Case v. Harrison

6 So. 2d 582, 192 Miss. 531, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 42
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1942
DocketNo. 34873.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 6 So. 2d 582 (Case v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case v. Harrison, 6 So. 2d 582, 192 Miss. 531, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 42 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit is brought by a bill of complaint in chancery which contains grounds for equitable relief if shown to be true, and there is a cross-bill seeking affirmative relief in favor of the appellant on a $1,000 note for a personal loan made by him to the appellee and secured by certain collateral which was asked to be ordered sold and applied to the payment of the note, interest and attorney’s fee, amounting to the total sum of $1,188.65 as found by the chancellor, but which indebtedness was decreed in favor of the appellant only as a credit on a 5% commission, amounting to the sum of $5,200, allowed to the appellee as a real estate broker on the sale of a plantation belonging to the appellant which was purchased in small units in December 27, 1940', by the Farm Security Administration, on behalf of certain tenant farmers selected and approved *536 by a County Committee under the supervision of such governmental agency, pursuant to an appraisal of the land theretofore made by its land appraiser for that purpose.

The appellee as a real estate broker had been authorized to sell the plantation at a price of $65' per acre, and in which event he was to receive the 5% commission provided for under a unilateral contract prepared by him in the form of a printed letter signed and delivered at his office at Moorhead by the appellant on October 2,1939, the pertinent part of which reads as follows: “I hereby authorize you to offer for sale the property hereinafter described, and I agree to sell to any prospective purchaser you may furnish in accordance with the price and terms hereinafter set out, and allow you a commission as mentioned below in event you furnish a'purchaser in accordance herewith (which then describes the land as being approximately 1700 acres, located near Blaine in Sunflower County, and gives the amount in cultivation, etc.). Price acre $65' cash . . . Commission you allowed for making this sale 5%. . . . I agree to furnish an abstract of title showing a good and merchantable title. (Then follows a printed township plat on which the governmental subdivisions of the land are checked.) This option to expire January 1, 1941. Tours truly E. C. Case.”

The plantation consisted of 1676.82 acres and the price agreed to be paid therefor was the sum of $104,000, but this consideration was reduced to the sum of $100,600 when the deeds were executed, due to the fact that the title of one of the units contracted for, consisting of 54 acres and valued at $3,400', had failed, and with the result that the area of the land actually conveyed was 1622.82 acres. The price realized was therefore slightly less than $62 per acre, from which the appellant as grantor was required to pay all expenses of sale amounting to between $2,000 and $3,000 for title insurance, abstracts, attorney’s fee, etc., whereas if the title to this 54 acre unit had not *537 failed, the grantor would have realized, the said price of $104,000 first agreed upon for the entire tract of 1676.82 acres, a sum slightly in excess of $62 per acre.

The bill alleges that the defendant Case entered into a contract with the complainant Harrison on or about the 2d day of October, 1939, to sell this plantation, and agreed to pay him the 5% commission for making such sale to whatever purchaser he found for said land, but that complainant “has mislaid said agreement and has searched diligently for same and he is unable to locate it.” However, it appears that the 'complainant later found the foregoing letter and introduced it at the trial as being the contract referred to in his bill of complaint and therein sued on.

The proof discloses that during the summer of 1939, one H. E. Chandler, a customer of the Farm Security Administration Program in Sunflower County, who had formerly lived on the Case plantation in question, learned that the said governmental agency desired to purchase some farm land to be sold to tenant farmers, and desiring to buy a farm for himself on this property, asked Harry Flowers, the county supervisor thereof in Sunflower County, to see the appellant and ascertain if this plantation was for sale. Thereafter, in August or September of that year, Flowers looked over the plantation in company with the appellant and found that he was willing to sell it and wanted a price of $65 per acre, but that otherwise he would sell for a price of $60 per acre net to him. Following this casual inspection of the property and discussion of the matter with the appellant, and prior to October 2, 1939, Flowers, in company with Barry Wood, the Land Appraiser of the said Farm Security Administration, and the appellant again drove over the land, when an unofficial appraisal was made by the said land appraiser to ascertain whether or not this governmental agency would be interested in purchasing it at a price for which the owner was willing to sell; and before any further steps were taken in that behalf, Flowers met the appellee on the *538 streets of Moorhead one Saturday afternoon and in thé course of the conversation which ensued expressed his. interest in the appellant’s plantation, and with the result that the appellee invited the appellant to his office the following Monday afternoon and then telephoned Flowers to come, stating to the appellant that he though he had a buyer for his plantation, and then procured from him the letter hereinbefore quoted from as his authority to sell the same. After the arrival of Flowers, it was finally agreed at the conference among the three of them that Flowers would take a ninety day option on the land for the benéfit of the Farm Security Administration at $65 per acre, but desired that it be executed on the Government form, and they all then agreed this should be done on the next day by the appellant at the office of Flowers at Indianola. Such an option was accordingly executed, giving said Administration the exclusive right to' purchase the land during that period for the price above stated. .

The evidence is in conflict as to whéthér the appellee’s authority to sell the land was to be limited to a period of ninety days, but the chancellor found that such authority was to extend to January 1, 1941, the date shown by the foregoing letter, and' rejected the contention that the true date had been erased and another substituted after the writing was delivered. We must therefore assume that the appellee was authorized to find a purchaser on the terms specified at any time prior to January 1, 1941, but it was conclusively shown that he accepted this written authorization with full knowledge and approved of the agreement that the appellant should give' Flowers on the next day an exclusive option for the ninety day period, and the record is silent as to whether appellee ever made any effort either before or after the expiration of the ninety days to sell the land to any purchaser other than the Farm Security Administration at any' price prior to the sale thereof made December 27, 1940', and it is not contended that he furnished a purchaser at any time prior *539 to the expiration of his contract on January 1, 1941, who was ready, willing and able to purchase the land on the terms specified under his authority to sell.

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Bluebook (online)
6 So. 2d 582, 192 Miss. 531, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-v-harrison-miss-1942.