Darnell v. Alexander

199 S.W. 17, 178 Ky. 404, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 749
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 18, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 17 (Darnell v. Alexander) 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
Darnell v. Alexander, 199 S.W. 17, 178 Ky. 404, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 749 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

This is a suit brought by appellee (plaintiff below) against appellants (defendants below), who are husband and wife, seeking a specific performance' of a written contract reading':

“This contract made and entered into this March 23, 1915, by and between Van Alexander and his wife, Lottie Darnell, parties of the first part, and J. B. Alexander, party of the second part, witnesseth, that the party of the first part has this day entered into contract with the party of the second part that they will make him a general warrantee deed to a tract of land in Caldwell county, Ky., known as the old Wolf farm, and is the same farm that we are now living on, on the following conditions: That the said J. B. Alexander is to assume the payment of two notes against the said farm which is now in the Bank of Dawson, and he is to have the Bank of Dawson release the said two notes amounting to $1,474.00, then they will make him the deed when he presents notice from the Bank of Dawson that we are relieved of the payment of the two notes. Witness our hands this March 23, 1915.
“M. Y. Darnell.
“Charlottie Darnell.
“Attest: J. Y. Darnell.”

[405]*405The answer resisted the relief sought upon the grounds that defendants did not intend nor did they by executing the contract obligate themselves to sell their' farm consisting of 200 acres in Caldwell county to the plaintiff, and that the execution of the contract was procured by fraudulent misrepresentations made to defendants by plaintiff whereby they were induced to sign it, and that it would be unconscionable and inequitable under the facts set out in the answer to enter a decree for specific performance. Other matters of less importance and which, under the conclusion we have reached, do not affect the case, were relied upon.

Appropriate pleadings put in issue the allegations of the answer, and upon trial the court sustained the prayer of the petition and adjudged that defendants be required to specifically perform the contract by executing a deed to the plaintiff within a timé' specified, but if they should fail to do so the master commissioner of the court was ordered and directed to execute the deed for and on behalf of the defendants,, Complaining of that judgment, they prosecute this appeal.

"While on some minor points there is a slight conflict in the testimony, the record as a whole shows the facts to be substantially these: The land was purchased by defendant, M. V. Darnell, some time about the year 1909 or 1910 from the owners, C. Y. Hayes and B. D. Menser, at an agreed price of $1,700.00. No deed was made at that time, but defendants took possession of the farm and moved upon it and improved it considerably by clearing new ground and cleaning up old ground, in all about eighty acres, building a new tobacco barn something like 34 feet square and capable of housing 8 acres of tobacco, building a considerable amount of new fencing and repairing other fencing, putting a new roof on the dwelling, which was a brick one containing about eight rooms with 18-inch walls, and perhaps other improvements. The unpaid consideration with interest on February 6, 1913, amounted to $1,294.08. On that day the vendors executed a deed for the land to defendant, M. Y. Darnell, and he executed a note to each of them payable one year afterward for the sum of $647.04, being their respective portions of the unpaid consideration. These notes were not paid at maturity, the payees indulging the maker, and some time after they became due Menser died; his administrator, who was the other vendor, Hayes, was compelled to collect at least the Menser note, of which [406]*406fact the defendant was aware,. and he began efforts to procure the money with which to meet his obligation.

The plaintiff, Alexander, is a nephew of the defendant, Mrs. Charlottie Darnell, and had recently come into possession of a considerable inheritance from his father, who had died. She suggested to her husband that perhaps her nephew could and would come to their rescue by either assisting them to procure the money or himself furnishing it, and thus relieve them of their present embarrassment. He was seen by the husband and expressed a willingness to do what he could, although stating at the time that he was not then prepared to take up the notes. Upon a second communication with him he agreed to do so, the notes at that time being in a bank at Dawson, as was supposed. Plaintiff notified the defendants that he would call at their home to see further about the matter, which he did on the evening of the day the contract was executed. He stated to them that he had gone to the bank at Dawson for the purpose of taking up the notes and that the bank would not deliver them to him without some writing, in the nature of a title bond, showing a contract between him and the makers of the notes evidencing his authority to make payment; that he had prepared such a contract, which he exhibited to defendants, and M. Y. Darnell signed it, but his wife procured her daughter to sign her name to it. These facts are testified to by defendants and three other witnesses, and each of them further says that after the contract was signed and delivered to plaintiff he left, saying: “Uncle Van, you and Aunt Lottie rest easy, I will pay it in the morning. All I want is the interest.” “Uncle Van,” who is the defendant, M. V. Darnell, asked him if he charged anything for coming to defendant’s home, when he said, “Nothing; I don’t charge anything.”

At the time the contract was signed the administrator of Menser had filed suit to collect the Menser note, and this had very much distressed defendants, especially M. V. Darnell. After the contract was entered into plaintiff paid the indebtedness, including the balance due on the Menser note and the cost of the suit brought upon it, and matters went along that way until some time in Februtry, 1916, when defendants concluded that one year’s interest was about due and asked plaintiff to come down and look at some stock with the view of selling it to him to satisfy the interest, and if the price were more than that to place the excess as a credit upon the indebtedness. [407]*407He went and looked at the stock, but no trade was made, and for the first time he informed the defendants that his contract was one of purchase of the farm, and that he intended to insist that he be given a deed. This was re-' fused, resulting in the suit.

It is true that plaintiff denies the testimony of the five witnesses as to what occurred at the time the contract > Aras signed, but he is overwhelmed Avith a great prepon- - derance of testimony upon this point, and, also, as we shall see, by other facts and circumstances in the case.' Defendant M. V. Darnell and his son testify that the farm in its improAnd condition was easily worth $3,000.00 at the time. No witness except plaintiff places the price at less than $2,000.00, Avhile others say that it was worth between $2,500.00 and $3,000.00. Plaintiff himself says that it was worth $1,700.00. We have seen that defendant, M. V. Darnell, paid $1,700.00 for it and improved it ■ many hundreds of dollars, and Ave know from the history ■ of the country that prices of land considerably increased from the time defendants purchased the farm until the contract sought to be enforced was executed. We attach but little weight to the fact that defendant, M. Y. Darnell, after he was sued offered to take $1,500.00 for the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 17, 178 Ky. 404, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darnell-v-alexander-kyctapp-1917.