40 Kan. 418 | Kan. | 1888
Opinion by
This action was brought in the district court of Atchison county by plaintiff in error, and 640 acres of laud were attached. The defendants moved to dissolve the attachment. There were five distinct grounds alleged in their motion for dissolution. The court denied the first four and sustained the fifth ground, and dissolved the attachment. The plaintiff brings the case here for review. The defendants state that the court erred in overruling the first four grounds of defendants’ motion, but as they have filed no cross-petition in error we shall not consider their objections. The attachment was dissolved because the court held that the petition did not state a cause of action. (Quinlan v. Danford,
“ CINCINNATI, Ohio, March 2, 1887.
“J. C. Greenawalt, Esq., No. 513 Commercial street, Atchi-son, Nansas — Dear Sir: Your letter of the 28th ult. has been received. We will sell the whole section of land in Atchi-son county, Kansas, referred to by you, at $50 per acre.
Yours respectfully,
Este & Schmidt.”
Upon the 5th of March the plaintiff telegraphed as follows:
“To Este & Schmidt, 31/. West Fourth St., Cincinnati, Ohio: Your offer, letter March 2, accepted; have deposited ten thousand dollars to your credit in Exchange National Bank. .Send deeds and papers at once. Answer. J. C. Greenawalt.”
At the same time he wrote and mailed to Este & Schmidt a letter of acceptance:
“Atchison-, Kahsas, March 5, 1887.
“Messrs. Este & Schmidt, Cincinnati, Ohio — GeNTS: I this morning accepted your proposition made to me by letter March 2, 1887, by telegram, and have deposited to your credit ten thousand dollars in the Exchange National Bank of this city, and requested them to inform you of the fact. The balance of the money is on deposit for you, and will be paid to you upon' the receipt of deeds conveying the title of said land, to wit, section fifteen, town six, of range twenty, in Atchison county, Kansas, to me. As the money is lying idle, I desire that you should close up the transaction at once.
I am, truly yours, etc.,
J. C. Greenawalt.”
The sole question we shall consider is, whether there was
The plaintiff in his petition asks for a judgment for damages because he avers the defendants refused to perform a contract they had made with him. Before he could recover damages for a refusal to execute, he must first of all allege a contract in his petition, and prove it by evidence. It follows, if no contract was entered into between the parties, he could not recover for any neglect or refusal of the defendants to comply with his understanding of what had been agreed upon. Failing to set forth a contract in his petition, he failed to state any cause against defendants, and therefore the court was correct in its judgment dissolving the attachment.
By the Court: It is so ordered.