61 W. Va. 221 | W. Va. | 1907
This, is a suit for the specific performance of a parol contract for the sale or exchange of lands between W. W. Garrett and L. S. Goff of Roane county. The contract was made on the 19th day of September, 1898. Garrett was to convey to Goff 145 1-2 acres of land in Harper District of said county and was to have in return 125 acres of land from Goff situate near the town of Spencer in Spencer District and $500.00 in moneju W. W. Garrett filed his bill in the. circuit 'court of Roane county at the March rules, 1900, alleging the contract as he claimed it to be; that he sold his said farm in Harper district supposed to contain 145 1-2 acres to the said Goff.for the 125 acres and $500.00 to be paid $250.00 in October, 1898, and $250.00 in twelve months from the 19th of September, 1898, said payments to draw interest from
The deed tendered with the bill to be held in escrow was dated December 3, 1899, executed and acknowledged on the 2nd day of January, 1900, and expressly reserved on its face the vendor’s lien to secure the unpaid instalment of the purchase money, and after the description of the land by metes and bounds the deed contained the following: “Sup
The defendant filed his demurrer and answer to said bill, admitting the making of a parol contract on the 19th day of September, 1898, but denied that the contract was correctly stated and set out in the plaintiff’s bill and denied that plaintiff agreed to exchange his farm in Harper district by the boundary upon any supposition that it contained 145 1-2 acres, but averred that said contract or agreement was as follows: “ The plaintiff, in said trade, represented to this defendant that he would trade him his ‘home farm’ in Harper district containing 110 acres and also a parcel of land adjoining the same, which he had bought of Morrison containing 35 1-2 acres for the 125 acres owned by this defendant near Spencer, West Ya. and $500.00,and represented that there were more acres in said two tracts than was mentioned in the deeds, that the deeds called for 145 1-2 acres and he was sure of the fact that there was that number of acres in the boundary which he proposed to sell this defendant, that there was one or two acres more adjoining said two tracts upon which there was a fine spring, that belonged to him (Garrett) but which was not mentioned in the deeds to him (Garrett) and that this defendant could have those one or two acres also in said trade; the plaintiff represented to this defendant that he would guarantee said two tracts of land to contain 145 1-2 acres, and that it was worth $5000.00, and that was his price for it; that he would either trade the said two tracts for the said 125 acres of land and $500.00 as aforesaid or would take $5000.00 for said 145 1-2 acres;” that defendant relying upon said representations of plaintiff and especially his unqualified statement that the land he proposed to trade defendant contained the specified number of 145 1-2 acres and relying upon said representations, guarantee and warranty of the plaintiff that there was that number of acres in his said two tracts, defendant having no knowledge whatever of the boundaries of said land or of the number of acres therein except said representations and was influenced to trade said 125 acres and to pay or agree to pay the $500.00 additional to plaintiff for said two tracts of land because of such representations and statements; and they agreed that they would make an exchange of lands as stated; and that defendant on
The plaintiff filed his amended bill to which defendant appeared on the 2'Tth of August, 1903, and demurred thereto, which demurrer was overruled and the defendant was given thirty days in which to answer. After referring to the original bill asking that it be made a part of the amended bill, plaintiff alleged that since the filing of the original bill the defendant by some means got possession of a deed which plaintiff and Mary J. Garrett had made to defendant, dated September 19, 1898, and defendant caused the same to be recorded in the clerk’s office of Roane county County Court, that thereby defendant accepted said deed, that by said deed it appeared that the tract of land to be conveyed was descxibed by metes and ‘ bounds and as containing 145 1-2 acres more or less, that it appeared by said deed that the land was the real estate of' said Mary J. Garrett, the same having been conveyed to her by deed dated TTth day of September 1895 by George W. Garrett and wife, and it further appeared from said deed that the tract of land therein mentioned was conveyed to the defendant for and in ■consideration of 125 acres situate in Spencer district; that said defendant and wife either on or near the 19th of September, 1898, made a deed to plaintiff conveying to him said 125 acres of land; that the same was duly executed and delivered to W. L. Starkey for plaintiff; that said defendant bj>- some means got said deed from Starkey; that the so-called deed filed with defendant’s answer dated September 19, 1898, was acknowledged before W. L. Starkey on the 10th of - February, 1900, nearly two years after the contract was made, is not the deed made by defendant,and his wife on the 19th of September, 1898; that this deed acknowledged by the defendant On the 10th of February, 1900, is not according to the contract made between the plaintiff and the defendant but is eh-
Defendant Goff filed his answer to said amended bill and averred that plaintiff got I. H. Lynch, his agent and attorney, to undertake the writing of the deed of September 19, 1898, conveying said 145 1-2 acres in accordance with the contract; that W. L. Starkey was called in to assist Lynch in the preparation of the deed; that Lynch dictated and W. L. Starkey wrote the deed; that said deed was prepared in the presence and hearing of said Garrett and in the manner agreed upon between plaintiff and defendant except the words “more or less” contained in the printed form in which the deed was written; that on the same day plaintiff caused said Starkey, as notary public, to take his acknowledgment and that of his wife, Mary J. Garrett, to said deed and delivered same to Starkey to be held by him until, defendant should execute a deed for the 125 acres and deliver the same to Starkey for plaintiff; that said deed from Garrett and wife to defendant remained in the hands of Starkey until a short time beforé the institution of this suit, when Garrett procured the same or got the same from the possession of Starkey under the false and fraudulent pretense that he wanted to place the necessary revenue stamps on it before it should be delivered to defendant and took the deed away and failed to return the same to Starkey as agreed; that after respondent found plaintiff had gotten possession of said deed he made several’
General replications were filed to the answers to the original bill and to the amended bill but no special replication was filed to either. The cause came on to be heard on the 'Tth day of January, 1905, upon the bill and amended bill and answers thereto and general replications to the answers and upon the depositions taken and filed in the cause, when the court was of opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to specific execution of the contract between him and the defendant set up in the original and amended bills; that the defend ant was not entitled to any abatement on account of any alleged deficiency but that plaintiff was not entitled to recover anything in this suit on account of the $250.00 note, but leave was given the plaintiff to withdraw said note and proceed to collect the same in any "way he might be advised proper without prejudice on account of any decision in this case; and decreed that said defendant execute and deliver to plaintiff proper deed with general warranty for-the 125 acres, said deed to be on the expressed consideration of the tract of land conveyed to him by Mary J. Garrett and husband as containing 145 1-2 acres more or less which tract of land the deed from Mary J. Garrett and husband was directed and decreed to be delivered to the defendant, the same having been already taken by the said defendant from the office of G. 3T. Cunningham and by him placed on record in the clerk’s office
The answer of defendant Goff set up a parol contract between the parties very different from that set up in plaintiff’s bills, and prayed for affirmative relief by the specific performance thereof, which contract, as claimed by defendant, is largely sustained by the deed of September 19, 1898, made by plaintiff and his wife Mary J. Garrett to defendant for the 145 1-2 acres oí land in Harper district. The discovery of the fact that said deed had. been entered of record seems to have caused plaintiff to file an amended bill, alleging that it appeared from said deed that the 145 1-2 acres of land was the separate estate of the wife, the said Mary]J. Garrett, and that the said deed was accepted by the defendant, and claiming that the words “more or less” following the description of the land in the deed supported plaintiff’s- contention that the sale was in gross and not by the acre. The said deed of September 19, 1898, was by plaintiff, after execution and acknowledgment by the grantors, placed in the hands of W. L. Starkey to be delivered to defendant when the defendant should execute and deliver to Starkey for plaintiff an apt and proper deed for the 125 acres. This was not done tjy defendant, but the first mentioned deed was withdrawn by plaintiff from Starkey under the pretense of placing upon it proper Internal Revenue Stamps and was not returned to Starkey but in some way came into the possession of defendant who caused the same to be recorded, as he claims and so testified, for safe keeping and not at all as an acceptance of the deed. “A deed committed to a third person to be delivered by him to the grantee upon the performance of a specified condition, does not take effect, until such condition is performed, although such third person may have delivered it to the grantee.” — White v. Core, 20 W. Va. 272. And in Gaines v. Keener, 48 W. Va. 56, it is held: “ To constitute a delivery of a deed, the grantor must by act or word, or both, part with all right of possession and dominion over the instrument with the intent that it shall take , effect as his deed.”
And it is further alleged in plaintiff’s- amended bill that, the land conveyed by said deed, the 145 1-2 acres, was the separate estate of his wife, Mary J. Garrett, who was dead at the time defendant got possession of the deed. In Lang v. Smith, 37 W. Va. 725, where a deed was executed and acknowledged, ready for delivery, but was not delivered by anything there said or done, but was laid away in decedent’s drawer, where he kept his papers, together with his will executed at the same time. After the grantor’s death the supposed deed and will were found in his drawer. It was held that such paper writing was not his deed, never having been delivered; and further, that there could be no valid delivery after the grantor’s death. In Skipwith v. Cunningham, 8
It is contended by counsel for appellee that defendant by taking possession of the deed and placing the same on record is estopped from denying his acceptance of it, that when he took it he said “it was no harm to put what belonged to him in his own pocket,” but there was no delivery of the deed and it passed no title to him as we have seen, but was of much value to him as evidence in the contention which had arisen between the parties as to what the contract was. It is contended by counsel for appellee that the proposition was made by Goff through his agent,I. H. Lynch, who states that “I just simply stated to Mr. Garrett that Mr. Goff would give him 125 acres of land for his land in Harper District and give him five hundred dollars to boot” and that Mr. Garrett said he would acceiat Mr. Goff’s propostion; this was prior to the meeting of the* parties in Lynch’s office to execute the deed. It was at said meeting when Goff asked Garrett how much land was in his two tracts and he said there were 145 1-2 acres; and as stated by Lynch in his testimony, Garrett represented the number of acres in the two tracts to be 145 1-2. “He said he believed there were more acres than were mentioned in the deed, but that he was assured there was funs'- one hundred and forty-five acres. He said to Mr. Goff in the presence of W. L. Starkey and myself that he would 'either take five thousand dollars for the farm, or-that-he would take the said one hundred and twenty-five acres of land and five hundred dollars to boot. Mr. Garrett also stated that there was one or two acres more with a spring upon it that belonged to him that was not mentioned
Counsel for appellee represent that Lynch was the agent of and acting for Goff in the transaction. Mr. Garrett, in his testimony, says, “I told Mr. Lynch before I ever saw Mr. Goff or heard of him, I wished he would find me a buyer for my farm and he asked me what I priced it at and I told him that if in the oil excitement if he would sell it for $5000.00 I would give him $50.00.” When asked on cross-examination, “Did you pay Mr. Lynch the $50.00 for selling your land ? A. I gave Mr. Lynch $50.00.” Goff testified that he] did not employ Lynch to make the trade for him and never paid or agreed to pay him anything for services in the matter. Lynch testified that Garrett agreed to compensate him for his services in making the trade, and paid him $50.00 therefor. It would appear that if Mr. Lynch was the agent of anyone in the transaction, he was the agent of Garrett.
The plaintiff lias set up a parol contract for the sale and exchange of the lands in question which he has been unable to establish by proof. In McCully v. McLean, 48 W. Va.
It is shown in the proofs by one of plaintiff’s deeds that the tract he represented as containing 110 acres really contains but 99 acres. The deed from Henderson Harper and wife to Andrew Carpenter in plaintiff’s chain of title, and a copy of which is filed with the deposition of J. L. Harper in this cause, describes the tract by metes and bounds and “containing one hundred acres, more or less, or the above described boundary, but the said party of the first part reserves one acre beginning.at the Sugar Corner running towards Samuel Gandee’s so as to take in a spring and thence towards the beginning.” In Nelson v. Mathews, supra, it is held: “A vendor who conveys a tract of land, with general warranty, as containing by estimation a specified quantity, more or less, when in fact his own title papers call for less than such specified quantity is bound to make good the difference to the purchaser.” Hogg’s Eq. Prin. section 7; Hilliard on Vendors, page 328, chapter 21. When the trade was made Goff had never seen the land but once,
The evidence is conflicting as to the value of the 145 1-2 acres and the 125 acres respectively, or as to whether the parties agreed as to the value thereof in their negotiations, so that this Court cannot say what amount per acre or in gross should be allowed the defendant as abatement for the 25 3-4 acres. This amount will have to be ascertained and adjudicated by the circuit court.
For the reasons herein stated the decree of January 7, 1905, entered in this cause by the circuit court of Roane county is reversed, set aside and annulled and the cause remanded to said court with directions to enter a decree requiring the plaintiff to execute and deliver to the defendant an apt and proper deed with general warranty for the actual and correct quantity of the two tracts of land in Harper district known as 145 1-2 acres but really containing only 119 3-4 acres, and including in such deed the small lot including the spring, but with special warranty as to such small lot, and that the court ascertain the proper amount of the abatement to be allowed to the defendant for the deficiency of 25 3-4 acres and that the unpaid note of the defendant still outstanding for $250.00 be deducted from said amount and judgment given for the defendant for the residue if any of said amount so ascertained by the court to be due him on account of such abatement; that the defendant be required to make and deliver an apt and proper deed to the plaintiff with general warranty for the tract of 125 acres agreed by him
Reversed. Remanded.