Depue v. Sergent

21 W. Va. 326, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 111
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 21 W. Va. 326 (Depue v. Sergent) 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
Depue v. Sergent, 21 W. Va. 326, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 111 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

Green, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

In this case, the written contract for the sale of the land under the hands and seals of the parties, is thus worded : “Henry Depue has this day sold to James M. Sergent, a tract of land situated on Island run on the waters of Spring creek, containing five hundred acres more or less, for the sum and consideration of one thousand two hundred dollars cash paid in hand and three thousand three hundred dollars (to be paid in specified times with interest from date).” The deed dated the 17th day of November, 1873, executed by Depue and wife to Sergent for this land, is as follows: “That for and in consideration of four thousand five hundred dollars, twelve hundred dollars of which is in hand paid, and the balance is to be paid at times specified in the deed, the parties of the first part (the grantors) grant, bargain, sell and convey to the party of the second part (grantee), the following described tract, (here follows the full description of the tract of land including its metes and bounds), containing five hundred acres more or less. The parties of the first part hereby expressly retain a vendor’s lien on the tract hereby conveyed for the purchase-money above mentioned. The parties of the first part covenant to warrant generally the property hereby conveyed.”

In Crislip, Guardian, v. Cain, 191 W. Va., p. 526 and 527, it is laid down, that “the decisions in Virginia and elsewhere [333]*333have uniformly held, that when a vendor sold by written contract a tract of land for a certain sum of money, describing tire land and adding thereto, containing so many acres more or less, specifying them or any other mode of specifying the quantity, which shows that its exact quantity was not intended to be given, such a contract or deed has been invariably construed to be a contract in gross, and has not been construed to be a contract by the acre, nor has such indefinite specification of the quantity of land ever been construed as a warranty of the number of acres by the vendor and as a contract, thus binding him to make it good.” This construction of such a contract, that it is a sale in gross and that there is no warranty in such a contract of the quantity, by the vendor, has in most cases been assumed and acted upon by the court as clear and indisputable, and no comment has generally been made on the subject; such contracts are not regarded in these respects, as being in any degree ambiguous. See Stebbins v. Eddy, 4 Mason 414; Smith v. Evans, 6 Binn. 102; Glen v. Glen, 4 Serg. and R. 488; Wiatt v. Rose, 16 N. J. Eq. 290; Marvin v. Bennett, 8 Paige 312; 26 Wend. 169; Jackson v. McConnel, 19 Wend. 175; Jackson v. Moore, 6 Cowen 706; Lush v. Druse, 4 Wend. 313; Brown v. Parish, 2 Dana 9; Hampton v. Eubank, 4 J. J. Marsh. 634; Eubank v. Hampton, 1 Dana 343-344; Peden v. Owens, Rice Eq. 55; Whicker v. Crews, 1 Ired. Eq. 351; Galbreath v. Galbreath, 5 Watts 146; Williford v. Bentley, 5 J. J. Marsh. 181; Perkins v. Webster, 2 N. H. 287; How v. Bass, 2 Mass. 382; Hall v. Mayhew, 15 Md. 551; Innis v. McCrummin, 12 Martin (La.) 425; Leassier v. Dashiel, 13 La. 151; People v. Wilson, 16 La. 185; Morris Canal Co. v. Emmett, 9 Paige 168; Slothower v. Gorden, 23 Md. 1; Tyson v. Hardesty, 29 Md. 305; 8 Cal. 76; Johnson v. Taber, 10 N. Y. 319; Clark v. Carpenter, 4 C. E. Green (N. J.) 328; Zeringue v. Williams, 15 La. Ann. 76; Wear v. Parish, 26 Ill. 240; Winch v. Winchester, 1 Ves. & Beam 385; and also these Virginia cases: Jolliffe v. Hite, 1 Call 301; Anthony v. Oldacre, 4 Call 489; Nelson v. Mathews, 2 H. & M. 164; Hull v. Cunningham’s Ex’or 1 Munf. 330; Grantlines v. Wight, 2 Munf. 179; Bedford v. Hickman, 5 Call 236.”

There is, as is here stated, no case, when by a written con[334]*334tract or deed a party sells or conveys a certain tract of land described, for a certain price, and in describing this land says it contains a specified number of acres, more or less, in which the courts have ever held, that such oontraet or deed could be construed as a contract of sale by the acre, except a single case, which will be presently noticed. It is true, that in Bierne v. Erskine, 5 Leigh 59, when the words describing the quantities of laud specified the exact quantities unqualified by the words “more or less” or any other words it was held that, if the price was an exact multiple of the exact number of acres named, the sale, which would otherwise have been clearly a sale in gross, was thereby rendered ambiguous. It would then still be prima facie, on the face of the deed, a contract of sale in gross and not by the acre, but being ambiguous, it might be shown to be a contract of sale by the acre by proof of the circumstances surrounding the sale and the subsequent conckict of the parties in carrying it out; but all other parol evidence was carefully excluded, as the character of a written contract can never be explained in this way by the oral declarations of the parties made either before, at the time of, or after the sale. See Crislip, Guardian, v. Cain, 19 W. Va. p. 527, 528 and 529.

It is true that where the words “more or less” were not added to the description of the quantity of the land, the court of appeals of Virginia in the case of Benson v. Humphreys, Law Journ. April, 1881, did hold, where the price was an exact multiple of the quantity, though it was not stated exactly but was qualified by the addition of the words “more or less,” yet, that this was still a contract of sale by the acre. But this case met the express and decided disapproval of our Court, in Crislip, Guardian, v. Cain, 19 W. Va. p. 551 and 552. It is entirely unsustained by reason or authority in Virginia or elsewhere.

Our conclusion therefore is, that in the case before us on the very face of the deed and written contract, the sale was cleaidy a sale in gross of the tract of land for four thousand, five hundred dollars, and not a sale by the acre; and this being the case, of course it could not be proven by any description of parol evidence and much less by the talk of parties to be a sale by the acre. The written contract, clear on its face, [335]*335could not be explained by any kind of parol evidence on principles of law universally acknowledged. 'When therefore the defendant in the case before us, filed his answer in this cause, in which he said, “that he purchased said land by the acre at nine dollars per acre and the plaintiff sold him five hundred acres at said price per acre,” the plaintiff ought to have excepted to this portion of this answer. For the deed, which was filed with the bill as a part thereof showed conclusively as a matter of law, that this sale was not by the acre, but was a sale of the entire tract of land at the gross sum oí lour thousand five hundred dollars.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 W. Va. 326, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/depue-v-sergent-wva-1883.