89 Kan. 338 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Defendant W. S. Lindsay owned 120 acres of land adjoining a large pasture owned by the plaintiff and made an oral agreement with him to sell the tract at $20 an acre, receiving a payment of $50 on the purchase price, the remainder to be paid and a deed given on or before the 10th of March. The plaintiff took possession of the land and moved a division fence and repaired the fence along the boundary. On March 1 the time of payment was extended to May 1 at the request of the plaintiff. Up to this point the parties substantially agree. Lindsay contends that about March 1 Smethers said he could not raise the money, but if Lindsay and wife would sign a contract he would pay the 1st of May, and that Lindsay replied: “Well,.I told him that we were ready to make the deed whenever he furnished the money”; that later Smeth-ers agreed to pay six per cent from the 1st of March and was to pay the taxes; that he met Smethers in November, when Smethers offered to pay $70 and said
The court found that the plaintiff had tendered the money into court and was entitled to a deed.
We think the evidence and the circumstances and conduct shown thereby justify the conclusion reached.
The plaintiff testified that in November he told defendant W. S. Lindsay that he had the money and wanted to pay for the land, “and he says no use of tendering me any money and he says I can not make a deed, and I will not make the deed.” This avoided the necessity of a formal tender, and the offer to pay the money into court was all that he was required to do. It is argued that the petition was demurrable because the contract was not in writing. But it alleged part performance, possession and tender. After the demurrer was overruled the defendants answered admitting the oral contract to sell, the payment of $50, the taking of possession (without the knowledge or
Mr. Lindsay in his answers to the following questions disclosed, we think, the cause of his reluctance to make the deed:
“Q. At the time that you were selling this land to Mr. Smethers at $20.00 per acre that was a fair value for the land ? A. It might have been then but it is not •now.
“Q. You do not think it is now? A. No, sir.
“Q. What do you think the land is worth now? A. I think $25.00 an acre.”
Finding no error in the record the. judgment is affirmed.