143 Mo. 1 | Mo. | 1898
This is a suit in equity for the specific performance of an alleged contract for the sale of a lot in Kansas City on which there was at the time a dwelling house.
The petition charges that on the fifteenth of November, 1890, plaintiff was the owner of the lot, describing it, and on said day a contract between him and P. W. Ditseh was entered into “by the terms of
Defendant by answer admitted the execution and delivery of the note and deed of trust, and the sale of the land thereunder as charged, but denied each other allegation of the petition. He charges affirmatively that the alleged contract, if one should be found to have been made, was not in writing, nor was there any memorandum thereof in writing signed by either of the parties charged therewith, and such contract can not be enforced by reason of the statute of frauds.
Upon a trial in the circuit court a decree was rendered in favor of plaintiff and defendant appealed. The facts will sufficiently appear in the opinion. It appears from the evidence to our entire satisfaction that a verbal agreement was entered into in November, 1890, between plaintiff and P. W. Ditsch, the ancestor of defendant by which the former agreed to sell to the latter the land in question for the sum of $3,000 cash. It is true the proof of the contract in part was made by a witness, who was the agent of plaintiff, and who
In equity cases incompetent evidence admitted on the trial, can be disregarded by the appellate court; so, speaking generally, the admission of such evidence is not reversible error. This is so when, rejecting the incompetent'evidence, the conclusion of fact will be unchanged. ' The witness, whose incompetency is charged, testified to the agreement for the sale which he said was made between himself, as agent of the ■ plaintiff, and Mr. Ditsch. Under the construction we have given to the statute, he was not a competent witness to the transaction. Banking House v. Rood, 132 Mo. 256. But a witness, called by defendant, confirmed this evidence, as did likewise all the circumstances. We need not go into the evidence on this question in detail, as defendant does not really dispute that such a verbal agreement was made.
II. The firs^ substantial defense is that the contract, being for the sale of real estate, can only be proved by some writing signed by the party to be charged and there was, therefore, a failure of proof. Plaintiff meets this defense by the charge -that there was such part performance of the contract on the part of plaintiff, and acceptance thereof on the part of defendant’s ancestor, as prevents the interposition of the statute of frauds as a defense. The agreed price for the property, as it stood at the time of the contract,, was $3,000, to be paid in cash on certain conditions in respect to the title, and on the condition that plaintiff would build an addition to the house at a cost of five hundred dollars, this amount to be added to the purchase price. Mr. Ditsch prepared the plans and speci
III. But defendant claims that plaintiff failed to correct the defects in the title and was unable to make good title to the land, and therefore the conditions upon which the sale was made failed, and he had the right, therefore, to foreclose the deed of trust. There can be no doubt that under the contract plaintiff was required to furnish Ditsch a good marketable title to the land and unless such a title was tendered within a reasonable time he had the right to rescind the contract and demand a return of the purchase money and on refusal could foreclose his deed of trust. We find in the record the following stipulation in respect to the title: “It is agreed by counsel for defendant and plaintiff that said abstract furnished by .Green showed that at. the date of the alleged contract of sale from Green to P. W. Ditsch the title of said Green to the property in question was the same as the title to the property in question in the case of Mitchener v. Holmes, decided by the Supreme Court at the April term, 1893, June 27, and reported in 22 Southwestern Reporter, page 1070.” The case referred to will be found reported in volume 117, Missouri Reports, at page 185. The conclusion of the court in that case (page 212) was that the title was good and marketable. It appears from the evidence that defendant refused to pay the amount expended by plaintiff in making the improvement, or to accept a deed to the property, but instead proceeded to sell the land under the deed of trust. The sale was made in December, 1891, Ditsch himself was the purchaser for $1,000, and the title was transferred to him by deed from the trustee. Thus he secured the title and possession of the property, refuses to pay the balance of
There was evidence to the effect that Ditseh
The foregoing opinion prepared by our late associate, Maceaelane, P. J., having been duly considered, is adopted as the opinion of the court, and in accordance therewith the decree of the circuit court is affirmed,