Crookshanks v. Ransbarger

92 S.E. 78, 80 W. Va. 21, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 4
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 78 (Crookshanks v. Ransbarger) 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
Crookshanks v. Ransbarger, 92 S.E. 78, 80 W. Va. 21, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 4 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge:

The general issue raised by the pleadings in this cause is whether or not a certain contract for the sale of real estate is valid. The original and amended and supplemental bills attacked it upon two grounds, fraud in the procurement thereof and fatal uncertainty in the description of the subject matter. In response to these attacks and the prayer for cancellation, the defendants filed their answer and cross-bill praying specific performance. The decree appealed from granted, the relief prayed for in the bill, upon the theory of fraud in the procurement of the contract, and dismissed the cross-bill.

If unaided by anything else in the paper, the descriptive clause might be so indefinite as to render the contract void for [23]*23uncertainty. It says the land agreed to be sold is “All of the real estate lying North of Laurel Creek, including that portion of the land lying on Laurel Creek near Withrow’s Mill, and also all of the land lying East and West of Meadow River, at Rader’s Ford, said land lying in Fayette and Green-brier Counties. ’ ’ But it is followed by another clause saying: “The parties of the second part reserves the right to remain on the- land in their present home and have the use of all the cleared land on both sides of the river and access for wood and coal for fuel until the 11th. day of August, 1906, free of any charge and also the refusal to rent said home as long as it is for rent, by the parties of the first part, or his assignees.” As it is permissible to read the entire contract, upon the inquiry for the intention of the parties, the two clauses may be read together, and, so read, they describe the land as the farm or tract of land on which the vendors resided. A deed or contract describing land generally, as being the tract on which the vendors reside, or as the home tract or farm, or as all the land they own in a certain county, is amply sufficient as regards descriptive matter. Furbee v. Furbee, 49 W. Va. 191; White v. Gore, 20 W. Va. 272; Munday v. Vawter, 3 Gratt. 518.

The application of this rule does not, however, completely solve the problem presented. The land claimed under the contract was not all in one boundary. The portion described as being “All of the land lying East and West of Meadow River, at Rader’s Ford” was the tract on which the vendors resided. “That portion lying on Laurel Creek near With-row’s Mill” is separated from the tract on which they resided, by another tract of 150 acres, which they seem to have sold out of their farm. It is composed of two tracts, one derived from Ashley, containing 16.7 acres and the other from McClung and containing 26.3 acres, a remnant of a 400 acre tract out of which the 150 acre tract was sold, leaving a large remnant at one end and a small one at the other. On the large one, they resided, wherefore the contract covers it; but it is not broad enough in its terms to reach the non-contiguous tract of 43 acres, composed of these two small tracts. It does not purport to sell all of the lands of the [24]*24vendors. Though it says "All of the real estate lying North of Laurel Creek, including that portion of the land lying on Laurel Creek near Withrow’s Mill,” it does not say whose land that is, which lies on Laurel Creek near With-row’s Mill and the vendors did not reside on that tract. It was not a part of the tract on which they resided. Between it and the tract on which they resided, there lay another 150 acre tract belonging to the Gauley Coal Land Co. The- words of the contract, therefore, fall short of any description of this small tract. Though it may be said, the parties intended to sell all the land they had, the contract does not say so by any words used in it, and it is absolutely essential that some words importing intent to cover the land be found therein. Words in the contract, not mere circumstances outside of it, nor the relation of the parties to the land, form an indispensable element. Oil Co. v. McCormick, 68 W. Va. 604; Crawford v. Workman, 64 W. Va. 10. No doubt the parties intended to contract the sale of these small tracts. If mere inference arising from their situation, their relation to them, the obvious intent and purpose of the vendee, and all the other facts and circumstances disclosed by the extrinsic evidence could supply want of language in the contract, it could be said the intent to sell these tracts is clear. But the law rigidly exacts the presence of words in the contract, expressing the intention. It cannot be supplied by mere inference arising from facts disclosed by extrinsic evidence and the relation of the parties to the instrument. "Operative words manifesting intent to transfer the property are absolutely essential to the conveyance of title. The intent must be disclosed in the words of the deed, not the mere acts of the parties.” Freudenberger Oil Co. v. Simmons, 75 W. Va. 337. It is hardly necessary to say a contract for a conveyance must be equally broad in its scope, for specific performance thereof results in a deed and a court, decreeing specific performance, would not be justified in going beyond the terms of the contract.

A letter signed by A. F. Crookshanks and dated September 6, 1905, less than one month after the date of the contract, describes these two small tracts as being land covered by, and [25]*25included in, the contract. That this letter may be read in aid of it and as constituting a part thereof, is perfectly manifest. Johnson v. Ronald’s Adm’r., 4 Munf. 78; McCandless v. Warner, 26 W. Va. 754; Moore v. Ward, 71 W. Va. 393; Parrill v. McKinley, 9 Graft. 1; Bowles v. Woodson, 6 Gratt. 78. In as much as the letter is a sufficient memorandum, it is unnecessary to say whether the bill and lis "pendens notice filed by the plaintiffs and admitting the two small tracts were parts of the land intended to be sold, constitute memoranda of sale, sufficient under the statute of frauds.

Pending the suit brought by the husband and wife, the former died and it was revived in the names of his administrator and heirs. For the most part, the testimony relied upon .to sustain the allegations of the bill and amended and supplemental bill, was that of the. widow and the children. This was objected to on the ground of ineompetency on their part, because of their interest in the result of the suit. It is unnecessary to enter upon any inquiry as to their competency, for their testimony, if admitted, would be insufficient to make out a case of fraudulent procurement. They may be competent witnesses as to some of the matters to which they testified but not as to others. Some of the transactions referred to by them may have been personal communications and others not. On the other hand, they may be fully competent. In view of the insufficiency of all of their testimony, if admitted, it would be a waste of time and labor to apply the test of competency to all of the various matters referred to by them. Telluric Co. v. Bramer, 76 W. Va. 185.

The representations relied upon to establish fraud did not pertain to the value or character of the land. Their tendency was to prove intimidation or coercion, something in the nature of duress, a special form of fraud, rather than 'deceit or ordinary fraud. About four years prior to the date of the contract, the plaintiffs had executed to D. C.„T. Davis a contract of sale of the same land or an option to purchase it, at the price of $11.00 an acre.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 78, 80 W. Va. 21, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crookshanks-v-ransbarger-wva-1917.