40 So. 557 | Ala. | 1906
This is the second appeal by Allen P. Howison from a.decree of the chancery court of Bibb county overruling a demurrer to a bill filed against him by Arthur S. Bartlett and others to have a contract for the sale of lands and timber rights specifically performed. The decree of the chancellor ivas affirmed on the former
The contract of which specific performance is sought exists by virtue of an option to purchase lands given by respondent and an acceptance thereof by • complainants Bartlett, Robertson, and Ensign, whose property rights thereby acquired have been assigned to the complainant corporation. The entire contract is made an exhibit to the bill and is contained in three papers of different dates. The bill states that on the 30th day of May, 1901, complainants made a contract to buy from Howison other and clifferents lands, and did afterwards buy as agreed. The contract here sued on, called an “option,” is a part of the first .contract, and is as follows: “Said first party, in consideration of the premises, hereby gives to second party an option to purchase two other tracts of timber land and timber rights or either of said parcels; one.known as the ‘Active Tract/ consisting of. about three thousand acres, more or less, in the vicinity of Active, Bibb county, Alabama, and the other known as the ‘Trio Tract,” consisting' of about five .thousand acres, situated near Trio, in said county and state, and constituting all the virgin growth, long leaf, yellow pine ..timber lands and rights owned by the first party in T. 22, R. 11 —10—9 east Callaba river, at the price of six dollars per acre, and said option to be exercised within ninety days from date. If the option is accepted, then purchase to be consummated on the same terms and conditions as herein above mentioned, except as to price per acre. This option relates only to virgin growth, Long leaf, yellow pine timber lands and timber rights which have not been cut over or denuded.” The terms and conditions (except
As was'Stated in the opinion on the former appeal: “To defeat the bill the respondent urges only those grounds of the. demurrer which are interposed upon the assumption that the contract is incomplete for want of survey by a surveyor agreed on fiy the parties, and that the contract is fatally uncertain as to the-property intended to. he transferred.” It is an elementary principle in equity jurisprudence that specific performance will not be decreed of an agreement for sale, unless the property to be conveyed is fixed with certainty as to the locality and description of the land. This principle is
But the clause with- respect to the survey marks the point of cleavage between the parties. It is the point of difficutly in the case. On the former appeal this clause was disposed of by the court in the following language:
The same doctrine has been folloAved in this country. —Norfleet v. Southall, Murp. 189; Woodruff v. Woodruff, 44 N. J. Eq. 349, 16 Atl. 4, 1 L. R. A. 380. “This case has been approved and its doctrine followed in many
The sense of these cases is that, where the' contract specifies a mode of ascertaining the price which is essential, the contract is conditional until the ascertainment, and is absolute only when the price has been determined. If there be default in this respect'the contract remains imperfect, and incapable of being enforced. — Fry on Specific Per. 163. In this case the contract fixes the price to be paid for the lands and timber rights at six dollars per acre. So it cannot be reasonably said that the price is left open. The most that can be claimed by appellant with respect to this feature of the contract is that the total sum to be paid is dependent upon the number of acres.
We have not overlooked the case of Alabama Mineral Land Co. v. Jackson, 121 Ala. 172, 25 South. 709, 77 Am. St. Rep. 46, so strongly relied on by the appellant. We are of the opinion that- the facts of the case at bar distinguish it from that case. The conclusion is that we will adhere to the decision made in the case on the former appeal, and the decree of the chancellor must, be affirmed. i
Affirmed.