Buckhorn Coal & Lumber Co. v. Lewis

23 S.W.2d 596, 232 Ky. 415, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 17, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 596 (Buckhorn Coal & Lumber Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckhorn Coal & Lumber Co. v. Lewis, 23 S.W.2d 596, 232 Ky. 415, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 16 (Ky. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Tinsley

Reversing.

On April 18,1917, the appellee and Ms wife executed and delivered to C. B. Gross a writing whereby they bargained and sold and convenanted to convey to him, “by good and sufficient deed of general warranty of title and free from all incumbrances or clouds,” a described tract of land containing 1,100 acres more or less, situate on the waters of Wolfe creek of Cutshin in Leslie county, Ky., for the consideration of $11 per acre, of which the sum of $1,000 was paid in cash; the balance to be paid in two equal installments, the first as soon as the title could be examined, survey made, and deed executed, and the other to be made in one or two months from the date of the deed. It was further provided that Gross should have six months from the date of the contract to elect whether he would purchase the land upon the terms provided, and if within that time he should give Lewis notice of his intention to purchase, the writing should then become a binding contract of sale and purchase upon the parties. It was further provided that if Gross, within the six months, gave the notice of his intention to purchase, he should have a reasonable time from the date of notification in which to make examination of title and survey the land. Shortly after execution of the contract, Gross assigned it to appellant, and within the six months therein provided for, appellant gave notice of its intention to purchase the land as provided in the contract. Between the giving of that notice and October 16, 1918, an examination of the title disclosed that 402 acres of the land was embraced within a patent for 40,400 acres dated November 4, 1873, granted to C. O. Lockard, which was superior to any patent held by appellee on that 402 acres. Thereupon the appellant took from the owners of that patent a deed in wMch *418 appellee and his wife joined, and paid for that much of the land. Some time thereafter, but just when is not shown, appellee tendered to appellant a deed for the remainder of the land and demanded payment of the balance of purchase money, but appellant declined to accept the deed. On July 24, 1925, appellee instituted this suit against appellant for specific performance of the contract, alleging that the remainder of the land contained 708 acres, and there was due him therefor the sum of $5,488. Appellant resisted specific performance on the ground that appellee’s title was defective, and,in its answer and counterclaim set up the defects relied on, sought a rescission of the contract, and a judgment against appellee for the amount claimed to have-bien paid to him, alleging further that it had paid to him on the 708 acres the sum of $3,149.18, for which it sought judgment -with interest from October 21, 1925. In his reply appellee admitted that as to a portion of the 708 acres his title was purely possessory, and as to another portion of it, admitted that the title thereto had been conveyed to him and his first wife (then dead) jointly, and that upon her death her interest descended to her eight children, but alleged that he had, since making the contract, acquired the interest of all these children except the interest of two grandchildren who were then infants, and which interest was but a small fraction of the entire boundary, and as to this interest he was willing for appellant to retain that proportion of the purchase money until he had acquired the title thereto or would execute to appellant a bond to acquire and convey that undivided interest. A demurrer to this reply was overruled. On final hearing the court adjudged specific performance by appellant; found that the appellee had good title to the land except as to an undivided interest of one-sixth of one-eighth of one-half of a tract of approximately 160 acres embraced in the boundary as to which it was adjudged appellant might withhold that proportion of the purchase money until appellee procured and conveyed title to that undivided interest to appellant; further found that the area of the entire tract embraced in the contract was 1,110 acres, from which should be deducted 402 acres previously conveyed and 162 acres belonging to Kentucky River Coal Corporation; found the balance of purchase money to be $4,638.82, for which appellee was awarded judgment with interest from July 16, 1924, the *419 date of the deed tendered appellant. Complaining of this judgment the defendant has appealed.

The first ground relied on for reversal of the judgment is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to appellee’s reply. It is insisted that since appellee admitted he did not, at the time of filing his reply, have title to the interest of two of his grandchildren, he did not have such title as he had obligated himself to convey, and could not therefore perform his contract. This contention, however, is without merit. In Logan v. Bull, 78 Ky. 607, this precise contention was made, and in denying it the court said: “The general doctrine is, that a contract incapable of being enforced against one party, that party is equally incapable of enforcing it against the other. Fry on Specific Performance, p. 198. It has often been held under this rule, that a party at the time he makes his contract, although not invested with such a title as he undertakes to convey, may compel a specific execution where time is not of the essence of the contract. Cases may be found, and language used by some of the elementary writers on the subject, conducing to the conclusion that, in the absence of such a title in the party at the time of making the contract as he contracts to convey, the vendee may rescind, and a specific execution will be denied; but the equitable rule as now settled by nearly all the authorities on the subject is, that when the contract is required to be performed, if the party is able to convey, and tenders his deed, the contract will be enforced, although his title was defective at the date of the contract; and if not able to convey at the time of filing a bill for rescission, if time is not of the essence of the contract, the chancellor will permit the vendor, if he can do so within a reasonable time, to supply the defects in his title, so as to comply with his contract.'” See also Smith v. Cansler, 83 Ky. 367; Posey et al. v. Kimsey, 146 Ky. 205, 142 S. W. 703; Maynard v. Lowe, 231 Ky. 258, 21. S. W. (2d) 285.

The next ground of complaint, and one of the defects in title relied on by appellant in its answer and counterclaim, is that on January 11,1915, appellee executed and delivered to William Lewis, E. G. Eversole, and J. H. Lewis, a writing by which he sold and conveyed to them all the coals, oil, gas, and other minerals, including rights incident to the mining and removal thereof, together with such of the standing timber 14 inches and under as *420 was necessary for raining purposes, on a tract of land containing 2,000 acres situated on Wolf, Coone, and Cutshin creeks, in Leslie county, Ky., described as -follows: “Beginning on the lower end of said farm next to the lands of Sammuel Maggard; thence running up Wolf creek on both sides of stream so as to include the lands on both sides of said creek owned by Lewis, and continuing up said stream a sufficient distance so as that when all the lands owned on both sides of said stream by him, including that on the waters of Coon and Cutshin creeks, and below said point, shall amount to 2,000 acres. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 596, 232 Ky. 415, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckhorn-coal-lumber-co-v-lewis-kyctapphigh-1930.