the unsold land referred to in the said correspondence, the same embracing the twenty-five sections of land set forth in the exhibit attached to plaintiff's petition."
On this point the defendant's agent, Whitty, testified: "I handed the letter to Mrs. Foster at the time [referring to the letter No. 2a above]. She stated that she would take the lands on those terms. Nothing was said as to when the first payment was to be made. She came around several times to make inquiries about the land, and as to when the surveys would be completed and when ready. I never told her that any of the twenty-five sections had been sold, because I did not know that any of them had been sold."
It is contended by plaintiff in error, that these facts were sufficient to show, not only that she had accepted, but that the company knew and recognized the fact, and that this cured any ambiguity which there might have been in the letter as to acceptance. No act of the company is here stated by which permission to sell was given to plaintiff. What it did and what plaintiff did, as represented in the bill of exceptions, is consistent with the contention of either party, and adds nothing to the effect of the alleged acceptance in the telegram and letter.
Our conclusion from the evidence introduced is, that the minds of the parties never in fact met in an agreement to buy and sell, but that the transactions were negotiations, through which they were putting themselves in a condition to conclude a contract. The evidence offered was *517 not sufficient to change this construction, and the court did not err in instructing a verdict for defendants.
It is therefore unnecessary to decide the numerous other questions raised.
Affirmed.
A writ of error was refused in this case by the Supreme Court, May 15, 1893.