Braig v. Frye

199 N.W. 977, 199 Iowa 184
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 26, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 199 N.W. 977 (Braig v. Frye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braig v. Frye, 199 N.W. 977, 199 Iowa 184 (iowa 1924).

Opinion

Stevens, J. —

This is an action in equity, to compel the specific performance of a contract to convey 258 acres of land in Palo Alto County, Iowa. Decree entered in the court below in favor of appellant gave him alternative relief in damages in the sum of $3,500. Plaintiff’s appgai jg on;[y from the amount of damages awarded. The defendants’ appeal challenges the right of appellant to recover at all. The contract in controversy bears date December 27, 1915, and fixed November 1, 1916, as the date for final performance and exchange of papers, time being made of the essence of the contract on appellant’s part. Appellees, as parties of the first part, agreed to convey the Palo Alto County land, subject to mortgages aggregating $14,000, in exchange for 320 acres in Hughes County and another 320-acre tract in Sully County, South Dakota, both subject to designated incumbrances. In addition to the conveyance of the Dakota land, appellant agreed to pay appellees $1,000 on or before March 1, 1916, or, in lieu of such payment in cash, to execute his note therefor, due November 1st, and to secure the payment thereof by a first mortgage upon 240 acres in Wyoming, and to pay the further sum of $3,000 on or before November 1, 1916. The contract further required appellant, on November 1, 1916, to execute to appellees two promissory notes, one for $4,000 and one for $5,600, both maturing March 1, 1917, and to secure the payment thereof by mortgage upon the Palo Alto County farm.

Deeds conveying the Dakota land to appellees were executed and delivered by appellant as agreed; and on or about March 1, 1916, a note for $1,000, secured by mortgage upon the *186 Wyoming land, was executed. This mortgage was later foreclosed, and the land sold on special execution. Sometime in the latter part of June or the first of July, 1916, appellant assigned his interest in the contract to one John Sehmierer, in exchange for some Omaha property. At the time the contract in controversy was executed, the Palo Alto County farm, with other lands, was incumbered by a blanket mortgage for $56,504.13, which provided that the same mig’ht be released as to certain tracts, which included those described in the contract, upon the payment of a sum equal to $75 per acre, on any interest pay day, the pro-rata incumbrance being, however, only about $60 per acre. After the contract had been assigned by appellant to Sehmierer, an abstract showing the incumbrance above referred to was, at his request, furnished him by appellees. On July 13th, appellant wrote Frye, one of appellees, a letter, inquiring if a partial release of the blanket mortgage could not be obtained, so as to reduce the incumbrance to $14,000, the amount he had agreed to assume on the land. To this letter Frye replied that he was of the opinion that a partial release of the mortgage could not be obtained; and, prior to this date, Kulp, also one of appellees, wrote appellant, in answer to a letter from him, explaining fully the situation with reference to the $56,000 mortgage. Appellant testified that he went to Emmetsburg in August, 1916, and demanded of Frye a conveyance of the Palo Alto County farm, subject to an incumbrance of $14,000, as agreed, and that his demand was refused, upon the ground that appellees could not comply with it. The contract fixed November 1st as the time, and the Emmetsburg National Bank, Emmetsburg, Iowa, as the place, of final performance of the contract. Appellant further testified that he informed Frye, on the occasion above mentioned, and also on a prior occasion in July, that Sehmierer was ready to pay the balance of $3,000, and that he, appellant, would execute the notes and mortgages upon the Palo Alto County farm, as required by the contract, if appellees could adjust the incumbrance so as to comply therewith. No other offer or tender of performance was ..ever made by appellant, nor did appellees at any time tender an abstract showing an incumbrance on the Palo Alto County land of $14,000 only, nor did they tender a deed conveying the same to him. On the *187 contrary, appellees, at all times treating the contract as a mere option until full compliance with its terms by appellant, notified him, shortly after November 1st, that he had forfeited all rights under the contract, but did not give him the statutory notice of forfeiture.

This closed all negotiations between the parties until on or about February 5, 1917. On that date, appellee Kulp, in a letter written in reply to one received from Messrs. Campbell & Campbell, attorneys for appellant, offered a reconveyance of the Dakota land to him, upon the payment of the commissions, expenses of trips to Dakota, attorney fees, and other expenses in adjusting the incumbrances and otherwise handling the land. On February 10th, Kulp again wrote to the Campbells, submitting a statement of expenses, commissions, etc., totaling $2,105.44, which was the amount appellees demanded as a condition precedent to a reconveyance of the South Dakota land. The offer was refused on February 17, 1917, by letter in which Campbell requested a statement of the amount necessary to be paid by appellant to consummate the contract, and suggested that he might be able to go ahead with the deal. So far as the record shows, nothing further occurred between the parties until the latter part of June or the first of July, 1917, when appellant casually met appellee Kulp on a railway train. Both appellant and Kulp admit that the contract was referred to, but they give widely different versions of. the conversation. Appellant testified that he asked Kulp what he intended to do about the contract, and that Kulp replied, “Nothing,” and that appellant then threatened to seek recourse at law. At the time of this conversation, the mortgage upon the Wyoming land was in process of foreclosure. Kulp testified concerning this conversation that appellant took from his pocket a copy of an original notice in the action to foreclose the mortgage on the Wyoming land, which was served by publication, and said :

“If you gentlemen had given me something, I would have given you a deed, and saved you the trouble.”

He further testified that appellant said he thought he ought to be entitled to something, and that Kulp told him that appellees would have been willing to turn the South Dakota land back to him, but that appellant replied, 1 ‘ I just took a long shot *188 at it and lost,” and that he did not want the Dakota property. Kulp admitted that he said that, so 'far as he was concerned, the ease was closed and option forfeited. The next effort by either party to close the deal was in August, 191.8, when appellant’s attorney went to Emmetsburg to secure some adjustment of the matter, if possible. Upon his failure to accomplish this, action was commenced for specific performance of the contract.

A demurrer was filed to the petition and sustained by the court upon the theory that the .contract granted appellant a mere option to pux’chase the Palo Alto County farm, and that he had wholly failed to xneet the terms thereof. Upoxx appeal, the judgment of the court below was reversed, upon the ground that, notwithstanding that the contract was originally a mere option, the payment of $1,000 by the execution of the note and mox’tgage oxx the Wyoxning land was a paymeixt, oxx the purchase price, and the contract, thereupon, became a contract of purehase. Braig v. Frye, 189 Iowa 1104.

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Bluebook (online)
199 N.W. 977, 199 Iowa 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braig-v-frye-iowa-1924.