Cornett v. Kentucky River Coal Co.

195 S.W. 149, 175 Ky. 718, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 405
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 22, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 149 (Cornett v. Kentucky River Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornett v. Kentucky River Coal Co., 195 S.W. 149, 175 Ky. 718, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 405 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

On March. 27,1905, appellants, W. W. Cornett and M. J. Cornett, his wife, executed and delivered to appellee, Kentucky Kiver Coal Company, a contract for the sale of a tract of land on Clover Fork of Big Leatherwood Creek of the north fork of the Kentucky Kiver, in Perry county, and containing “about 560 acres from estimation.” This contract was recorded in the office of the clerk of the Perry county court on July 18, 1905. The contract contained a provision that appellee was to pay appellants for the land $6.50 per acre, $25.00 of which was paid when the contract was executed, and the balance was to be paid within twelve months from that date, “when the amount thereof is ascertained as hereinafter stated. ’ ’ The stipulation as to how and when the balance of the contract price was to be paid is as follows:

“Before payment of said deferred consideration cah be demanded by the grantor as a matter of strict right, [720]*720the number of acres in said boundary is to be determined by actual survey made by and under the direction of a competent civil engineer at the expense of grantee, and grantor shall furnish a complete abstract showing title in him and thereupon convey to grantee by deed containing covenants of general warranty, etc.”

Seeking to enforce a specific performance of this contract, appellee filed this action against appellants on the 18th day of October, 1910, alleging in the petition, after setting up the contract, that it had caused to be made by a competent surveyor a survey of the land described in the contract and ascertained thereby the actual number of acres to be-acres; that appellant, W. W. Cornett, accompanied the surveyor over and around the marked boundary lines, but, for the purpose of avoiding the contract, objected to the number of acres ascertained, and claimed that the survey was incorrect; that appellee then sent other surveyors upon the land and had it resurveyed, obtaining the same results as before, and that appellants still refused and failed to convey the land to appellee, and have, at all times, refused to furnish appellee with the evidences of their title, or an abstract thereof, and had evaded plaintiff and its employes and recently absolutely refused and failed to convey to it said land, and plaintiff had been, at all times since the execution of the contract, ready, willing and able to pay for the land according to the contract.

To that tho defendants made answer, traversing the. allegations of the petition; in the second paragraph, pleaded that the contract was obtained by misrepresentation and fraud; that the contract actually made an option for twelve months and not a contract of sale; and, in a third paragraph, alleged that the contract should not be enforced because it was a chancing bargain, unconscionable and inequitable, because the plaintiff has a superior knowledge of the present and probable future values of the land, and with this superior knowledge, failed and refused, for a period of more than five years from the date of the writing, to do any act tending toward a performance of the stipulations thereof. That appellee was at all times insolvent and did not execute the contract with any intention of taking the land except in the event that its salable value should materially increase.

Appellee, by réply, traversed the affirmative allegations of the answer, and, in a separate paragraph, pleaded that appellants were estopped from asserting fraud in [721]*721the execution of the contract by failure to complain thereof until after the suit for its enforcement was filed, and by causing appellee to expend large sums in resurveying the land after the expiration of twelve months, with full knowledge of the provisions of the contract, in the belief that they would comply with its terms when satisfied that a correct survey had been made.

Appellants filed a rejoinder traversing the affirmative allegations of the reply, thus completing the issues.

"We deem it necessary to the decision of the case to consider the following propositions: First, whether or not the contract was vitiated by fraud on the part of appellee in its execution; second, whether or not a specific performance was warranted upon the facts proven; and, third, whether or not the judgment rendered is correct in the terms upon which the contract was ordered performed.

1. It is admitted by counsel for appellants that the contract is, in form, a contract for the absolute sale of the land described and not an option, but it is insisted that as a result of fraud practiced by the agent of appellee, who acted for it in the execution of the contract, the writing signed is not their true contract in that it is an absolute contract for the sale rather than an option; that before the writing was signed, the agent for appellee, who had prepared it, professed to read it to appellants, but did not read it correctly; that provisions agreed upon making it void upon the failure of appellee to exercise its option to buy within a year were fraudulently omitted from the writing, but that the writing, before it was signed by appellants, was read to them by the agent of appellee as though it included these provisions. In support of this contention appellants introduced the appellant, W. "W. Cornett, P. C. Hall, and W. E. Halcomb, each of whom testified that the contract, as verbally made by the parties, and as read by appellee’s agent, contained a provision of forfeiture that would have made it an option rather than a contract of sale. The agent of appellee, denied this testimony of appellant’s witnesses and alleged that the contract, as signed, truthfully recorded the contract as made and as read by him to appellants before its execution. These are the only witnesses who were present at the execution of the contract, and upon this evidence counsel for appellants earnestly insist that the fraud alleged is established, since three witnesses testify to the fraud which is denied by only one witness.

[722]*722While this is all of the evidence bearing directly upon the execution of the contract, except the contract itself, and which alone possibly might have authorized the chancellor in avoiding the contract, there are other circumstances in the evidence which amply sustain the judgment of the chancellor in upholding the contract. Appellant, ' W. W. Cornett, was shown to be, at the time the contract was executed, fifty-eight years of age, a successful merchant and farmer, able to read and write and to understand the contract as executed. The parties were dealing at arm’s length and while appellant testifies that he did not read the contract, he does not offer any reason for not doing so. The contract was put to record on July 18, 1905, and from that date, at least, he cannot deny knowledge of just what it did contain. He testified that he remembered the date of its execution and yet more than a year thereafter he went upon the land and showed to the surveyors, employed by appellee to survey it, the location of his corners, and held frequent conversations with agents of appellee looking to a compliance with the terms of the contract when the dispute as to the true acreage was determined by a survey satisfactory to him.

At no time until he filed his answer did he even intimate to appellee or any of its agents, in any of these frequent conversations, that there was any reason why he would not comply with his contract except that he was dissatisfied with the surveys made. He states that he assisted Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 149, 175 Ky. 718, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornett-v-kentucky-river-coal-co-kyctapp-1917.