Burns v. Witter

108 P. 129, 56 Or. 368, 1910 Ore. LEXIS 178
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 108 P. 129 (Burns v. Witter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burns v. Witter, 108 P. 129, 56 Or. 368, 1910 Ore. LEXIS 178 (Or. 1910).

Opinion

[370]*370Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moore.

1. Though the demurrer challenges the entire complaint, the principal part assailed is the contract, a copy of which is set forth therein. An examination of the agreement will show that in attempting to describe the premises, no section, township, range, county, or state, is specified, nor is any town, village, or city designated as being the place where the contract was consummated.

In Bogard v. Barhan, 52 Or. 121, 125 (96 Pac 673, 674) the locality where the memorandum purported to have been executed was held to be the vicinity in which the land intended to be conveyed was situate. In deciding that case, Mr. Justice Eakin says:

“The contract is dated at. Woodburn, Oregon, and in the light of that fact, and that all the other property is referred to as at Woodburn, the designation of ‘his 5-acre residence property lying west of the Catholic Church,’ and ‘party of the second part is to occupy his residence property until September 30,’ clearly indicates that it is the property in which he was residing in that vicinity, and by extrinsic evidence its location and boundaries may be easily ascertained. At any rate, on the face of the agreement, it is sufficiently definite for identification.”

In Mead v. Parker, 115 Mass. 413, 414 (20 Am. Rep. 110), the court, referring to a similar memorandum, says:

“In the present case the writing bears daté at Boston; which might indicate that the property was in Boston. But that is an inference of fact, not conclusive.”

To the same effect is the case of Pelletreau v. Brennan, 113 App. Div. 806 (99 N. Y. Supp. 955, 956), where it is said:

“As the parties were dealing in the city of New York, the legal inference is that the contract refers to land - there.”

A failure to specify in the memorandum the place where it was executed ought not, and the omission from the [371]*371writing of the township, range, county, and state will not, render nugatory an instrument relating to real property if the description given can, without alteration, be applied to a particular tract, so that the court can say, from extrinsic evidence, that the minds of the parties met and agreed upon the identity of the distinct piece of land intended to be the subject-matter of their negotiations: 13 Cyc. 549; McCullough v. Olds, 108 Cal. 529, 532 (41 Pac. 420); Lloyd v. Bunce, 41 Iowa 660; Garden City Sand Co. v. Miller, 157 Ill. 225, 233 (41 N. E. 753).

2. If, on its face, the memorandum contain such a specification of real property that by the aid of parol testimony the description given can apply to only one particular tract of land, it is sufficient; but if it appear, from extrinsic evidence, that the delineation set forth can refer to more than one parcel, the ambiguity is patent and the instrument void for uncertainty: Brandon v. Leddy, 67 Cal. 43 (7 Pac. 33).

3. In construing a land contract, the terms of which are uncertain, it is the duty of a court to take into consideration all the incidents surrounding the consummation of the agreement, for which purpose parol testimony is admissible, not to vary the stipulations there expressed, but, as it were, to assume the. positions occupied by the respective parties when it appears that they were of one mind concerning a writing which purports to have expressed what was their serious contemplation. Devlin, Deeds, § 1012; Pomeroy, Contracts, § 90. As illustrating this rule, Mr. Justice Wells, in Mead v. Parker, 115 Mass. 413, 415 (20 Am. Rep. 110), says : “When all the circumstances of possession, ownership, situation of the parties, and of their relation to each other and to the property, as they were when the negotiations took place and the writing was made, are disclosed, if the meaning and application of the writing, read in the light of those circumstances, are certain and plain, the parties will be [372]*372bound by it as a sufficient written contract or memorandum of their agreement. That parol evidence is competent to furnish these means of interpreting and applying written agreements is settled by the uniform current of authorities.”

4. It will' be remembered that the complaint sets forth the situation of the defendants with reference to “my farm containing 40 acres” at the time the memorandum was executed, and alleges the incidents relating to' the premises particularly described in the pleading, so that it is reasonably to be inferred -that the specification given in the contract could not apply to any other piece of real property. These averments are sufficient to admit extrinsic evidence to_ substantiate the facts thus detailed. A contract to sell real property imports, in the absence of any stipulation respecting the matter, an agreement to convey a title to the premises in fee simple: Hughes v. Parker, 8 Mees. & W. 244, 247.

5. A contract which recites that it has been entered into with a designated person for the sale of land, creates an inference that he is the purchaser thereof.

6. The allegations of the complaint are sufficient to present for consideration the remaining question as to whether or not the memorandum subscribed by the defendants contains such a description of the land that a court can say from parol testimony to be introduced so as to apply the specification to a 'part of the earth’s surface, that the parties were negotiating for the respective purchase, and the sale and conveyance of a particular tract which can be identified. “A ‘farm,’ ” says a text-writer, “may be defined by parol evidence showing what lands, house, and buildings have been used and known as constituting the farm.” Jones, Eeal Property, § 345. This author, in the following section, observes: “Land described as ‘my residence,’ ‘my homestead,’ ‘my place,’ ‘my lot,’ may be identified by parol evidence if necessary.” Thus in Lick v. O’Donnell, 3 Cal. 59 (58 Am. [373]*373Dec. 383), it was held that a deed for “one-half of my lot,” accompanied by proof that the grantor owned at the time but one lot in the place, was not void for uncertainty in the description.

In Lente v. Clarke, Adm’x, 22 Fla. 515, 519, 520 (1 South. 149, 151), the following memorandum was held to be sufficient, to wit:

“Dec. 18, 1883. I agree to make good titles in fee to my forty near the Garrison lands in Hernando County, to Wm. K. Lente. Consideration, $75. Received. Thomas W. Clarke. Witness, M. P. O’Neal” — the court saying: “The rule is that the contract or memorandum must identify or point out a special tract of land as within the minds of the parties, and intended to be conveyed. It must so describe the land as it can be found, or located, or in other words, there must be such a description as can be applied to a particular piece of land as the subject of the contract. A detailed description is not necessary. Where the description shows that a particular tract as distinguished from other lands is meant, then parol evidence can be _resorted to to apply the description, or identify, or locate the land, though the description be somewhat general.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P. 129, 56 Or. 368, 1910 Ore. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-witter-or-1910.