Fox v. Wilson

507 P.2d 252, 211 Kan. 563, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 424
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 3, 1973
Docket46,828
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 507 P.2d 252 (Fox v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Wilson, 507 P.2d 252, 211 Kan. 563, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 424 (kan 1973).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Foth, C.:

This case started out as an action to foreclose and cancel a contract for the sale of a ranch, bought by the sellers alleg *565 ing default by the buyers. By counterclaim it was converted into, and was basically tried as, an action by the buyers against the sellers for damages for fraud.

The trial court, after hearing eight days of testimony, refused to foreclose the contract and awarded damages to the buyers in the total amount of $181,269.78. The sellers, plaintiffs-appellants, were Melvin V. Fox and his wife Barbara; the buyers, defendants-appellees, were Fountain L. Wilson and his wife Patricia. They will be referred to by name.

In the middle of May, 1968, the Wilsons were the owners of the El Rancho Motel at Pratt, Kansas. They had run the motel for about a year, and weren’t doing too well with it. It had taken their life savings to buy it, in the form of their equity in their home and four rental houses in Wichita, or about $23,000. The total price had been $87,500. Repairs and refurbishing were making serious inroads into current operating revenue, and two outstanding loans were proving burdensome. Fountain Wilson, who was about 37 years old at the time, had been raised on a farm. After ten years of factory work, selling insurance and most recently operating the motel, he was looking for a chance to return to the tranquillity of rural life. It was then he came across an ad in the Wichita paper for the “Fox Ranch,” a 3840 acre spread in Gove County.

A couple of calls to the listing broker in Dighton brought the news that the seller would consider taking the motel in trade. They also brought a specification sheet, later admitted into evidence as defendant’s exhibit 1. Features which subsequently became important were:

“377 acres feed grain base (average 33 bn)”
“Wheat averaged 57 bu. per acre 1967
% of 500 acres fine growing wheat goes”
“ASC Payments about $6,000.00 last year”
“12 wells rebuilt in 1967 with new cylinders. 3 with plastic casings, wells have never been pumped dry.”
“30 ft. to water, good prospect for irrigation”
“Cut 22,000.00 bales of hay in creekbottoms, last year”
“Ran 1200 head yearlings — year around”
“Modem improvement, (not extra big tenant house)”
“3 miles to oil field”
“Buyer has option to buy the machinery”

A few days later Wilson and his fifteen year old son were on their way to Gove to meet the broker and see the ranch. Fox wasn’t there when they arrived, but the three of them drove around the *566 place in a pickup truck; because of the weather they did not get out. Wilson learned that the ranch had been “written up” in a farm magazine for its outstanding beef production, and that Fox was selling only because of an injury to his back. The broker impressed upon him the scale upon which Fox operated and his unequalled reputation in the community.

It was a little later that day that Wilson first met Fox. After looking at the growing wheat the party retired to a cafe in Gove, and there discussed the ranch and its potential for some four hours. The asking price, at $115 per acre, amounted to $441,600. Wilson explained that all he had was the motel, which he valued at $100,-000, subject to a $30,000 mortgage. (In fact, this would be the debt after a proposed refinancing.) He would, he said, be entirely dependent on income from the ranch for both living expenses and debt payments of principal and interest; he would have to rent the grassland for cash. Various assurances were given him, most notably that he would have Vs of the wheat and the ASG payments for the year, and could count on the yield from the 377 acres of milo — which should be put in right away. Fox promised to look into finding a tenant for the pasture.

The first meeting led to a second a few days later, when the Foxes journeyed to Pratt to look over the motel. They stayed a couple of days looking the place over and discussing terms. Once again it was emphasized that time was running out to get the milo in, and that the crop would be a source of ready cash — if the deal was to be closed it should be done soon.

In addition, Fox reported notable progress in the pasture rental pi'oject. Mrs. Fox mentioned a telephone call for her husband, and he remarked, “Oh, I bet that is on the pasture rental. They have really been after me to get that taken care of.” It appeared that the Keller brothers, large cattle operators at nearby Oakley, were all set to rent the grassland for $15,000 cash in advance. The only reason Fox hadn’t signed them up before was that he thought Wilson should make the agreement directly, if he was going to buy the ranch.

It was during this meeting that the question of machinery came up. Wilson had none, while Fox had that with which he claimed to have been operating. He presented a three page inventory of personal property — machinery, trucks, equipment and supplies — for which he wanted $48,000. This inventory was admitted into evi *567 dence as defendants’ exhibit 2. Wilson had seen the machinery lined up at the ranch, looking new to his eyes. It had, in fact, been freshly painted in colors to match the manufacturers’ original paint. According to Wilson, Fox said it was in tip-top condition and he would personally guarantee every item.

The result of this meeting was an agreement to trade the Wilsons’ $70,000 equity in the motel for the Foxes’ equity in the ranch. The Wilsons would assume a mortgage to Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of $124,000, leaving a balance of $247,600 due to the Foxes. This was to be paid in annual installments, with the first, in the amount of $15,000, to be made on August 1, 1968, just over two months away. Wilson was also to pay $1,500 for the rent of an additional 480 acres of pasture.

At the same time the Wilsons agreed to buy the inventoried personal property for $48,810, to be paid by assuming Fox’s three outstanding notes in the total amount of $37,500 and giving a personal note to the Foxes for the balance of $11,310.

With terms agreed upon Fox went to his attorney, Ray Sloan, of Hoxie, and had him draw the real estate contract. The closing was in Sloan’s office on June 3, 1968, some ten days to two weeks after Wilson and his boy first looked tihe ranch over. The Wilsons appeared without an attorney, looked the contract over for twenty minutes or so, and then all parties signed. According to Wilson, Just after signing he asked Sloan about the mineral rights clause in the contract. Upon being told that the Foxes were reserving the reversionary interest in the % of the mineral rights then outstanding, he remarked that “That isn’t what we had agreed upon.” Fox insisted that it was

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
507 P.2d 252, 211 Kan. 563, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-wilson-kan-1973.