154 P. 767 | Utah | 1916
The substance of the complaint is, that the defendant, a resident corporation of California doing a real estate business, was, subject to a $20,000 mortgage, "the record owner, as appeared from the plat books and other records in the office of the county recorder of Salt Lake County, Utah,” of particularly described real property, a lot 55x165 feet, on the west side of State Street, in the City of Salt Lake; that the defendant, on the 9th of September, 1907, gave the Equity Investment Company, a Utah corporation doing a real estate business in Salt Lake City,, an option to purchase the property subject to the mortgage, for $30,000, $1,000 cash, and $29,000 on or before 30 days thereafter, and that in pursuance thereof the equity investment company for the credit of the defendant, deposited with the National Bank of the Republic at Salt Lake City, $1,000, and took the bank’s receipt therefor, which, so far as material, acknowledged payment of the $1,000 "on account of the purchase price” of the property described in the complaint, a lot 55x165 feet, and recited the further payment of $29,000, to be made within thirty days thereafter, when the property was to be deeded by warranty deed, free from all incumbrances, except the mortgage, and the taxes for 1907. The receipt, or writing further recited that:
"This deposit is made with the National Bank of the Republic and accepted by them under authority of the following telegram from R. A. Rowan: ‘Los Angeles, California,, Sept. 6-7, 1907. Thomas E. Rowan, Salt Lake, Utah: Will accept one thousand for thirty days option for property west side State street. Price fifty thousand subject to twenty thousand mortgage. Balance thirty thousand to Be paid in cash on or before thirty days from date. Taxes to be pro-rated. One thousand to be deposited to my credit immediately with National Bank of Republic, they to notify me by wire. R. A. Rowan.’ ”
It then is alleged tha,t the Equity Investment Company, in paying the money and taking the receipt, acted for the plaintiff and that he understood and believed that the defendant
The case was tried to a jury who rendered a verdict in plaintiff’s favor in accordance with the prayer of the complaint. The defendant appeals and urges that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict, to charge the jury as requested, in misdirecting the jury, and in permitting answers to be made to certain questions propounded to the plaintiff as a witness.
As shown by the records in the recorder’s office of Salt Lake County, one Colgate, in 1903, by warranty deed, conveyed the lot, 55x165 feet, to one Halloran. In June, 1905, Halloran, by warranty deed, conveyed 53^x165 feet, and by quit-claim I%xl65 feet, to R. A. Rowan of Los Angeles. In December, 1905, Rowan, by warranty deed, conveyed 53^x165 feet, and by quitclaim 1^x165 feet to the defendant, and in July, 1908, the defendant, by R. A. Rowan, its presi
‘ ‘ Colgate having given a warranty deed to all of the fifty-five feet, we don’t question whether he owned it or not; so that the plat itself would not reveal whether the man or the corporation in whose name the property stood held title by warranty or quitclaim deed; in order to ascertain that it would be necessary to go to the deeds themselves or to the abstracts. We have an abstract book of all the transactions; a mere glance at that abstract book will show whether it is a quitclaim deed or what it is,”
—and that the record of deeds showed the character of title acquired and held by the defendant. Thus, the plat in the recorder’s office indicated that the defendant was the owner of a lot 55x165 feet; but whether by warranty or quitclaim deed would not there be disclosed. The abstract book and records of deeds, however, readily disclosed the defendant’s title, and the number of feet of ground 53-J feet it had by warranty and 1-J by quitclaim, the same as was conveyed to it by Rowan and by Halloran to Rowan.
Some time prior to September 4, 1907, the plaintiff informed the Equity Investment Company that he was desirous of purchasing property on the west side of State street, between Second and Third South, and in the block where the property in question is located. In pursuance of that, one T. E. Rowan, a real estate agent at Salt Yake City, but not related to the Rowans at Los Angeles, nor in any manner connected with
“Advise cash price west side State, taxes prorated, whether leased. ’ ’
R. W. Rowan, the next day replied:
“Will accept fifty thousand. Property now mortgaged for twenty thousand at five per cent. Leases very short. See Kelsey and Gillespie for exact information. Several people now figuring on this property. Doubtless will be sold, as figure named is ten thousand less than its present value. ’ ’
The same day, T. E. Rowan wired R. A. Rowan: “Responsible party offers one thousand for thirty days’ option, recommend.”
R. A. Rowan, the next day replied:
“Will accept one thousand for thirty days’ option for property west side State street, price fifty thousand, subject to twenty thousand mortgage. Balance thirty thousand to be paid in cash on or before thirty days from date. Taxes to be prorated. One thousand to be deposited to my credit immediately with the National Bank of the Republic; they to notify me by wire.”
Upon payment of $1,000 to the Equity Company by the plaintiff, that company, on the 9th of September, deposited the $1,000 with the National Bank of the Republic to the credit of R. A. Rowan, whereupon the bank gave the Equity Company the receipt and writing heretofore referred to, and in which it is stated that the lot, described as 55x165 feet, was to be conveyed by warranty to the Equity Company on the further payment of $29,000 within thirty days thereafter. Up to this point the name of the defendant nowhere appeared in any of the telegrams, writings, or negotiations. The receipt itself is signed alone by the bank, and on its face purports to be signed on authority of the telegram from R. A. to T. E. Rowan. It, however, is shown that R. A. Rowan then was the president of the defendant and that it did some business in Salt Lake City, buying, selling, and renting real estate, had a bank account with the National Bank of the Republic in the name of R. A. Rowan, and that at the time of the negotiations, and for nearly two years prior thereto, it, and not
The case was here on a former appeal. 37 Utah, 304, 108 Pac. 1109. On that trial the plaintiff was let to the jury and permitted to recover on the theory that the receipt or writing given by the bank to the Equity Company, wherein it was recited that 55x165 feet were to be conveyed by warranty, evidenced the terms of the option, and that the bank was authorized by the defendant to give such a writing, or, that it, with full knowledge that such a writing had been given by the bank, had ratified it. On that appeal we held that there was no evidence to justify findings that the defendant had authorized the making of such a contract, or that it had ratified it, and hence that the case was submitted to the jury on a theory unsupported by evidence. We thus
This testimony was permitted on the theory, putting it
But for the reasons heretofore given, together with this, the