Breedin v. Smith

120 S.E. 64, 126 S.C. 346, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 16, 1923
Docket11346
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 120 S.E. 64 (Breedin v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breedin v. Smith, 120 S.E. 64, 126 S.C. 346, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 195 (S.C. 1923).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

Action to recover the sum of $4,500.00, with interest, alleged to be due the plaintiff by defendants under and by virtue of the terms of a contract in writing which will be hereinafter fully set out.

The complaint alleges, in substance, (1) that on January 27, 1920, the plaintiff entered into a written agreement with P. E. Clinkscales, whereby Clinkscales undertook to sell and the plaintiff to buy a certain lot of land in the City of Anderson upon the terms and conditions therein set out; (2) that plaintiff had complied with all the conditions of his said contract with Clinkscales; (3) that on January 31, 1920, the plaintiff entered into a writing with the defendants, whereby, upon the terms and conditions therein set out, he assigned to them all of his right, title, and interest in and to the contract with Clinkscales; (4) that by the terms of their contract with plaintiff the defendants “were *349 obligated” to make certain payments therein referred to, to wit, $2,500 to Clinkscales and $1,000.00 to plaintiff on February 26, 1920; (5) that on February 26, 1920, when said payments were due, the defendants refused to make same, and thereupon plaintiff paid to Clinkscales the $2,-500.00 that day due under his agreement with said Clink-scales; (6) that defendants were further obligated to pay plaintiff $1,000.00 on January 27, 1921, which they had refused to pay; and (7) that “by reason of their said engagements the defendants are indebted to the plaintiff” in the sum of $3,500.00, with interest from February 26, 1920, and $1,000.00, with interest from January 27, 1921.

By their answer the defendants deny liability generally, and allege facts, which, liberally interpreted, may be held to set up the following defenses: (1) Full compliance with the terms of their contract according to its true meaning and purport; (2) rescission of their contract by them for the wrongful repudiation thereof by the plaintiffs; (3) rescission of the contract by them for fraud of the plaintiff in procuring same, if subject to the construction and interpretation for which plaintiff contends; and (4) a counterclaim’ for the sum of $1,000.00, the amount paid by them to plaintiff at the time of the execution of the contract.

Upon the trial the Circuit Judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,000.00, with interest on $1,000.00 from February 26, 1920, and on $1,000.00 from January 27, 1921. From judgment thereon, the defendants appeal. From the ruling of the trial Court, refusing to direct a verdict for the full amount claimed, and in effect directing a verdict against plaintiff to the extent of $2,-500.00 of the amount claimed, the plaintiff appeals. The respective appeals of the parties will be considered in the order mentioned.

Defendant's Appear

From defendants’ standpoint the essential facts may be thus stated: The plaintiff, Dr. Breedin, on January 27, 1920, entered into a contract with P. F. Clinkscales, the *350 owner of a lot of land in the business section of the City of Anderson, for. the purchase thereof substantially upon the following terms: (1) The payment of a purchase price of $15,500.00, payable, $1,000.00 in cash, $2,500.00 on February 26, 1920, and the balance on January 27, 1921, with interest at 6 per cent, on the deferred payments; (2) the payment by Breedin of all taxes levied subsequent to the year 1919, and all paving or other assessments already levied or to be levied; (3) the assumption by Breedin of all liability for outstanding claim of Mrs. Seligman for the use of a party wall; (4) the conveyance of the premises subject to an outstanding lease to one Yancey, under which lease Yancy had the right to remove all fixtures placed by him on the land; (5) option of the seller, Clinkscales, on. failure of Breedin to make the payments or any part thereof within the time limited or to perform any covenant, to terminate the contract, re-enter, and retain all payments made as stipulated damages. Having paid Clinkscales the $1,-000.00 in cash as provided by this contract, the plaintiff, Breedin, employed IT. M. Holland “to resell” the property he had contracted to purchase; the authority of Holland as agent to expire at 6 p. m., January 31, 1920. Holland talked with the defendant, Smith, on the morning of January 31, “carried him down there and showed him the property.” About 2 :00 p. m. of this day Smith took his codefendant, Dagnall, to see the lot and reported to him what Mr. Holland had said. Smith and Dagnall then talked further with Holland, and after doing so went to the plaintiff, Breedin’s, office and offered him $17,000.00 for the lot. Dr. Breedin declined to take less than $17,-500.00, and Smith and Dagnall then agreed to pay that price. They then went to Mr. Dagnall’s office to draw the contract; Mr. Holland came in and shortly afterward Dr. Breedin, the plaintiff, came. Breedin then stated that all of the purchase price could not be paid at once, as it would have to be paid as arranged for in his contract with *351 Clinkscales. Smith and Dagnall agreed to making the payments accordingly. Mr. Smith drew the contract, and the dates of payments were furnished by Holland or Breedin, one of whom had the Clinkscales contract, by reference thereto. At this time the Yancy lease was mentioned, and it was agreed that Smith and Dagnall were to- get the rents. Thereupon the contract, giving rise to the present controversy, was drafted and executed about, or a little before, 4:00 p. m. of January 31. The transaction was hurriedly conducted. The defendants testified substantially that the Clinkscales contract was never in their possession, and that, except in the particulars relating to the dates of payments to be made by Dr. Breedin to Clinkscales and to the fact of the Yancey lease, the contents of that contract were wholly unknown to them; that, in the negotiations with the plaintiff’s agent, Mr. Holland, the Clinkscales contract was not mentioned; that upon the basis of the representation made to them by Mr. Holland, the plaintiff’s agent, they offered $17,500.00 for the property, free from all liens and incumbrances; and that the contract actually entered into merely embodied that offer and its acceptance by the plaintiff.

Several days after the execution of this contract between the plaintiff and the defendants, the defendants learned for the first time through Mr. Clinkscales that by the terms of his contract with Dr. Breedin certain obligations- as to a claim for the use of a party wall, as to taxes and paving assessments, as to interest, and as to removal of fixtures by the tenant, Yancey, had been assumed by Dr. Breedin. Mr. Dagnall, one of the defendants, then saw Dr. Breedin and stated to him that it was the defendants’ understanding and construction of their contract, that they were not to assume Breedin’s obligation to Clinkscales beyond the payment of $17,500.00 for a free and unincumbered title to the lot. Dr. Breedin stated, in effect, that it was his understanding and construction of their contract that the defendants were to assume all obligations imposed on him by *352 the Clinkscales contract in addition to making the payments to him and Clinkscales, amounting to $17,500.00, as provided in defendants’ contract, and that he would insist on their performance accordingly.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 64, 126 S.C. 346, 1923 S.C. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breedin-v-smith-sc-1923.