Hampe v. Sage

125 P. 53, 87 Kan. 536, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 191
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 6, 1912
DocketNo. 17,478
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 125 P. 53 (Hampe v. Sage) 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
Hampe v. Sage, 125 P. 53, 87 Kan. 536, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 191 (kan 1912).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

Action for damages for the breach of a contract'for the exchange of lands. Thé jury in answer to special questions found the value of the Oklahoma lands which the defendant agreed to convey to plaintiff, the value of plaintiff’s land in Shawnee county, Kansas, which he was to convey to the defendant, and returned a general verdict in plaintiff’s favor for the difference, amounting to $2647.66. Judgment was rendered thereon for the plaintiff and the defendant appeals.

A former judgment for the plaintiff was reversed on the ground that the petition was demurrable under the statute of frauds because the contract for the sale and exchange of the land was evidenced by a memorandum which failed to describe the Oklahoma land or to state any fact, beyond its acreage and the county of its location, which might help to identify it. (Hampe v. Sage, 82 Kan. 728, 109 Pac. 408.) In the opinion it was intimated that the petition would not have been demurrable if it had contained an allegation that the land referred to in the memorandum was the only land in that county owned by the defendant. After the cause was remanded, the plaintiff amended his petition as follows:

“Said tract of land was the only land in Pottawatomie county, Oklahoma, which said defendant then, owned or claimed to own or have dominion over or con[538]*538trol of, or in which he had or claimed to have any interest.”

The defendant’s answer, besides a general denial, alleged that at the time the memorandum was executed, the land described therein was, as plaintiff well knew, Indian land allotted and patented to members of the tribe of the Pottawatomie Indians and not to the defendant; and further pleaded an act of congress approved February 8, 1887, providing that any conveyance or contract made touching the said lands before the expiration of the period of twenty-five years mentioned in said patents and said act of congress, shall be absolutely null and void. The answer set out copies of the patents to the lands in question, and alleged that the twenty-five-year period from the date of the allotment and issue of the trust patents had not expired or been abrogated at the date of the alleged contract with defendant. The reply was an unverified general denial.

On the trial plaintiff proved by two real-estate agents of Topeka that defendant listed the Oklahoma land with them for sale. They produced the original entries in their books showing the description of the land with Sage marked as. the owner, and testified that he dictated the description, read over the same and approved it; that he stated to them that he .owned the land and would sell it at $20 an acre, and that it was the only land he owned or controlled in Oklahoma. The plaintiff proved that the defendant made similar statements to him on different occasions, and also to witness Hewins, who went to see the land a short time before the contract in question was entered into. The first claim of error is that this testimony should have been excluded, that it was an attempt by parol evidence to establish an essential element of a contract required to be in writing. It is argued that the memorandum does not say that the land referred to was that listed with these real-estate agents or that referred to in the conversations to which the witnesses were permitted to [539]*539testify. In support of this contention the former opinion is relied upon wherein it was held that to allow the land to be identified by proof that the defendant had showed to plaintiff a certain tract of land in Pottawatomie county, Oklahoma, containing 760 acres-, and' that this was the land referred to in the memorandum, would be the same as to permit an.essential element of the contract to be supplied by parol; that while it is always competent to offer parol evidence to identify the description, it is never admissible for the purpose of supplying a description which the parties have omitted from the writing. This statement of the law was made in answer to plaintiff’s contention on the former hearing' that the defect in the petition was cured by alleging and proving that defendant, previous to the execution of the memorandum, had showed him a certain tract in Pottawatomie county, Oklahoma, containing the acreage mentioned, and that this was the land referred to in the memorandum; It was held that proof of this character would have been admissible and sufficient to render the contract definite, provided the memorandum itself, after the reference to the Oklahoma land, had contained the words “being the tract recently showed by Sage to Hampe.” (Hampe v. Sage, supra, 731.)

The contention that the court erred in the admission of testimony showing statements and admissions made by Sage to the effect that he owned this tract of land and that it was the only land in Pottawatomie county, Oklahoma, that he did own or claim to own or control, the contention that the court erred in refusing to sustain the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, as well as most of the other contentions raised by the defendant, are met and fully answered in the former opinion. It was there said:

“Under the authorities cited, a recital that Sage owned the land which he undertook to convey can be found in the contract itself, by a liberal interpretation [540]*540of its. terms. Proof that he owned no other land in that county would then render the description, as so-interpreted, absolutely definite.” (Hampe v. Sage, 82 Kan. 728, 733, 109 Pac. 408.)

That Sage owned the land he undertook to convey may by a liberal interpretation of the terms of the memorandum be found in the writing itself. All that was necessary to make the position good as against a demurrer was to plead the fact that he owned or claimed to own only the stated number of acres in that county. The plaintiff amended his petition by so alleging. On the trial proof that defendant owned or claimed to own that number of acres and no more in Pottawatomie county, Oklahoma, was all that was necessary to render the description of the land which the parties had in. mind, and about which they negotiated, absolutely definite. The defendant’s statements made at or about the time the contract was entered into were admissible as proof .that he claimed to own land of that acreage so situated and that he owned no other land in that county. Proof of his statement that in fact he owned this land could not hurt him because the memorandum itself is to be interpreted as so stating.

Another contention of the defendant is that since the unverified reply -admitted the issue of trust patents for these lands and the provision of the act of congress declaring any conveyance or contract with reference to such lands absolutely void, there was an utter failure of proof showing that Sage owned the lands, and, on the contrary, an admission that he could not possibly own or convey them. In the brief it was said:

“This clause in the Act of Congress, of course, does, not directly apply to any contract made with George Hampe by Aaron Sage, but it does apply to any conveyance or contract made by the allottee members of' the Pottawatomie tribe, to whom this land was patented, and by disqualifying them from conveying or contracting to convey to another, renders it apparent that Aaron Sage was not the owner of any of this particular-[541]

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Bluebook (online)
125 P. 53, 87 Kan. 536, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hampe-v-sage-kan-1912.