Gibson v. Greene

298 S.W. 209, 174 Ark. 1010, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 209 (Gibson v. Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson v. Greene, 298 S.W. 209, 174 Ark. 1010, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 565 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

McHaNey, J.

On the 20th clay of March, 1926, appel-lee, Rheamona Surridge Greene, entered into a contract of agency with one F. M. Messer for the sale of certain' real estate located in the city of Walnut Ridge, which is as follows, to-wit:

“I have this day placed with F. M. Messer for sale the property described on the reverse side of this card, of which I am the owner. The said Messer shall have the exclusive agency for the sale of the property for a term of three months from date hereof, and thereafter until notified by me in writing of the .withdrawal from sale, and I authorize the said Messer to sell and convey and contract with the purchaser for the sale and conveyance by warranty deed of said property, according to the price and terms herein specified, or any price or terms I may hereafter authorize the said Messer, in writing or verbally, to accept. In case of sale, abstract of title to be furnished by me,".and warranty deed with proper relinquishment of dower, properly acknowledged, to be delivered on receipt.of purchase price. Price $5,500 net, $....gross. If the property be. sold or in any manner disposed of during .period above stated, no matter by whom or in what mamier, or after the above period, on information obtained through the said Mes-ser, I ag'ree to pay a commission of 3 per cent.
‘ ‘ Hoxie, Ark., 20th day of March, 1926. Signature: Rheamona Surridge Greene. Client’s address, Walnut Ridge, Ark. ”

On the reverse side appears the following:

“Section.......township 17-1-E., range 8, lots btwn. Pine and Vine Streets,- block.., between E. Front and E. Second Str. Addition, town of Walnut Ridge. Possession immediately.:..'Date.”

Thereafter, .on April 20,1926, Messer secured a purchaser in the person of appellant, John K. Gibson, for this property for a consideration of $5,000, of which $2,000 was to be cash, $1,000 due the next fall, with eight per cent, interest, and the assumption of a $2,000 note to Barnett Brothers of Batesville, and a contract was prepared by Gibson’s attorney, on memoranda furnished by H. L. Ponder, attorney for Mrs. Greene, in his own handwriting, and in this contract Josephine R. Gibson, the wife of appellant, was named as the purchaser.

It is admitted by all of the parties that Prank Pace of Little Rock held a mortgage on this and other property of the appellee, Mrs. Greene, to secure a large sum of money due him on a promissory note, and that, before Mrs. Greene could convey a good title to the property, it would be necessary for Mr. Pace to release this property from his mortgage. Appellant contends that he was advised by both Messer and Ponder that Pace would release this property from his mortgage to any one who would purchase it, and appellee contends that the matter would have to be taken up with Pace in order to get a release of this property from the mortgage. The contract so prepared was presented to Ponder and Mrs. Greene, and both Mrs. Greene and Ponder came to Little Rock, presented the contract to'Pace, and he declined to release this property from the mortgage in Gibson’s favor, but agreed, if it were sold to appellee, Z. M. McCarroll, he would release. Mrs. Greene returned from Little Rock on the evening of April 22, and, when she got off the train, she saw Messer and talked to him about the matter of the sale, and, she says, told him that she could not make the contract, for the reason that Pace would not release the mortgage, and told him to do nothing further about the matter; that he should make no further arrangements regarding the sale of the property. This was denied by Messer. Ponder went from Little Rock to Fayette-ville, and returned to Walnut Ridge the following Sunday, which was April 25, and Messer talked to him over the telephone, making an engagement to see him at his office the next morning, April 26, and, according to Ponder, Messer came to see him the next morning, and he told Messer that it was not satisfactory with Pace for Mrs. Greene to make the sale to Gibson, and that he would not release Ms mortgage, and told Mm to let the matter drop where it wias, consider the matter ont of his hands, and not to do anything further with it; that, so far as Messer was concerned, the matter was closed; that they would pay him his commission for making the sale, but that he needn’t do anything* further about it. Messer denies having these conversations with Ponder, and thereafter, on the same day, April 26, he, assuming to act under authority of the written contract between him and Mrs. Greene, entered into a contract with appellant, which undertook to bind Mrs. Greene to convey the property to appellant, on the same terms and conditions as the proposed contract of April 20 between her and Mrs. Josephine R. Gibson, and without taking into consideration the necessity of the release of the mortgage thereon held by Pace. A copy of the written contract between Messer, as agent, and appellant was, on the same date, mailed to Mrs. Greene by registered letter, which was delivered on April 27, and this contract was also duly filed and recorded in the recorder’s office. On the night of the 27th of April Mrs. Greene executed and delivered a deed to appellee, McCarroll, for the same consideration and upon the same terms as the proposed contract with appellant, with the exception that Pace had agreed to release this property from Ms mortgage in favor of McCarroll.

Under this state of facts, and others not necessary to discuss, in view of the point hereinafter decided, on which the case hinges, appellant brought suit for specific performance of his contract, on which issue was joined, which resulted in the court’s finding1 that there was no equity in appellant’s complaint on which to base a decree of specific performance, dismissed his complaint for want of equity, and canceled the contract entered into between him and Messer on the 26th day of April, from which comes this appeal.

We think the decree of the court is sustained by a fair preponderance of the evidence, both as to the fact that there was a mortgage on this property in favor of Pace, which■ would have to be released before Mrs.Greene could make a good deed conveying a clear title thereto, and as to the fact that Messer’s authority to act as her agent before the contract of salé to appellant was entered into between Messer and appellant was revoked. Not only wias Pace’s mortgage of record, which was constructive notice to appellant that she could not convey a good title to the -property with that mortgage covering it, but they both had actual knowledge of the existence of such mortgage, as they both claimed that they were assured by both Ponder and appellee, Mrs. .Greene, that Pace would release. Nor do we think that the fact that the release of this mortgage was not made a condition of sale in the contract between Messer and Mrs. Greene, and the fact that the memor-anda made by Ponder on the 20th of April, on which the contract between Mrs. Greene and Josephine R. Gibson was drawn, omitted the condition relative to Pace’s mortgage, are' of sufficient weight to overcome their positive testimony that this was, at all times, one of the conditions of . sale, that is, that Pace would have to release his mortgage before any sale could be made. The contract between Messer and Mrs. Greene contemplated that the price might have to be reduced. It did not undertake to fix any terms upon which Messer might sell.

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 209, 174 Ark. 1010, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-greene-ark-1927.