Coulter v. Anderson

357 P.2d 76, 144 Colo. 402, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 491
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 14, 1960
Docket18903
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 357 P.2d 76 (Coulter v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coulter v. Anderson, 357 P.2d 76, 144 Colo. 402, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 491 (Colo. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Doyle.

Submitted for review in this case is a decree granting specific performance of an alleged agreement to purchase a guest or dude ranch near Rifle, Colorado. The plaintiffs in error were the defendants in the trial court. The suit was instituted by the Andersons, who were the buyers of the property in question, seeking specific performance and damages.

The defendants’ answer denied that there was a contract and maintained that the signed agreement relied on by the plaintiffs was merely a memorandum evidencing negotiation progress which looked to further negotiations and ultimately a contract, and due to its vagueness did not justify the granting of specific performance. Defendants also sought damages.

The written document relied on by plaintiffs was executed by all of the parties in the latter part of May 1957. It purported to be an agreement to sell and convey the real estate and personalty of the Coulter Lake Ranch. It described the property and stipulated the buyers’ agreement to pay the sellers a total of $100,000, $10,000 of *404 which would be a down payment, the balance of which would be paid at the rate of $5,000 per year plus, a percentage of the gross income. The agreement contemplated immediate possession and operation by the buyers, the execution of a promissory note and deed of trust for the balance of the purchase price, and conveyance of the title by sellers. The remaining provisions of the contract are consistent with its being a binding agreement for the purchase and sale of the ranch.

At the trial, evidence was adduced to show that the plaintiff Lucille J. Anderson met the plaintiff Kelly B. Anderson at this ranch in 1951. He was employed there as a wrangler and she was a guest. They were married in 1953 and spent their honeymoon there. In 1954 they both worked on the ranch during the entire season, including the hunting season in the fall. In December of 1956 defendant Claude Coulter contacted Kelly Anderson at the latter’s place of employment, a ranch near Wichita Falls, Texas. He suggested that Kelly Anderson purchase the guest ranch. The negotiations continued in the succeeding months by mail and by telephone and finally the contract in question here was signed in May of 1957. There had been previous drafts submitted by the attorneys for the Weld County Bank at Greeley, Colorado. David H. Jackson, the father of plaintiff Lucille Anderson, was president of this bank and by mutual agreement the bank lawyers were employed to prepare the contract. The Coulters delivered a list of furniture and other personalty, together with two deeds which contained descriptions of the property, to Mr. Jackson for use by the attorneys in preparing the contract. The other details were furnished by the plaintiff Kelly Anderson.

At the time the Coulters signed the agreement in suit, it was pointed out that numerous details had been omitted and apparently the parties were aware of this and were agreeable to a subsequent supplemental contract to embrace the omitted items. These included a *405 chattel mortgage on the personalty as security for the balance of the purchase price and an agreement to except a 20-acre tract of land from the fee property to be conveyed by the Coulters, which 20-acre tract the defendant was obligated' to convey to Elwin Coulter, a nephew. Other terms not included were the location of the exact site for a cabin, the right to which had been reserved in the contract by the Coulters; terms and conditions for the use of electricity, water and gas by the Coulters; provisions for rights of ingress and egress; easements for utilities; furnishing of dairy products by the Andersons to the Coulters; pasturage rights for two horses; fishing rights and a place to store a boat. Notwithstanding that these several items had not been included, Kelly Anderson persuaded the Coulters to sign the agreement, promising that he would furnish a supplemental or additional draft which would supply the omissions and make the corrections required. On this occasion, Claude Coulter scribbled a list of omissions, gave it to Anderson, who agreed to send it to the attorneys.

The evidence also shows that the agreement erroneously included 243 acres of leased land, whereas there was no leased land. The property referred to was 135 acres occupied under special use permits from the United States government. These permits were intended to be transferred to the Andersons.

On the date of execution of the agreement, Mr. Coulter delivered the abstracts to the Garfield County Abstract Company with instructions to bring them up to date and mail them to the attorneys who had prepared the agreement. The court found that the parties had definitely agreed on the details which had been omitted from the contract and specifically found that the 20-acre tract of fee land, although not surveyed, had been pointed out as an exception; that the defendants were entitled to occupy a cabin in accordance with the provision in the agreement without cost to them for the cabin, for water *406 and electricity, and that the gas was to be metered at the cost price; that plaintiffs had agreed to furnish milk and dairy products when available; that defendants were entitled to fishing privileges and to have a right to keep a boat for fishing on the lake and to have the right to pasture two horses, and that plaintiffs had agreed to execute and deliver a chattel mortgage as additional security for the payment of the balance of the purchase price.

The court further found:

That the plaintiffs went into possession following the execution of the agreement; that an inventory of supplies was taken and that plaintiffs purchased this merchandise separately; that the defendants had acknowledged in response to an inquiry from a third person that the ranch was sold; that plaintiffs had purchased numerous articles, including a station wagon for use in connection with the operation in reliance on the agreement as a subsisting contract to sell. The court also found that the plaintiff Kelly Anderson had helped defendants construct their cabin on the premises; that payments aggregating $8,000 had been made toward the purchase. Plaintiffs operated the resort during the summer and fall of 1957 and defendant Claude Coulter was employed during the hunting season of 1957 and during the summer of 1957, during which time the Coulters were occupying their cabin on the premises.

Relations became strained as a result of differences following a relatively minor incident, the visit of the brother of La Yelle Coulter to the ranch. The Andersons charged him for lodging over which Mrs. Coulter became very angry. Between August 7. and 10, plaintiffs tendered to defendants a written supplemental contract providing for chattel mortgage security for the balance of the purchase price. This the defendants refused to sign. In the latter part of October 1957, defendants served a written notice to vacate on the plaintiffs. The trial court concluded that this was without legal *407 effect and ruled that the act of the. Andersons in surrendering the keys did not in these circumstances constitute an agreement to rescind or abandon the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
357 P.2d 76, 144 Colo. 402, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coulter-v-anderson-colo-1960.