Davison v. Robbins

517 P.2d 1026, 30 Utah 2d 338, 1973 Utah LEXIS 714
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1973
Docket13317
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 517 P.2d 1026 (Davison v. Robbins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davison v. Robbins, 517 P.2d 1026, 30 Utah 2d 338, 1973 Utah LEXIS 714 (Utah 1973).

Opinion

CALLISTER, Chief Justice:

Plaintiffs initiated this action seeking specific performance of an agreement, denominated a real estate contract and receipt for deposit, which defendants had signed. Upon trial before the court, a decree ordering specific performance was entered. Defendants appeal therefrom.

Defendants, who are residents of Utah, are owners as joint tenants of certain real property situated near Duchesne, Utah. Plaintiffs are residents of California. During September, 1970, while visiting Du-chesne, plaintiffs discussed purchasing defendants real property at the price of $90 per acre. In October, plaintiffs ordered a preliminary title report from Stanley & Sons, Inc., of Heber City, Utah. On November 20, 1970, plaintiffs returned to Utah with a California real estate broker, Roy Vickery, for the purpose of executing a purchase contract. The trial court found that initially defendants had expressed a willingness to sell all the property, hut defendants refused to execute an agreement with such provisions and expressed a desire to reserve from the sale a parcel encompassing the “bottom land.” Plaintiffs, their agent, Vickery, and Mr. Robbins traveled to the subject property, where Mr. Robbins indicated the boundaries of the area he wished to reserve. The witnesses for plaintiffs testified that Mr. Robbins pointed to certain fence lines, posts, and U. S. Highway 40 to delineate the property to be retained; Mr. Robbins vigorously denied this testimony, but the findings of the trial court reflect a belief in the plaintiffs’ version of the 'transaction. Mr. Vickery *340 thereafter drafted a document which the defendants signed. Plaintiffs delivered a copy of the agreement, together with a check for $1,000, to Stanley & Sons, Inc., of Heber City, the designated escrow agent. The check has remained in Stanley’s trust account, pending completion and performance of the contract.

Under the terms of the agreement, defendants were to order a survey of the property to determine the net acreage to be conveyed after deduction of the reserved area. According to the findings of fact, Stanley contacted defendants on numerous occasions to request that the survey be made. Initially, defendants responded that they were unable to procure a survey due to adverse weather conditions or the Unavailability of surveyors. Approximately six or eight months later defendants refused to perform, claiming that they had never agreed to sell the property, or, in the alternative, that under the agreement they were entitled to reserve as much acreage as they desired. Prior to trial, defendants indicated that they had elected to reserve from the sale all of their property except for one acre.

The trial court found the contract valid and enforceable and that plaintiffs were entitled to specific performance. The trial court decreed that the land to be conveyed was as described in the preliminary title report except for the area reserved, which was described by the landmarks identified by the witnesses for plaintiffs. The court ordered that a survey be made to determine the net acreage to be conveyed to plaintiffs.

On appeal, defendants contend that the land to be conveyed was not described with sufficient certainty to permit specific performance, and that the trial court erred in admitting parol evidence to ascertain defendants’ intention to reserve certain land within existing landmarks. Defendants claim that the trial court modified the contract under the guise of construction.

The agreement signed by the parties was a standard printed form, which indicated by its language that it was designed for use in California. Roy Vickery, a California real estate agent, was brought by plaintiffs to this state to complete this form. In the space provided for a description of the property, the following was written:

legal description to be prepared by licensed civil engineer after survey ordered by seller and paid for equally by both parties hereto, land being sold consists of approx. 150 acres selling at $90.00 per acre on the exact net acreage delivered in escrow.

In a space provided for other terms, the following was written:

Property in question is briefly described in preliminary title report No. U-102434, Schedule A, issued Oct. 24, 1970 by Stanley and Sons, Inc. of Heber *341 City, Utah, less any acreage reserved by seller. Offer contingent upon buyers approval of net acreage description and grant deed executed and deposited in escrow. [Emphasis added.]

Defendants urge that the terms of the agreement are clear and unambiguous, and the court must determine the intention of the parties as expressed within the four corners of the document. Defendants were granted the right to determine the amount of the acreage they desired to reserve, and plaintiffs were granted the right to refuse if they disapproved of the net acreage. Defendants contend that such provisions constitute merely an agreement to agree in the future. Defendants claim that the trial court erred in admitting parol evidence indicating defendants’ intention to reserve certain land within existing landmarks, an intention contrary to that expressed within the agreement. Defendants persuasively assert that if the parties had intended the area to be reserved was to be delineated by the suggested landmarks, such could have been expressed in the agreement. Instead, plaintiffs’ representative, Mr. Vickery, drafted the agreement, leaving the matter of the reservation of the acreage open to future agreement.

In Calder v. Third Judicial District Court, 1 the vendor counterclaimed for specific performance of a contract, wherein the vendee was to select 200 acres of land from a larger tract which was sufficiently described. The issue was whether the description was sufficient so that there was a valid contract which could be enforced by specific performance. This court cited Scanlon v. Oliver, 2 wherein the court explained the relevant distinctions between two types of cases. In one, the contract grants one party the exclusive right of selection, and the contract thus provides a definite means by which the location and description of the land may be definitely determined without any further agreement of the parties. In the other type, the writing provides that the particular piece of property to be conveyed is to be mutually agreed upon by the parties, i. e., the mode provided for the location and description of the land is the future agreement of the parties. In the Calder case this court concluded that the writing constituted a valid and enforceable contract, since the agreement provided that the vendee was to select the land within a given time, and nothing more had to be agreed upon between the parties.

In the instant action, the agreement in clear and unambiguous terms provided that the location and description of the land to be conveyed was subject to the future mutual agreement of the parties. This writing constituted a mere expression of a purpose to make a contract in the fu *342 ture, for the whole. matter was contingent on further negotiations. The trial court erred in its conclusion that the writing constituted a valid, enforceable contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
517 P.2d 1026, 30 Utah 2d 338, 1973 Utah LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davison-v-robbins-utah-1973.