Corbin v. Holmes

154 F. 593, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4563
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 13, 1907
DocketNos. 2,363, 2,417
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 F. 593 (Corbin v. Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corbin v. Holmes, 154 F. 593, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4563 (8th Cir. 1907).

Opinions

HOOK, Circuit Judge.

Holmes, the successor in interest of one Bowman, obtained a decree against the executors of the will of Austin Corbin, deceased, for $21,718.49, being, according to the theory of the trial court, half of the profits realized in the purchase and sale of certain lands. Both parties appealed.

The controversy arose in the working out of a contract made in 1877 between Corbin and Bowman. Corbin, having purchased from one Dr. Upham about 13,500 acres of wild land in Minnesota for the sum of $26,076.60, made the following proposition to Bowman by a letter dated May 12, 1877:

[595]*595“Now if you want to do this, you can. I will figure up exactly the eout as allowed the Doctor, put them in to you on Joint account to run 10 years at 10% annual interest; I to have my money out first, and when it comes out .you to have half the profits. X want this limited to 10 years, toocause I don't want it running indefinitely in case it don’t work. 1£ it don’t operate at all at the end of five years, 1 shall expect you to release me from the trade, hoean.se it is not any object for you to he fiddling with a thing that don’t pay, nor for me to he tied up and not do either of ns any good. You will appreciate that, I guess, lint the contract shall run for ten years. Then, if at the expiration of ten years it cannot he wound up. and I get my money out, I will agree that you will have 5% allowed on all sales that have been made, so that you will, in any event, not he doing this absolutely for nothing.”

On May 21, 1877, Bowman, referring to the proposition oí Corbin, wrote as follows to a representative of the latter; ,

“Dear Sir — I have your favor of the 16th informing me that Mr. Corbin had that morning left. 1 suppose of course, you mean that he has gone to Kurope. He (Corbin) wrote lhat if I want to agree to a 10% joint account with him by and under the terms of which he is to pay all the taxes and pay for the land and I am to sell the lands and turn over all the proceeds to him until all his money invested with 10% interest is paid, etc., that at the end of 10 years if he shall not have received all his money and interest out of the sales, the joint account shall be wound up and I shall have 5% for all the lands I have sold, etc., etc., as will more fully appear hy reference to the copy of the letter on your books, and he asked me for a reply, so I say that I will undertake to live the 10 years and sell during that lime all of the lands I can according to the proposition he makes me.”

Tt was by these two letters that the contract was formed. The cost of the lands to Corbin was found by the trial court to be as above noted, and, though the finding is assailed by the complainant Holmes in his cross-appeal, it is well sustained by the facts. Shortly after the contract was made 560 acres of the land were sold to the complainant’s wife, and eliminated from the account. The transaction worked a reduction of the principal of Corbin’s investment to the sum of $24,993.93. The principal question in the case is presented by the contention of Cor-bin’s executors that a wrong construction was put upon the contract. Upon the theory that time was not of the essence of the contract, the complainant was given a decree for half of the profits of the venture, although Corbin had not at the expiration of the 10 years been reimbursed his investment with interest. When the end of the 10-year period. May 21, 1887, came around, this was the condition; There remained unsold 6,445 acrés of land. After crediting Corbin with the original cost of the lands and interest at 10 per cent, and with his disbursements for taxes and expenses for foreclosures, etc., with interest at 7 per cent., there still remained due to him $16',079.70, or about two-thirds of his original investment. At the same time there were on hand unpaid purchase-money notes amounting, with accrued interest, to $11,599.55. Upon the assumption that these notes should be charged to Corbin as cash, there nevertheless remained a balance at the end of the 10-vear period of $4,480.25. In reaching this balance the trial court allowed Corbin but 7 per cent, interest upon his disbursements for taxes and expenses, whereas, as will be noted hereafter, we are of the opinion that he was entitled to 10 per cent.; and upon this basis the net deficit at the end of the 10-year period was $6,035.93, after charging Corbin with more than $11,000 of uncollected notes and mortgages [596]*596with accrued interest. This deficit was nearly one-fourth of his original investment. The tidal court said:

“My direction of this accounting is based upon my holding that time was not of the essence of this contract, in such strictness that, if it was nearly but not strictly carried out within the 10 years, the complainant should forfeit absolutely all advantage substantially earned in carrying' it out.”

It seems quite' probable that the substantial amount of the deficit and the substantial proportion it bore to the original investment, even after charging Corbin with the uncollected purchase-money notes, was not clearly perceived by the trial court when it adopted the theory upon which the decree proceeded.

Does the language of the contract permit of the construction that was given to it ? In the consideration of this question it is well to bear in mind the settled rule that although time is not ordinarily of the essence of a contract for the sale of real property, yet it 'may appear to be so either by express stipulation to that effect or by clear implication from the terms employed; that courts have no right to make’a contract for the parties, or to insert stipulations which it is clear they did not intend; that it is only when the question is at large, and is not foreclosed by the terms of the contract or the nature of the property which is the subject of it, that the courts will apply equitable considerations to the construction, so that justice may be done to the defaulting party without injury to the clear rights of the other. But the primary question always is, is it clear what the parties really intended by the language which they themselves employed? If it is, it is then the duty of a court to respect their intention. In the construction of the contract the trial court confined itself to the terms of Corbin's proposition. But the terms of Bowman's acceptance should not be regarded as mere subsequent declarations, useful as an aid to construction of a contract the import of which is doubtful. On the contrary, Bowman’s acceptance was an integral part of the very contract that was entered into. Four times did Corbin, the owner of the lands, mention a 10-year period in bis proposition. Each time he referred to the period within which he should get his money out. And Bowman said in accepting the proposition “that at the end of ten years if he (Corbin) shall not have received all his money and interest out of the sales the joint account shall be wound up and I shall have 5(⅞ for all the lands I have sold." Note that Bowman said “all his money,” not part of it. Bowman further said that he would undertake to live the 10 years and sell all of the lands he could during that time. And note that this undertaking was limited to 10 years, and did not extend an indefinite time thereafter.

One of the strongest arguments in favor of the construction asked by Corbin is the existence of the provision for the payment of the 5 per cent, commission on the sales if he had not succeeded in getting all of his money back in 10 years.

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Bluebook (online)
154 F. 593, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbin-v-holmes-ca8-1907.