Alexander v. Ward

148 N.W. 123, 126 Minn. 340, 1914 Minn. LEXIS 645
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 10, 1914
DocketNos. 18,631—(167)
StatusPublished

This text of 148 N.W. 123 (Alexander v. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Ward, 148 N.W. 123, 126 Minn. 340, 1914 Minn. LEXIS 645 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Bunn, J.

The issues in this case were tried by the court below without a jury. There were findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of plaintiff, and judgment was entered thereon. Defendant Benjamin E. Ward appeals from this judgment.

The claim is that the findings of fact do not support the conclusions of law. The action was for the alleged conversion by defendant Benjamin E. Ward of the sum of $3,900, and the further sum of $500, alleged to belong to plaintiff; the wife of said defendant was made a party, the claim being that the moneys converted were invested in the name of the wife for the purpose of defrauding plaintiff; the relief asked was a money judgment against defendant [341]*341Benjamin E. Ward for the sums converted, less $300 paid, and an. injunction restraining defendants and each of them from disposing' of the money or the property in which it had been invested. The-answer, as amended, denied generally the allegations of the complaint, alleged the making of the contract hereinafter noted, the.making of sales thereunder by defendant and the receipt by him of. partial payments on such sales; these payments being the moneys-alleged in the complaint to have been converted by defendant. The1 answer alleged that up to July 10, 1911, defendant had performed and was ready, able and willing to perform the contract, but that on-said date plaintiff gave and defendant received a notice in writing; terminating the same; that by giving this notice plaintiff did wholly' “repudiate, breach and terminate” the contract and prevented defendant from further carrying out the same, and “defendant has and does hereby elect to treat the said contract, Exhibit ‘A,’ as terminated and at an end because of and by reason of the said breach and repudiation thereof on the part of the said plaintiff.” The answer concluded by demanding judgment that plaintiff take nothing and that defendant have judgment against plaintiff for the damages sustained from plaintiff’s alleged breach of the contract in serving the notice of cancelation. The reply admitted the making of the contract, the receipt by defendant of payments on sales made under it, and that the moneys so received were the same moneys claimed by-plaintiff to have been converted by defendant. It admitted that plaintiff gave notice of cancelation of the contract, and that such contract had been terminated by mutual consent of the parties. The other allegations of the answer were denied.

The findings made on the issues thus presented by the pleadings were in substance as follows: Plaintiff owned lands in Saskatoon Province, Canada. April 15, 1911, plaintiff, as party of the first part, entered into a written contract with defendant Benjamin E. Ward as party of the second part and one Elliott, as party of the third part, by the terms of which contract plaintiff agreed to sell the lands to defendant Ward for the sum of $38,000, of which $8,000 was to be cash, the balance to be paid in five equal annual instalments of $6,000 each with interest, the first instalment payable. [342]*342November 1, 1911. The $8,000 cash was to be paid by the transfer to plaintiff of stock in a corporation, and it was provided that when this stock was received plaintiff was to transfer one-third thereof to Ward and one-third to Elliott. These provisions followed:

“It is further understood and agreed that it is a term of this agreement that the party of the second part shall sell the said lands, and the proceeds of the said sale shall be applied, firstly, in ‘payment to the said party of the first part of the balance of purchase price, •and, secondly, any residue, after payment of the purchase price, shall be divided equally amongst the three parties hereto.”
“It is further agreed and understood that the party of the second part is to have full control of the sale of the said lands both as to price, terms and time of sale. And the party of the first part is to retain possession of all buildings now on said lands.”
“It is further understood and agreed that all the covenants, terms and provisions contained in the agreement for sale hereto attached which are not inconsistent with the provisions of this agreement shall be construed as though embodied in and forming a part of this agreement.”

The agreement attached was a blank form of contract evidently intended to be used in the sales that defendant was to make. We find nothing in its provisions that changes the rights of the parties under the contract, except the provision giving the vendor a right to terminate the contract for default of the purchaser in performance of any of the “stipulations, covenants, provisos and agreements” of the contract.

After the making of this contract, defendant Benjamin F. Ward sold under land contract (using the form before mentioned) certain of the lands for a gross sale price of $36,000, the cash payment being $3,600, which was received by Ward. This contract was signed by Ward, by plaintiff and by the purchaser. Ward sold to another purchaser a certain tract for the price of $6,000, and received $300 in cash and the note of the purchaser payable to himself for $325, as ihe “down payment.” This contract was signed by Ward and the purchaser but not by plaintiff, who had no knowledge of the sale rantil after Ward left Saskatoon. After receiving the $3,600 pay[343]*343'ment, the $300 payment and the note, Ward discounted the note, transferred all of the moDeys thus received from Saskatoon to Minneapolis and deposited them to his own credit in a Minneapolis bank, by which the court found that he converted all said sums. On June 17, 1911, plaintiff demanded of Ward the moneys so received by him •on said sales, but Ward refused to pay over,any part thereof, and has converted the same to his own use and benefit.

The gross amount of sales made by Ward under the contract was .$46,225; these sales covered only a portion,of the lands, the portions unsold being of the value on July 5, 1911, of the sum of $46,725, the whole property covered by the contract being worth $93,000.

The court found as a fact, though it is really a conclusion of law, that under the provision of the contract the proceeds of sale of the lands by Ward should be applied, firstly, in payment to plaintiff of the balance of the purchase price, plaintiff was entitled to have and receive all of the payments made by purchasers until the full purchase price of $38,000 was received.

The court further found that, by converting the sums so received from the purchasers, defendant forfeited his rights under his contract with plaintiff; that on July 8, 1911, plaintiff served notice on ■defendant of the cancelation of the contract, and that by this notice .all rights of defendant Benjamin F. Ward under the contract were ■cancelled and annulled.

The conclusions of law were that plaintiff was entitled to judgment against defendant Benjamin F. Ward for the sum of $3,900 with interest, and that the contract be adjudged cancelled and annulled.

The contentions' of plaintiff, sustained by the trial court are: (1) That he was entitled to have paid to him the sums collected by •defendant on the sales made by him, and that the failure of defendant to pay these sums on demand was a conversion; (2) that by this failure to pay defendant breached the contract, giving plaintiff a right to cancel it, which he exercised, thus terminating the contract •and all rights of defendant thereunder.

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.W. 123, 126 Minn. 340, 1914 Minn. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-ward-minn-1914.