Amann v. Frederick

257 N.W.2d 436, 1977 N.D. LEXIS 161
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 1977
DocketCiv. 9329
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 257 N.W.2d 436 (Amann v. Frederick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amann v. Frederick, 257 N.W.2d 436, 1977 N.D. LEXIS 161 (N.D. 1977).

Opinion

VOGEL, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court ordering specific performance of an option to convey 400 acres of land.

We affirm.

On September 28, 1971, Norbert Amann entered into an agreement with John and Cecelia Frederick. The agreement was unartfully drawn by a banker. It provided that an option agreement would be entered into as to 400 acres of land, and that the option agreement as to the 400 acres was contingent upon the execution of an option to buy an additional 720 acres with funds to be provided in part by a Farmers Home Administration real estate loan. It further provided that a lease was to be given on the 400 acres for five years, starting in 1972, with lease payments at eight dollars per acre per year, and that the lease would include a five-year option to purchase the 400 acres at a price of $40,000, including 50 percent of the mineral rights.

On the same day, September 28,1971, the same parties executed an option on a form provided by the Farmers Home Administration for the sale and purchase of the 720-acre tract, and a separate option to purchase farm machinery at a price of $18,250. Parenthetically, we mention that the reason for the separate agreements as to the 720-acre tract and the 400-acre tract apparently was that the lending agency had limits which would be exceeded by the purchase of all the land in one transaction.

On April 3, 1972, the parties entered into a farm lease on the 400-acre tract, drawn by the same banker on a printed form, and containing this language:

“This is meant to include five crop seasons or the crops from 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975 and 1976.
“This lease includes an option to purchase during the time of this lease for a price of $40,000.00 with 50% of the mineral rights to go with this sale.”

On December 22, 1975, an attorney for Amann notified the Fredericks in writing that Amann was exercising his option. Instructions were given as to bringing the abstract up-to-date and execution of a deed enclosed with the letter. The Fredericks refused to convey and asserted then, and assert now, various reasons for such refusal.

The allegations of the defendants in this court can be summarized as follows:

As to formation of a contract:

1. There was no “meeting of the minds” of the parties for various reasons, including those mentioned in 2 to 5 below.

2. There was no consideration for the option.

3. The rental was unconscionably low.

4. There was a mutual mistake as to the mineral acres owned by the Fredericks, and the Fredericks were allowed to remove some old buildings which were part of the real estate.

5. The lease-option was not notarized.

As to admission of evidence:

6. The trial court erred in the admission of Exhibit 1, the option agreement of September 28, 1971, first described above.

7. Misleading evidence as to notations on checks was received.

*439 As to tender:

8. Amann failed to tender performance when he purportedly exercised his option.

As to payment of rent after exercise of option:

9. Since the lease-option does not provide otherwise, Amann is obligated to pay rent for the fifth year, even after he exercised his option during the fourth year of the agreement.

We will discuss these points in the order stated.

1. It is variously alleged that Mr. Frederick cannot read and Mrs. Frederick did not read the various papers they signed; that they thought they were signing only a lease; and that they were unaware of the fact that they did not own all the minerals under the land.

There was evidence which would justify nonreliance by the court upon these statements. The evidence showed that all three of the parties went to the banker together, and the instrument was apparently drawn up in their presence and signed in the presence of the banker, who witnessed.it. It is somewhat hard to believe that the contents of the instrument were not discussed. At any rate, there is more than adequate evidence to justify the conclusion of the trial judge that the contract was based upon mutual assent.

The invocation of the shorthand expression “meeting of the minds” is more misleading than helpful in deciding contract issues. Mutual assent to a contract is indeed required, but that assent must be evidenced in some way, and if the evidence is clear enough, the contract will be binding, regardless of mental reservations or misunderstandings of one or both parties, in the absence of fraud or other recognized ground for setting aside the contract. It is the words of the contract and the manifestations of assent which govern, not the secret intentions of the parties. As was said by Brian in Yearbook, 17 Edward IV, 1,

“It is trite learning that the thought of man is not triable, for the devil himself knows not the thought of man.”

And, as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., said in O’Donnell v. Clinton, 145 Mass. 461, 14 N.E. 747 (1888), and Justice Cardozo quoted in Sokoloff v. National City Bank, 239 N.Y. 158, 145 N.E. 917, 920, 37 A.L.R. 712 (1924):

“Assent, in the sense of the law, is a matter of overt acts, not of inward unanimity in motives, design, or the interpretation of words.”

See also Restatement, Contracts, 71 and 233.

Professor Williston sums it all up by saying that the term “meeting of the minds” is a “familiar cliché, still reechoing in judicial dicta,” and that it is a nineteenth-century expression which seems to be contrary to the rule “long ago settled that secret intent was immaterial, only overt acts being considered in the determination of such mutual assent” as the law requires. Williston on Contracts, 3d Ed., § 22.

We are satisfied that the circumstances of the signing of the lease agreement show a sufficient manifestation of assent to the terms of the lease-option by all the parties and that they are bound by it.

2. As to the claim that there was no consideration for the option, there are two sufficient answers. One is that there was evidence by Amann, not disputed by Mr. Frederick (who said he “did not recall”), that the parties discussed the amount of rent to be paid and fixed a figure based upon the going rate of interest on savings (6 to 6½ percent) and the amount of real estate taxes (up to one dollar per acre), which made a total of approximately seven dollars per acre on each $100 acre, and that the additional one dollar, approximately, of the eight-dollar-per-acre rental fee was consideration for the option. The second sufficient answer to the contention is that consideration for an option can be supplied by the consideration for a lease in the same instrument. Dole v. Hansen, 238 N.W.2d 58 (N.D.1975), n. 1 at p. 61; Re v. Wells Fargo Bank,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 N.W.2d 436, 1977 N.D. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amann-v-frederick-nd-1977.