Biggs v. Moll

463 S.W.2d 881, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1137
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 8, 1971
Docket55152
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 463 S.W.2d 881 (Biggs v. Moll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biggs v. Moll, 463 S.W.2d 881, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1137 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

HENRY I. EAGER, Special Commissioner.

The plaintiffs here seek specific performance of a contract for the sale of real estate. The trial court decreed specific performance. Defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled by lapse of time and she appealed in due course. We have jurisdiction because title to real estate is involved. Arnold v. Smith et al., Mo., 436 S.W.2d 719, Cossairt v. Reich, Mo., 370 S. W.2d 291. Since the case is here for our original review on the facts, they will need to be stated in some detail.

Defendant, a widow, owned a tract of land in Jefferson County; her counsel says that it consisted of approximately 93 acres; a plat seems to show it as 73.7 acres. The difference is immaterial here. The tract was divided by Highway MM which ran from southeast to northwest through it. The northerly part was irregular in shape and would appear to contain slightly less than half of the total acreage. Defendant had known a real estate broker by the name of Edward Cooperman, and in years past she had listed this property for sale with him, but none was sold. On October 8, 1966, Cooperman obtained from her, as he testified, a listing of the tract now in question, described as 93 acres, at a price of $46,500. Defendant’s name appears on this card, printed in red pencil in two places, as “MRS MOLL”; one of these places was that for the signature of the owner. She denied that she placed it there and denied that she ever owned a red pencil. Cooperman testified that he saw her place her name on the card while they were out at the location of the property. He and his sales force showed the place and apparently got no bids at or near $500 an acre for all or any part, until approximately September 9, 1967. At or about that time Miss Helen Sullivan, a saleswoman of Cooperman, told defendant that she had a purchaser (the present plaintiffs) and talked to her several times. This led up to the contract now in controversy. The present difficulty arises largely out of the conversations between defendant and Miss Sullivan and the description written into the contract by Miss Sullivan. That description included “a tract of ground situated on the No East side of MM highway, being a minimum of 25 acres,” except for a reservation of 20 feet at the west end (for a roadway or access). The price fixed was $12,500. Defendant insists that she only sold 25 acres. The plaintiffs insist that she contracted to sell the whole tract as described. The contract was largely printed and was called “Receipt for Earnest Money,” but it recited an agreement to sell, certain terms of financing, “property to be surveyed,” and the statement of a closing date of October 30, 1967, along with sundry other provisions of a contract of sale. Defendant did not sign the contract on its face as “owner,” but she did sign an “Agreement” and an “Amendment” on the back. The former stated that the sale price was $12,500 (which may mean cash) and otherwise confirmed the contract terms; the “Amendment” restated the description and the price as follows: “It is herewith agreed to convey this acreage contained within the bounds, as evidenced by survey, bordered by existing Eastern line, county road and the Northern line to a point 20 feet East of the property line of Lee Moll. Said Western boundary to parallel Eastern Boundary and join county road to Northern boundary. Price for acreage contained herein to be $12,500.00.” Plaintiffs signed in three places. No one makes a point of any irregularities in the contract except for the description. The controversy primarily concerns the amount of land thus agreed to be conveyed, but incidentally concerns the delay beyond October 30, 1967, in plaintiffs’ tender of performance.

At some unstated date thereafter defendant went to see Mr. Theodore Hurtgen, a registered surveyor, about “preparing a description.” She obviously ordered a survey *884 eventually, for Mr. Hurtgen and his associates made and furnished a survey which was received in evidence; this showed that the tract so described contained 34.96 acres. Mr. Hurtgen testified that he met defendant on the ground and that she pointed out “what she wanted done,” that he heard no discussion of 25 acres, and that he surveyed the land as directed. The survey was dated October 23, 1967, but it was probably delivered some time thereafter to the abstract company or to Cooper-man’s office. It is indicated that the surveyor was delayed by his efforts to get defendant to meet him on the ground to point out the exact tract. The tract which was thus surveyed was that which the plaintiffs were trying to buy, i.e., everything north of the road except a strip 20 feet wide at the west end. Cooperman testified that defendant had pointed out to him, on the ground, the boundaries of the tract.

A certificate of title was ordered, but it could not be issued until a valid legal description was obtained from the survey. The certificate was ordered by an employee of Cooperman after receiving the survey. It was finally issued under date of November 8, 1967, and was delivered at some time thereafter, presumably to Coop-erman. The certificate recited one deed of trust, recorded on February 15, 1967 (John Girlie beneficiary), in the amount of $10,-950.- In the meantime, the closing date (October 30, 1967) fixed in the contract had passed. Cooperman testified that he talked to defendant about a “postponement” before that date. Miss Sullivan testified: that she went to see Mr. Hurtgen to try to hurry the survey and that, at that time, defendant had not even ordered it; that defendant called her a “couple of times,” or more after October 30, 1967, to ask “how the deal was going”; that they talked about the survey “that was held up so long”; in one conversation in November, 1967, defendant was “rather anxious to get it closed,” and did not state that “the deal was over”; that she had told defendant that the closing date had “expired.” Miss Sullivan never saw any partial deed of release.

On November 17, Mr. Cooperman called defendant and told her that the deal would be closed on November 22; he testified that she made no complaint. However, he called her again on November 18, and she had changed her mind and said that she was not going to close; her stated reason was that she had heard that some “shopping centers” were going up. At that time Cooperman seems to have suggested a possibility of a suit against her.

The closing statement prepared by Miss Schachner of Cooperman’s office showed an amount due from plaintiffs of $11,081.-05 after a “First Deed of Trust” from the Lemay Bank and Trust Company. This seemingly meant that defendant would receive the $1,000 from that bank. In any event, plaintiffs appeared at Cooperman’s office on November 22, and delivered to him a cashier’s check for the $11,081.05. Defendant did not appear. No point is made here that plaintiffs did not then tender the full amount due under the contract.

There was considerable testimony concerning a partial deed of release to free the tract from the incumbrance of John Girlie’s first deed of trust. Cooperman testified that he asked defendant to get one, and that he later had one in his possession; whether it was executed or not is not definitely shown. He thought that it was returned to Girlie, to whom he had talked by phone.

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Bluebook (online)
463 S.W.2d 881, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 1137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biggs-v-moll-mo-1971.