Berndt v. Berndt
This text of 149 N.W. 287 (Berndt v. Berndt) 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.
Opinion
Plaintiff and defendant are father and son. Plaintiff, the father, owned a 200-acre farm in Watonwan county. One year he rented it to the defendant, his son. They did not agree, and the next year a mutual friend, Charles Duryea, interceded, rented the land of the father and sublet it to the son. This arrangement was followed for two seasons. Toward the end of the second season, and in September, 1911, the father announced to Duryea that he was going to sell the farm. Duryea urged him to give his son the first chance to buy. The father remonstrated at first, stating that the son could never pay for it, hut, at the instance of Duryea, consented to meet with the son and talk it over. They met. Plaintiff testified that as a result of the interview he said to his son: “I will give you a chance up to the fall, and if we can get along togedder, I sell you the farm at $55 an acre, and if we can’s get along, then I says you have to pay rent. * * * If he got it * * * I say you have to pay me * * * every year $600 * * * ■ interest * * * he have to pay me 5 per cent * * * I tell him dis way, if we go and make papers out, a deed, that we make it that way that he never could sell the land or put a mortgage on it * * * and when he is dead it goes to the children.”
The son testified that the agreement, though verbal, was an absolute and present agreement to sell the farm for $55 an acre, payable $750 a year, without interest, the first payment to he made in the fall of' 1912. He admits, however, that a contract was to be drawn when the first payment was made and that the land was to go to the children after his death. The son continued in possession during the season of 1912 under this agreement. Father and son disagreed and the father notified the son early in the season that he could not have the farm, and in September sold the farm to other parties, Hanson and Wenstrum, and later commenced this action in ejectment. The defense is that an oral contract of sale was made and that there was such part performance as to take the case out of the [240]*240statute of frauds. The court found that no contract was made. Defendant asks us to set aside this finding as not sustained by the evidence.
If we bear in mind the principles which govern such cases, the determination of this question becomes easy. It is an old established rule that “to entitle a party to the specific performance of an alleged contract to convey real property, the contract must be clearly proved, and its terms should be so specific and distinct as to leave no reasonable doubt of their meaning.” Lanz v. McLaughlin, 14 Minn. 55 (72); Kileen v. Kennedy, 90 Minn. 414, 97 N. W. 126; 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 764. This rule is applied even when the alleged contract is in writing. It goes without saying that a rule no less strict is applied when the alleged contract is oral. Burke v. Ray, 40 Minn. 34, 41 N. W. 240; Koch v. Fischer, 122 Minn. 123, 142 N. W. 18; Brown v. Brown, 47 Mich. 378, 11 N. W. 205; 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 764.
While the defendant does not ask in the present action for a decree for specific performance of his alleged contract, yet the effect of granting the relief he does ask for is in substance much the same, for he .asks the court to find that the alleged contract was made and to adjudge his possession rightful by reason thereof, and the principles above stated are substantially the principles which the trial court was ■obliged to apply in arriving at the decision it did that no contract at all was made.
In reviewing that decision this court is to be guided by the principle that the finding should not be set aside, unless it is manifestly and palpably against the weight of the evidence. Wann v. Northwestern Trust Co. 120 Minn. 493, 497, 139 N. W. 1061. Applying this principle, the trial court must clearly be sustained. If plaintiff’s testimony is true, there was no contract. There are circumstances tending to corroborate plaintiff. Defendant testifies to a contract. He is corroborated by some testimony in the nature of admissions said to have been made by plaintiff. The questions involved were purely questions of fact. The findings of the court are well sustained by evidence and should not be disturbed.
Order affirmed.
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149 N.W. 287, 127 Minn. 238, 1914 Minn. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berndt-v-berndt-minn-1914.