Brown v. Evarts

258 A.2d 471, 128 Vt. 1, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 194
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 3, 1969
Docket14-68
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 A.2d 471 (Brown v. Evarts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Evarts, 258 A.2d 471, 128 Vt. 1, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 194 (Vt. 1969).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The plaintiff, Edward B. Brown, seeks by his action in equity in the Essex County Court of Chancery to compel specific performance on the part of the defendant, Alexander L. Evarts, to buy certain premises now owned by the plaintiff on the lake shore of Little Averill Pond in Essex County. Although this action in equity was brought in the Essex County Court of Chancery it was heard by agreement of the parties by the chancéllor at" the Windsor County Court House in Woodstock, Vt., on Oct. 2, 1967.

All the testimony given, .before, the Court of Chancery was by the plaintiff and his one witness, then .Miss Alice DeCesaris, and all exhibits offered were also those introduced by the plaintiff. Defendant did not take -the stand or offer any evidence in support of his position in the matter.

The judgment of the chancellor was for the defendant, which judgment also had the effect of removing the injunction imposed by the Windsor County Court on the defendant from proceeding with his action in that court for a return of the money he had paid to the plaintiff as a down payment on the purchase price, of the property. ■

The findings made by the chancellor below, omitting those to which exceptions were taken, disclose the following situation. The’plaintiff, owner of a large tract of lake frontage on Little Averill Pond, made an oral agreement with the defendant to sell the defendant a lot comprising 300 ft. of said frontage at an agreed purchase price of $15,000.00, with an agreed down payment from defendant to plaintiff of $5,000.00, in July, 1964. This amount was paid by the defendant to the plaintiff in two checks, one for $500.00, bearing the notation “partial payment for 300' of shoreline property on Little Averill Pond”, and a later check for $4500.00, both paid before August 1, 1964.

Although plaintiff testified that he was not able to find a letter written by the defendant to the plaintiff between July 8 and August 1, 1964, both the plaintiff and a Miss DeCesaris, who were the only witnesses in the case; testified that the defendant notified the plaintiff that he wished his attorney, Henry Black, to draw up the deed and requested *3 the plaintiff to send his original deed, which was from the Brown Company, a Maine corporation, as well as a description of the area to be conveyed to Attorney Black. This was done by the plaintiff, who included in his letter to Attorney Black a rough drawing of the property to be sold, as well as certain restrictions relative to the disposal of sewage and commercial use of the property which plaintiff desired to have included in the deed. The letter was mailed on July 29, 1964. During August, 1964, the plaintiff and the defendant met on the property and marked out the three hundred foot frontage to be conveyed to the defendant with cairns of stones. Later in the same month, the defendant and his family camped out on the property.

On October 2, 1964, Attorney Black wrote to the plaintiff, which letter, in substance, stated that he had received insufficient information to prepare a deed, that his client was unwilling to accept at least some of the proposed restrictions and that the defendant “would be perfectly willing to abandon the transaction if you wish to return his deposit of $5,000.00.”

We now come to a series of findings made by the chancellor, most of which were excepted to by the plaintiff, and which are the crux of the matter before us.

The chancellor first found that upon the receipt of the letter from Mr. Black, the plaintiff, in the presence of Miss DeCesaris and within her hearing, telephoned Mr. Evarts, the defendant, but in the next finding the chancellor states, that he is unable to find that the plaintiff inquired of the defendant as to his intentions or objections to the purchase. (F. 32 and F. 33)

In F. 34, however, the chancellor finds: “In the presence of Miss DeCesaris, the plaintiff stated to the defendant over the telephone that if there were any restrictions or conditions . . . which were not acceptable to the defendant, he, the plaintiff, was willing to delete them from the agreement.”

In the next finding, (F. 35), the chancellor, using that phrase so dear to finders of fact, stated that he was “unable to find” that in response to plaintiff’s telephone statement that the defendant replied in substance that he would not buy the property or accept the deed “under any circumstances.”

*4 It was the undisputed evidence of the plaintiff and his witness that this was the reply of Mr. Evarts after the plaintiff had agreed to withdraw all restrictions. In fact, no evidence of any kind was offered by the defendant in the cause below, who rested immediately after the close of plaintiff’s evidence.

The chancellor was confronted on this matter of the telephone conversation with evidence that was undisputed. Plaintiff and his witness not only testified as to the waiving of any conditions that he previously might have sought in the deed by the plaintiff, but that in reply the defendant would not accept a deed to the property under any circumstances. The chancellor found that the evidence of the plaintiff was believable relative to that part of the conversation in which plaintiff waived his proposed restrictions. But he did not find that the evidence of the plaintiff relative to the reply of the defendant that no deed would be accepted “under any circumstances” believable. Upon this critical issue the chancellor equivocated by stating “he was unable to find.”

“The general rule is that where a credible witness testifies directly and positively to a fact and is not contradicted and there is no circumstance shown from which an inference against the fact testified to can be drawn, that fact may be taken as established.” Granite Creamery v. Cheese Company, 115 Vt. 408, 413, 63 A.2d 193.

Defendant cites us Crossman v. Crossman, 124 Vt. 127, 197 A.2d 818, an uncontested divorce case, in which it is stated that “in an uncontested action a trial court is not bound to believe uncontradicted testimony, for the trier has a broad latitude in determining which evidence is worthy of belief and its finding should be read accordingly.”

But the present case was not uncontested. In fact, the companion action brought by the defendant against the plaintiff in the Windsor County Court of Chancery for the return of his down payment proves quite the contrary. Further, in the Crossman case the court used the words “the court is unable to find from the believable evidence.” No such words are used in the case before us.

*5 In effect, the chancellor found believable the evidence of the plaintiff and his witness as to what was said by them in the telephone conversation with the defendant, but refused to find that the testimony of the same witnesses was credible on the statements made by the defendant during the same conversation. Their testimony was direct and positive and it was not contradicted during their cross-examination, or other testimony, facts or circumstances.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gabler v. Fedoruk
756 N.W.2d 725 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2008)
Currier v. Letourneau
373 A.2d 521 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 A.2d 471, 128 Vt. 1, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-evarts-vt-1969.