Crancer v. Lareau

1 F.2d 117, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1797
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 1924
DocketNo. 6496
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 F.2d 117 (Crancer v. Lareau) 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
Crancer v. Lareau, 1 F.2d 117, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1797 (8th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiffs below, defendants in error here, recovered a judgment after a jury trial against the defendants, plaintiffs in error here, for $5,050 on two alleged causes of action springing frqm a written contract between the plaintiffs and Charles D. Bell, made on September 14, 1920, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to sell for $7,500 1,000 acres of timber trees out of 1,840 acres they owned, and Bell agreed to buy and pay $7,500 for them on or before August, 1921, and whereby they also agreed that Bell, or his assigns, “should have the exclusive option of purchasing the balance of the timber, trees, and lumber on said above-described land, at $7.50 per acre, save and except ■ approximately 200 acres thereof now inclosed by fence, provided the same is paid for within two years from and after the first payment above mentioned.” That first payment was the first payment on the purchase price for the 1,000 acres, which was required to be and was made on October 15, 1920; and by the terms of this contract relating to the other 640 acres of timber, Bell or his assigns, on condition that he or they paid $7.50 per acre for them on or before October 15, 1922, might acquire the exclusive option of purchasing them from the plaintiffs. On September 21, 1921, Bell assigned this contract and all his rights thereunder to the defendants, who paid the purchase price of the 1,000 acres in full to the plaintiffs on or before April 20, 1922.-

On May 12, 1922, the plaintiffs sued the defendants for the $4,800, by the payment of which, at any time before October 15, 1922, the defendants had the right by the terms of the contract to acquire the exclusive option to purchase the 640 acres, and the plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that the defendants had cut timber and trees on the 640 acres of land, and had elected to exercise the option they had to purchase it. This constituted the first and principal alleged cause of action in this case. The second cause alleged by the plaintiffs was that the contract provided that in the cutting and removing of the 1,000 acres of timber the defendants should leave the stumps not over 8 inches above ground, where practicable, and that they should pile the brush and limbs ready for burning, and the plaintiffs alleged that the defendants had left the stumps more than 8, and the greater portion thereof more than 15, inches in height, and had failed to properly cut the stumps and pile the brush, to the damage of the plaintiffs in the sum of $1,000. The defendants by their answer denied that they had in any way elected to exercise or acquire the option to purchase the 640 acres of timber, and denied that they had failed to comply with any of the terms of their contract. At the close of the evidence there had been none to the effect that the parties to the contract had ever, by agree[119]*119ment or otherwise, separated by lines, marks, or otherwise the 1,000 aeres of timber sold and paid for from the 640 acres of timber, which the plaintiffs by the written contract offered the defendants an option to purchase on condition that they paid therefor $4,800 on or before October 15, 1922, and the only criterion by which to determine what timber had been or was on the 1,000 acres was that clause of the contract which provided that the cutting of the 1,000 acres of timber should commence “at a point where the road leading from Cabool to the residence of said first parties crosses the south line of the property above described (which was the entire 1,840 acres), and that said 3,000 acres shall be cleared as nearly as practicable in one body.” There had been substantial testimony that the employees of the defendants had cut and removed a considerable quantity of trees and timber from the 640 aeres, but tlie evidence was too indefinite and contradictory to indicate with any reasonable degree of definiteness the amount of timber or the value of timber taken. In this state of the ease the court charged the jury that: “If you find that it was practicable for the defendants to have ent and cleared the 1,000 aeres bought by the terms of the contract in one body, and that during the two years while the option or offer was open they, through their agents and servants, went onto the remaining 640 acres of land belonging to the plaintiffs, and cut and removed the timber therefrom, then such acts, as a matter of law, constitute an acceptance by defendants of the timber on said 640 acres, and the defendants are liable to the plaintiffs for $7.50 per acre for such timber, amounting to $4,800; and if you find the above facts 'to be true, then you should find the issues for the plaintiffs on the first count of the petition, and assess their damages at $4,800 on the first count of said petition.”

The defendants excepted to this charge and here insist that it was erroneous. According to this charge, if a fawner had 20 bales of bay, and offers to sell them to his neighbor on condition that tho latter within 10 days pays him $200 therefor, and tho neighbor, without paying the $200, wrongfully takes and appropriates to his own use 2 or 3 of the bales, he thereby accepts the offer and makes a contract binding on both himself and the other farmer. If an owner offers to a customer the exclusive option of purchasing 5 specific automobiles, on condition that the latter pays $10,000 for them within 30 days, and his customer wrongfully takes 1 or 2 of them tho next day and pays nothing, he thereby makes a contract of purchase and sale between himself and the owner, which binds both. This does not seem to bo a reasonable or practical rule. The only argument presented in support of it by counsel for the plaintiffs is: “The defendants were not required to evidemee their election to take this 640 acres of timber in any different manner than they took tho limber from the 1,000 acres. All they did with reference to tho 1,000 acres was to cut the timber. This 1,640 acres was all inclosed and in one body. They went upon this tract of land, and cut all of tho timber on the 1,000 acres, and then cut the best on the 640 acres, as the evidence warrants and the jury found.” But this argument is futile, because the premises on which it is based do not exist, and never did exist. It is not true that all that the defendants ever did with reference to the 1,000 acres was to cut the timber. Their assignor first made a written agreement, signed by him and by the plaintiffs, to cut, remove and pay $7,500 for the trees on the 1,000 acres. The defendants purchased and assumed the liability to pay that sum for the timber on this 1,000 acres, and they did pay that amount for it, and cut and removed it. The defendants were expressly required by the written contract to evidence their election to take and exercise the option offered them on the 640 acres in a different manner, to wit, by the payment therefor of $4,800 on or before October 15, 1922.

The only authorities counsel cite in support of this part of the charge of the court are Lindell v. Rokes, 60 Mo. 249, 21 Am. Rep. 395, Allen v. Chouteau, 102 Mo. 309, 14 S. W. 869, and tho recital in some of the text-books of the indisputable rule that an offer may be accepted or an election to accept or exercise an option may be made by acts or conduct requisite to have that effect; for example, in the ease at bar, by the performance of the express condition precedent to the making' of the contract of sale — the payment of the $4,800 on or before October 15, 1922. In Lindell v. Rokes, 60 Mo. 249, 21 Am. Rep. 395, the latter agreed in writing to pay Lindell $50 if from July 1, 1872, to March 18, 1873, he would not use intoxicating liquors of any kind. Ho did not, and tho court sustained his action against Rokes for the $50. In Allen v. Chouteau, 102 Mo. 309, 14 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F.2d 117, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crancer-v-lareau-ca8-1924.