Doyle v. Wohlrabe

66 N.W.2d 757, 243 Minn. 107, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 690
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 29, 1954
Docket36,307
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 66 N.W.2d 757 (Doyle v. Wohlrabe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle v. Wohlrabe, 66 N.W.2d 757, 243 Minn. 107, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 690 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Matson, Justice.

Defendant appeals from an order denying her motion for a new trial.

We are primarily concerned with the question whether the statute of frauds bars specific performance of a contract to sell land due to the inadequacy of the legal description when the description contained in the written memorandum agreement, although insufficient in itself to identify the land, coincides with a description appearing on a sketch prepared by the seller stating the dimensions of the land and locating it geographically as abutting upon two intersecting public streets in a specified section and township of Hennepin county; such sketch having been exhibited to the purchasers by the seller at the time of sale and having then been used by the parties as an aid in identifying the landmarks, the actual physical boundaries of the property, and its location with respect to said streets. We are also concerned with the admissibility of parol evidence bearing upon the application of the description to the intended property.

The written contract, which admittedly was sufficiently definite for specific performance in all other respects, contained the following description:

“* * * i0ts A & B — Registered Land Survey of Sec. 19, T. 28, R. 21, at W. 60 St. and Normandale Rd.”

In October 1951 plaintiffs and the defendant entered into negotiations for the sale and purchase of the two purported lots which constituted a part of a larger tract owned by the defendant. Before executing the written agreement, the defendant exhibited to the *109 plaintiffs a sketch or diagram (drawn on a large cardboard) of several lots arranged alphabetically and showing their respective dimensions in feet. The sketch purported to be according to a Eegistered Land Survey of the entire tract of land owned by the defendant. The lots here involved were designated thereon as “A” and “B,” and the defendant pointed out on the diagram the areas covered by each of said lots. In addition, she took the plaintiffs on the land itself and showed them the actual boundaries and landmarks of the lots as they appeared on said sketch.

Subsequently the defendant prepared the memorandum agreement which the parties executed. The plaintiffs gave defendant a check for the down payment specified in the agreement. Approximately 12 days later, the defendant returned the down payment to the plaintiffs and notified them that she refused to convey the property and that she rescinded the contract. The plaintiffs thereafter brought this action for specific performance.

Defendant contends that, without the aid of parol evidence or a further agreement of the parties, the description is wholly inadequate to identify the property and that specific performance must be denied under M. S. A. 513.05. The evidence is undisputed that there had never been a Eegistered Land Survey of section 19, township 28, range 24, Hennepin county, Minnesota, on file in the office of the Eegister of Deeds or with the Eegistrar of Title for said county. Although the sketch exhibited to plaintiffs was not produced in court, it is also undisputed that it did exist and contained the identical description used in the memorandum agreement. Over the specific objection of the defendant that the entire agreement of the parties was merged in the written contract and further that parol evidence was inadmissible to establish the boundary lines of the lots, the trial court permitted the plaintiffs to introduce into evidence, with the aid of photographs, oral testimony describing the boundaries of the property as they appeared on the sketch and as pointed out by the defendant on the land.

The trial court granted plaintiffs specific performance and ordered the defendant to execute and deliver to them a warranty deed to the *110 premises. Defendant appeals from an order denying her blended motion for amended findings or in the alternative for a new trial.

Section 518.05, insofar as here pertinent, provides:

“Every contract for * * * the sale of any lands, or any interest in lands, shall be void unless the contract, or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, is in writing and subscribed by the party by whom the * * * sale is to be made, * *

In order to satisfy this section of the statute of frauds, a written memorandum of a contract for the sale of land must contain a description of the land which the contract purports to convey. 2 In passing upon the particularity with which the property must be described, it is to be borne in mind that a written contract for the conveyance of land, to satisfy the statute of frauds, need only provide that degree of certainty which is reasonably necessary to identify the parties, the land to be conveyed, and the terms and conditions of the promises made by the respective parties to each other. 3 When we recall the historical fact that the statute of frauds was originally enacted simply to prevent the frauds to which transfers of land by parol and livery of seizin lent themselves, we will readily recognize that its basic purpose is only to provide reasonable safeguards to insure honest dealing and that it was not enacted to make a fetish of literal statutory compliance or a fetish of requiring a perfect written contract. That adherence to the strict letter of the statute or perfection in the drafting of the written conveyance are not ends in themselves is illustrated by the equitable doctrine that the statute may not be used as an instrument of fraud and that part performance may, in some instances, place the transaction wholly outside the statute. 4

*111 Although, even a seller who frankly admits the existence of an oral contract to convey is entitled to assert the invalidity of such contract under the statute of frauds, 5 this court, in passing upon the adequacy of a legal description in an individual case, will not apply the statute in a rigid manner whereby it becomes a technical shield behind which nonperformance may be justified when the description contained in the executed memorandum, by itself or as amplified by other instruments or papers with which the memorandum is expressly or impliedly connected, 6 provides an adequate guide to locate and identify the property in the light of the surrounding circumstances and in the light of facts of which a court can take judicial notice. 7 An executed memorandum may be impliedly related to other documents by an internal similarity or identity of provisions. In fact an agreement for the sale of land, to satisfy the statute of frauds, need not be made as a memorandum contract but may consist wholly of letters if they are internally connected by reference, express or implied, so as to show on their face that they all relate to the same subject matter but such relationship may not be shown by parol. 8

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.W.2d 757, 243 Minn. 107, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-wohlrabe-minn-1954.