Eisenbeis v. Shillington

159 S.W.2d 641, 349 Mo. 108, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 494
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 25, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 159 S.W.2d 641 (Eisenbeis v. Shillington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisenbeis v. Shillington, 159 S.W.2d 641, 349 Mo. 108, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 494 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

Percy O. Eisenbeis and Ruth C. Eisenbeis, husband and wife, as vendors, seek the specific performance of a contract to purchase certain described real estate by John J. Shillington, vendee, who by cross-bill prayed for a rescission of said contract of purchase and the return of $200, earnest money deposit. The chancellor, nisi, being of opinion the parties should seek their remedy at law, denied the prayers of the vendors' petition and the vendee's cross-bill, and dismissed said petition and said cross-bill. The vendors appeal, asserting they made out a clear case for specific performance, defendant failed to establish any of the four affirmative defenses pleaded, which admittedly included, among others, the defenses of a mistake of fact and fraud and misrepresentations on the part of the vendors' agent with respect to the restrictions of record against the property, and contend that specific performance should have been granted as matter of right and not denied as matter of discretion.

Ruth C. Eisenbeis, on June 21, 1938, contracted with Arthur W. Chapman to acquire "Estate No. 2 of Algonquin Estates," an unimproved lot in St. Louis County, Missouri, the real estate involved, which transaction was to be consummated on or before August 5, 1938. Robert B. Rogers, a real estate broker, employed by A.T. Whitelaw Terry, conducted the negotiations between Mr. Eisenbeis and Mr. Shillington. On July 15, 1938, Mr. Shillington was informed by Mr. Rogers that if he desired to purchase the matter was urgent; that he would have to act quickly as there were other offers, one of which was in excess of his. At Rogers' instance Shillington signed an instrument, prepared on the stationery of A.T. Whitelaw Terry, and showing "A.T. Whitelaw Terry, Agents" as the first signers thereof. It was in the nature of an earnest money contract. Mr. Shillington's consent thereto was evidenced by his signature to a paragraph immediately following the signature of "A.T. Whitelaw Terry, Agents." This instrument recited, among other things, that the vendee had deposited $200 earnest money and had purchased the real estate involved for $4,750, subject to the approval of the owner; that it was conditioned upon the consummation of the contract dated June 21, 1938; that the title was to be perfect of record and in fact, *Page 112 and conveyance was to be made by warranty deed, containing the usual covenants of warranty, excepting, so far as material here, "restrictions, reservations and conditions now of record;" and that the transaction was to be consummated on or before August 16, 1938. This was taken to Mr. Eisenbeis by Rogers. Eisenbeis, over his and his wife's signature, by him, approved the sale and agreed to pay A.T. and Whitelaw Terry the broker's commission.

The Chapman-Eisenbeis contract was consummated August 4, 1938.

A month or two prior to the contract of July 15, 1938, Rogers had talked to Shillington about the property. The matter was not pushed, Rogers testifying the vendee did not show any great enthusiasm. Sometime after the first of July, Rogers again talked to the vendee. Shillington mentioned to Rogers the kind of residence he desired to construct, informing Rogers he was not in a position to spend and could not afford to spend more than $14,000 for a residence. On one of these occasions Mr. Rogers had a plat with him. This plat, we understand from Rogers' testimony, had been made by a young architect in an endeavor to induce Rogers to build houses in Algonquin estates. It had the figures $20,000 [643] written on it in connection with "Estate No. 2" and Rogers, in answer to inquiries, stated to the vendee that was a restriction on the lot but that a house costing $14,000 could be constructed on the lot. The vendee testified that he was in the box business and his knowledge of the effect of building restrictions on real estate was limited; that Rogers told him he could build a $14,000 house on the lot; that Rogers did not state this as his opinion but as a fact — "that it would be possible to build a $14,000 house on that lot," explaining that the house on Estate No. 1, subject to the same restriction did not cost $20,000 in his opinion; that said lot owner had not lived up to the restriction and neither he nor anyone else could enforce it and also that such restrictions were very often non-enforceable; and that otherwise he would not have contracted for the lot.

Rogers denied telling Shillington that he could erect a $14,000 residence on the property; but there was some discussion of the matter as he testified he was not attempting to mislead the vendee, explaining, among other things: that the opinion "of the trustees" would govern; that restrictions of this nature were usually flexible; that it is a restriction as to the appearance and acceptability of the house as much as anything; that often the price does not enter at all; one man builds a house for $14,000 that looks like $20,000, while another will build a house for $38,000 that looks like an $8,000 house.

A comparatively short time after the date for performance, the vendee consulted Mr. Chapman and his (the vendee's) attorney and ascertained, at least inferentially, that a $20,000 prima facie valid restriction as to residences existed against the lot. He thereupon notified the vendors he would not perform the contract of purchase. *Page 113

[1] A vendor may have specific performance of a contract to purchase land on the theory, in this State, of mutuality of remedy. [Paris v. Haley, 61 Mo. 453, 457.] Mutuality of remedy has been said to be essential to a decree of specific performance. [Falder v. Dreckshage (Mo. App.), 227 S.W. 929, 935[3]; see Missouri Annotations, Restatement of Contracts, Sec. 372.] We need not inquire if this be sound law in every instance. Consult Tebeau v. Ridge (Banc), 261 Mo. 547, 567(V), 170 S.W. 871, 876[5], L.R.A. 1915C, 367, as well as the case therein overruled, which are, so far as material, to the effect that a vendee may, if he so elect, have specific performance of a contract to convey land by a husband although the husband, by reason of his wife's failure to contract and refusal to join in the conveyance, is unable to convey the precise estate contracted for.

[2] In support of their position that they made a case for specific performance as a matter of right, and not as a matter of mere discretion, the vendors stress Beheret v. Myers (Banc, 1912), 240 Mo. 58, 77, 144 S.W. 824, 830[8], stating: "The rule is that specific performance is somewhat of grace as over against a hard and fast matter of absolute right. The chancellor has discretion to perform or not to perform. But he has studied the law of specific performance to little purpose who supposes that discretion may be exercised without reason and of caprice. The discretion to be exercised is a sound (that is) judicial discretion. It is exercised against performance when plaintiffs come into a court of equity with unclean hands; or when the contract is incomplete or so ambiguous as to be uncertain in terms and intendment; or where the contract is unfair, overreaching, biting; or when there are present (in pleadings and proofs) elements of mutual mistake in matter of substance, covinous contrivances, fraud, imposition, surprise or accident, as those terms are understood in the law. Absent such features and present a fair, plain contract, one complete and certain in terms and intendments, specific performance goes as a matter of right." This was said arguendo upon an appeal by a vendor of land in answer to the contention (consult l.c.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W.2d 641, 349 Mo. 108, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenbeis-v-shillington-mo-1941.