Chapman v. Lott

110 So. 793, 144 Miss. 841, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 374
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1927
DocketNo. 26060.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 110 So. 793 (Chapman v. Lott) 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
Chapman v. Lott, 110 So. 793, 144 Miss. 841, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 374 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

*847 Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. .

Appellant filed his bill in the chancery court of Hancock county against appellees, Andrew Lott and his wife, Elizabeth Lott, for the .specific performace of. a contract, by the terms of which it was alleged that appellees agreed to convey to appellant two hundred eigvhty-two acres .of land in Hancock county, in consideration of twenty dollars per acre to be paid by appellant to the appellees. There was a trial on bill, answer and. proof, and a decree for appellees dismissing appellant’s bill. From that decree appellant prosecutes this, appeal. . .

The contract which the bill sought to have specifically performed was in this writing, in this language:,

“Kiln, Miss.

“This is to certify that I have this day,given W. W. Chapman, of Bay St. Louis, .an option on. two, hundred eighty-two acres of ground known as the .old Nelson place and now owned by me, a.t a cash amount agreed upon and paid to me... Purchase price to be twenty .dollars per acre. ..... ., -. . , .. . ■

‘ ‘ [ Signed] ‘ ‘ Andrew Lott. ’ ’

*848 The chancellor, in a written opinion, found the law and the facts of the case. This opinion is a part of the record of the cause on appeal. "We think the chancellor’s finding of facts was justified by the evidence, and we also agree with him as to the law of the case. His opinion so clearly states the facts of the case and the law applicable thereto that we adopt it as the opinion of this court. It follows:

“About fourteen years ago the defendant, Andrew Lott, owned a tract of land now sometimes called the Nelson place and upon which land he and his wife had long lived as their homestead. Owing no one, and having a right to do so, he conveyed this land to his wife, Elizabeth, the deed being promptly recorded. This land, together with forty acres, subsequently acquired by Mr. Lott lies in a body and comprises two hundred eighty-two acres. The relationship of the husband and wife being and having been always one of complete trust one in the other, Mr. Lott apparently continued to look after the land and manage it very much as his own, although there does not appear in the evidence any real or specific authority to him from his wife so to do.

“On or about April 13, 1925, Mr. Lott, without the then knowledge of his wife, signed and delivered unto the complainant Chapman, a paper termed an option by which Mr. Lott, styling himself as the owner, agreed to convey this Nelson tract, upon a time not stated, to the complainant for a total purchase price of twenty dollars per acre. No consideration was paid by the complainant for this so-called option, nor did the complainant thereby bind himself to do anything, it being explained by complainant in his testimony that it was not his intention to pay anything or bind himself to do anything until he had made further investigation. The complainant investigated and believed that he had discovered from the public records that the entire tract belonged not to Mr. Lott, but to Mrs. Elizabeth Lott; but having made financial arrangements and desiring to purchase the land, *849 he returned to Mr. Lott and there tendered not a payment to Mr. Lott under the paper which Mr. Lott had given complainant, in which paper as already mentioned, Mr. Lott had styled himself as the owner of the lands, but a payment by way of a check payable to Mrs. Elizabeth Lott, and bearing the provision on its face as follows : “To bind sale of two hundred eighty-two acres of land on Jordan River in the name of Elizabeth Lott. This check is a part payment on same at twenty dollars per acre.” Mr. Lott took the check to his wife, but she promptly refused it and repudiated the whole transaction as unauthorized and as being contrary to her will in the premises.

“Upon the above statement of the salient facts, so far as concerns Mrs. Lott, it is apparent that Mrs. Lott cannot be compelled to specifically perform an agreement which she never made, never authorized to be made and which she promptly declined to ratify. Complainant, sensing this, has sought to hold to the land as against her upon two theories: First, that the land in reality belonged to Mr. Lott, and that the wife, Elizabeth, held the nominal legal title merely as a trustee for he'r husband, the allegation being that the conveyance to her by her husband, had been originally in fraud. The proof fails to support this theory — on the -contrary it is overthrown by the proof. Second, that the deed from Mr. Lott to Elizabeth was never delivered. It is enough on this point, and so far as this case is concerned, that Mr. Lott deliberately signed and acknowledged the deed to his wife and delivered it for record among the public records of the county. The formal ceremonial of a manual delivery from the grantor to the grantee is not a thingso sacroscanct that no other overt act evidencing .a completed intention to convey may be accepted in lieu of the actual delivery inte the very grasp of the vendee. Certainly Mr. Lott, -after the delivery by him of this deed for recordation could not say he had not by actual overt act, open to the world, evidenced -his delivery in an accept *850 able manner, and no one claiming- through him subsequently would have a higher right than he in that respect. It is not probable in .the average home of this country that the husband and wife keep their papers separate one from each other, and the deposit of the deed in the home of the Lotts in the manner in which it was deposited, was perhaps not different from that of thousands of other deeds between husband and wife. It seems to me that this is an occasion typical for the application of the maxim that substance rather than form shall be regarded and shall .eontrol.

“But complainant says, in any event, he should have a decree for the forty acres that Mr. Lott actually owned.- .There are. two difficulties which bar the way to this relief. First, the complainant did not accept the so-called option or offer made,by Mr. Lott as it was made; he attempted to accept something else, namely, he attempted to erect and accept a new or different trade, one with Mrs. Lott, which failed for two good reasons, first, Mrs. Lott had made no offer on her part,-and second, she refused to accept the proposed trade on the other part. It is familiar learning that an, acceptance of an .offer must be in the identical terms of the offer — not of something else, or with new or different elements interposed. Complainant did not accept in its identical terms the offer made by Mr. Lott, but he attempted to build a new trade upon the offer made by Mr. Lott, this new trade to be with Mrs. Lott. The offer made by Mr. Lott was1 not, attempted to 'be accepted .as the end of a binding contract; that was not the end to which the complainant was working — it- was merely a- means attempted to be used as a conduit to a trade with Mrs. Lott. Complainant seeks to get around-this difficulty by showing that the two -hundred fifty, dollar check payable to Mrs. Lott was afterwards taken by Mr; Lott to the bank, and that by .that-means, although through an. error in the bank, the money was placed.to .the .credit of Mr. Lott.

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 793, 144 Miss. 841, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-lott-miss-1927.