Cherbonnier v. Cherbonnier

108 Mo. 252
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 108 Mo. 252 (Cherbonnier v. Cherbonnier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherbonnier v. Cherbonnier, 108 Mo. 252 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Brace, J.

This is a suit in equity instituted by the plaintiff, Edward G. Cherbonnier, against his father, Andrew Y. Cherbonnier, to compel the performance of a verbal contract alleged to have been made between his father and his father-in-law, George S. Case, whereby his father 1 agreed to convey to plaintiff a certain lot, fronting twenty-five feet on Finney avenue, in the city of St. Louis.

The material averments of the petition are, in substance, that, in the year 1880, the plaintiff having become engaged to be married to Annie C. Case, the daughter of the said George S. Case, the said Case and the defendant, Andrew Y. Cherbonnier, agreed verbally “each with the other, that said George S. Case would convey within a reasonable time after said marriage should take place, to his said daughter, real-estate residence property in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, of the value of $3,000, upon the express condition that defendant, Andrew Y. Cherbonnier, would convey to plaintiff within a like reasonable time after said marriage, real-estate residence property in the said city of St. Louis, of the value of $3,000; each agreeing and obligating himself to convey the said real estate as aforesaid, upon the consideration and express promise of the other to convey as aforesaid.”

That the plaintiff having been informed of said arrangement, afterwards, on the twenty-seventh of April, 1881, intermarried with the said Annie C. Case; that afterwards, and in pursuance and execution of said agreement, the defendant purchased the lot described in the petition, and paid therefor the sum of $1,250. [255]*255And at the same time the said Case purchased the lot next adjoining it on the east, for the purpose of complying with Ms part of said agreement, and immediately thereafter the defendant and the said Case commenced the erection of two houses upon said lots, in pursuance •and towards the performance of their said agreement.

That after the work of erecting said houses was 'entered upon as aforesaid it was ascertained that they, together with the lots, would cost over $3,000 each; and thereupon it was verbally agreed between the plaintiff and his wife and said George S. Case, that as soon as said house, then being constructed by said Case, should be completed and conveyed to plaintiff’s wife, under said agreement, as aforesaid, that plaintiff and wife would refund to said George S. Case such excess, that being the consideration and condition upon which said Case agreed to, and did, go on and complete the said house at a cost in excess of $3,000, agreed on as aforesaid. That said verbal agreement between plaintiff and said Case was communicated to defendant, Andrew Y. Cherbonnier, by said Case shortly after it was made, when said Case stated to defendant, A. Y. Cherbonnier, that, as he had made that arrangement as to his daughter, he supposed that he, A. Y. Cherbonnier, would do the same as to his son, the plaintiff.

That said houses were completed under said agreement and arrangements, about the first of September, 1881, at a cost of about $5,000 each. That, as soon as said houses were completed as aforesaid, said Case put his said daughter into possession of the one built by him as aforesaid, in pursuance with his said agreement with defendant, A. Y. Cherbonnier, and plaintiff and his wife aforesaid; and she has been in possession of said property as owner ever since. Afterwards, about May, 1882, in compliance with his said agreement with defendant, Andrew Y. Cherbonnier, and pursuant thereto, with the full knowledge and consent of said [256]*256defendant, by what he deemed a good and sufficient deed, said George S. Case conveyed to his said daughter the said house and lot purchased and provided by him for that purpose as aforesaid, in consideration and upon the express condition that defendant, Andrew Y. Cherbonnier, would convey to plaintiff the said lot purchased by him for that purpose, and in pursuance of the-said agreement so to do.

That plaintiff and his wife, after being put in possession of the house and lot conveyed to his wife by her-father, Ur. Case, made a satisfactory arrangement with-him for the payment to him of the excess of the cost of' said property over said sum of $3,000, and after-wards, in March, 1888, the said Case executed and caused to be executed other and sufficient deeds conveying the said real estate so purchased by bim for his daughter to her; and has fully performed his part of said agreement, and that plaintiff has often requested his father, the defendant, to perform his part of said agreement by conveying the property so purchased and built upon by him to the plaintiff, to do which, how-' ever, he has always refused and still doth refuse. That plaintiff has at all times been and is now ready and willing and offers to pay the said defendant whatever may. be the excess in the cost of said property over $3,000. That the said defendant, Andrew Y. Cherbonnier, on the tenth of February, 1887, conveyed said real estate to his codefendant Farrish, in trust for the sole and separate use of Sarah C. Cherbonnier, also a codefendant and the wife of the said Andrew Y.; that said deed was made without consideration, and was taken with notice of said agreement of the said Andrew Y. Cherbonnier with said Case.”

Wherefore plaintiff asks that the title to said real estate may be divested out of defendant and vested in plaintiff, and that an account may be taken of the cost of said house and lot, to the end that plaintiff may, pay the excess thereof over $3,000 to defendant, Andrew Y. [257]*257Cherbonnier, and that said defendant may be required to account for the rents and profits received by him and the other defendants since first of September, 1881, and for general relief.

The answer put in issue all the material allegations of the petition and set up some special pleas that it will not be necessary to notice. On the hearing the trial court found the issues for the defendants and dismissed the bill, and the plaintiff appeals.

It will be observed from the foregoing statement of the substance of the petition that the specific promise counted upon is that the defendant, within a reasonable time after the marriage of plaintiff and Miss Case, would convey to plaintiff “real-estate residence property in the said city of St. Louis of the value of $3,000,” in consideration of a like promise upon the part of Dr. Case to convey property of a like character and value to his daughter. It is further alleged in the petition that, relying upon these promises, the plaintiff and Miss Case were married ; but it is conceded in the argument that the marriage constituted no such part performance of the contract as would take the case out of the statute of frauds, and plaintiff relies solely upon the performance by Dr. Case of his part of the agreement for that purpose. It will be observed that the petition does not expressly charge that the defendant, Dr. Cherbonnier, promised to convey the particular real estate in question to his son, the plaintiff, but he seeks to set up and have specifically enforced against the said defendant a definite verbal contract to convey such real estate, of the value of about $6,000, upon payment of said $3,000; which it is not alleged he agreed to convey upon that condition, or at all; but upon the alleged promise of the defendant that he would convey to plaintiff some real-estate residence property, in the city of St. Louis, of the value of $3,000. t

It appears from the evidence that some time in the winter of 1881, after the engagement' and before the [258]

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Bluebook (online)
108 Mo. 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherbonnier-v-cherbonnier-mo-1891.