Clark v. Gordon

14 S.E. 255, 35 W. Va. 735, 1891 W. Va. LEXIS 103
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 255 (Clark v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Gordon, 14 S.E. 255, 35 W. Va. 735, 1891 W. Va. LEXIS 103 (W. Va. 1891).

Opinion

English, Judge :

This was a suit in equity brought in the Circuit Court of McDowell county on the 20th day of June, 1789, by E. W. Clark, S. F. Tyler, and TI. M. Bell, trustees of the Flat Top Coal Land Association, lately known as the Flap Top Land Trust, plaintiffs, against Charles H. Gordon, Joshua Day, Hiram Christian, M. L. Murphy, and William Harmon defendants, for the purpose of enforcing the specific performance of an agreement for the sale of a tract of land said to contain one hundred acres.

The plaintiffs in their bill allege that on the lltli day of November, 1887, Charles II. Gordon and Joshua Day sold them a tract of land containing one hundred acres, more or less, lying on the left prong of Mill creek of Tug river, in McDowell county, W. Va., for which plaintiffs were to pay to the said Gordon the sum of three dollars per acre, and were to pay to the said Day the sum of one dollar and fifty cents per acre ; — -the purchase-money was to be paid one half cash, and the residue in nine months, when a survey of the tract had been made; that it was also provided in the contract of said sale that the plaintiffs were to have thirty days’ option to determine whether or not they would accept the terms of the said purchase; — that on the 4th day of December, 1887, within the said thirty days, the [738]*738plaintiffs gave due notice to tlie said Gordon and Day that they bad elected to purchase on the tenns aforesaid; that the said contract was in writing, and the said notice was indorsed thereon, and the service thereof was acknowledged by said Gordon and Day in writing upon said contract, which contract, with the indorsements aforesaid indorsed thereon, were exhibited with the plaintiff’s bill ;• — that since the said sale the name of the said Klat Top Coal Land Association has been changed to the Flat Top Land Trust;— that the said Gordon, since the sale to plaintiffs, has made some sort of sale of the said one hundred acres of land to Hiram Christian, and that the said Hiram Christian has pretended to sell'the same to the defendant William Harmon, and obtained a conveyance of same by said Gordon to said Harmon, and said Harmon has pretended to sell and convey the said land to the defendant M. L. Murphy, who is the son-in-law of said Hiram Christian, and the said Gordon has failed and refused to comply with the tenns of his contract aforesaid with plaintiffs.

The plaintiff's also allege and charge that the defendant Gordon made the said pretended sale to said defendant Christian for the purpose of defrauding plaintiffs, and avoiding the effect of the contract aforesaid with the plaintiffs They also aver and charge that the pretended sale and conveyance from Christian and Gordon to Harmon and from said Harmon to said Murphy were made for the purpose of avoiding plaintiff’s said contract; and the sale pretended to be made as aforesaid to said Harmon was made by said Christian, ór by said Gordon, or both acting in conjunction with each other; — that the defendants Christian, Harmon and Murphy all had notice of the existence of said contract of the plaintiff's with said Gordon, and knew that said land had been sold to the plaintiff's prior to their pretended purchase, and they charge that the whole transaction between said Gordon, Christian, and Harmon and Murphy is a fraud upon their rights, and is void; — that the said contract has never been performed with them by said Gordon and Day; — -that plaintiffs were ready and willing to perform their part of said contract, and that they are entitled to have a specific performance of the same; and they [739]*739pray that said pretended sales and conveyances to said Christian and Harmon and Murphy may be set aside, and that the said contract between'plaintiffs and the said Gordon and Day be decreed to he speeiiieally performed, and, if necessary, a commissioner he appointed for the purpose, with directions to convey the legal title of said lands to the plaintiffs.

The defendants ITiram Christian, M. L. Murphy, and Charles H. Gordon demurred to the plaintiffs’ bill, and as I see no good reason why said demurrer should have been sustained, and it is not relied on by counsel in their argument, I conclude that it was only filed out of abundant caution.

The said Hiram Christian answered said bill, saying that he purchased the tract of laud in the bill described, and paid the purchase-money therefor, and then sold the same to his. co-defendant M. L. Murphy for a valuable consideration, and, instead of taking the deed directly to himself, had the same made to his co-defendant M. L. Murphy. He admits that one J. A. ’Welch, as the agent of the plaintiffs, had an optional or unilateral contract for said land before his purchase thereof, but at the same time he knew that the said plaintiffs had not only failed to comply with the said contract with his co-defendant Gordon by paying at the time fixed and provided for tlie cash payment provided for in and by the terms of said contract, but had abandoned said contract, and through the agent J. A. Welch had told and notified the said Gordon and defendant that they would not, on account of complications existing in the title of said Gordou,take the said land, and carry out'their option contract with the said Gordon; and that, relying on the statement of the said plaintiffs made by their said agent, Welch, and being induced thereby, purchased the said land of the said Gordon, or paid him the full amount of the purchase-money ; and, still relying on said statements and representations of the plaintiffs made as aforesaid, sold the said land to the said M. L. Murphy, received from him the purchase-money therefor, and had the legal title thereto conveyed to the said Murphy; — that he never would have purchased said land if he had not known that the plaintiffs had failed [740]*740to comply witli their said contract with the said Gordon, and had not known that the plaintiffs had i'efused to carry the same out, and had abandoned the same; — that he was led and induced by these facts to make the said purchase, and is advised that now, at this late day, and after the plaintiffs had wholly failed to comply with their said contract by doing what they agreed to do, and after their declaration that they would not take the said land, and had abandoned the said contract, and thereby induced the defendant to believe that their contract with Gordon was ended, they will not be allowed to have specific performance of the said contract, and take the laud away from the innocent vendees of defendant; — that to allow such, defendant is advised, would be to allow a gross fraud to be perpetrated on defendant and his vendee; — that plaintiffs stood by for nearly two years before bringing this suit without offering to comply with their contract., and now, after the large enhancement and advancement in the value of said tract of land, they come into a court of equity, and seek specific performance, and this, too, after their refusal and declared intention not to carry out said contract; that said tract is now worth twenty five dollars per acre; — that it was contracted to plaintiffs for the small and nominal sum of three dollars per acre, and defendant is advised that a court of equity, under the facts and circumstances of the case, will not enforce said contract, but will refuse to do so; and he prays that plaintiff’s bill may be dismissed.

The defendant M. L.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 255, 35 W. Va. 735, 1891 W. Va. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-gordon-wva-1891.