Harper v. Kellar

35 S.E. 667, 110 Ga. 420, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 6, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 667 (Harper v. Kellar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper v. Kellar, 35 S.E. 667, 110 Ga. 420, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 452 (Ga. 1900).

Opinion

Fish, J.

This was- a suit for the specific performance of a parol agreement for the sale of land. There was a demurrer to the petition, upon the ground that there was no equity in it. The demurrer was "sustained, and we are to determine whether the court below erred in thus ruling. It is not until we reach the fourth paragraph of the petition, and only in that paragraph, that we find the statement of the parol agreement which the plaintiff asks the court to specifically enforce. This agreement is there stated as follows: '“On or about the last of February, 1898, your petitioner made with the said J. Frank Kellar a certain other parol agreement, by which your petitioner was to take the purchase of the four hundred dollar tract, your petitioner to-pay to the said J. Frank Kellar four hundred dollars and take his deed to the same.” So the plaintiff seeks to compel Kellar to convey to him the “four hundred dollar tract.” It is apparent that the expression, “the four hundred dollar tract,” in and of itself, describes nothing. If this were all of the agreement, it needs no argument to show that no court of equity could ever enforce it, because of the court’s inability to lay hold of the particular tract of land which was the subject of the contract. The allegation that the agreement was that the plaintiff “was to take the purchase of the four hundred dollar tract” would seem to imply that there is something elsewhere in the petition by which the meaning of this expression can be ascertained. Nothing which comes after this allegation attempts to throw any light upon the meaning of this expression; and, from the words [421]*421themselves, one would naturally expect to find the explanation in the petition before this allegation is reached. Let us see whether this is true or not. The first paragraph of the petition is as follows: “That J. Frank Kellar, . .. owns title to a certain tract or parcel of land situate in the county of Elbert, State of Georgia, in the 192d district, G. M., of Elbert County, State of Georgia, adjoining the lands of W. E. Tate, E. B. Tate, and Mrs. Marie H. Harper, containing seventy-eight acres, more or less, which said tract of land was purchased by the said J. Frank Kellar from James L. Tate, of Elbert County, Georgia, on the 17th day of February, 1898, as evidenced by deed of date last mentioned, and recorded in book of deeds, QQ. of Elbert County, folio 114, on the 7th of March, 1898.” It will be seen that there is nothing here to indicate the purchase-price of this tract of land, nor any intimation that the land described is the subject-matter of the contract which the plaintiff wants specifically enforced. The second paragraph merely alleges that W. E. Tate, a tenant of Kellar, is in possession of this land under a •contract of rental for the year 1898. The third paragraph is as follows: “That your petitioner and the said J. Frank Kellar, .about the 20th of February, 1898, entered into a certain parol agreement by which they were to purchase two certain tracts of land in Elbert County, Georgia, your petitioner to furnish the sum of four hundred dollars in cash, and the said J. Frank Kellar the sum of one thousand dollars; your petitioner to pay thereafter the balance of his half of the purchase-money, and they to become joint owners of the two tracts of land; and, in pursuance of said parol agreement, your petitioner purchased of Jas. L. Tate, of Elbert County, Georgia, the tract of land herein described, paying as earnest to bind said bargain the sum of five dollars, and endeavored to purchase the other tract of land agreed upon from E. B. Tate, but failed to negotiate the jmrchase, on account of the failure of the said J. Frank Kellar to raise the thousand dollars.” There is nothing here which shows that the tract of land which Harper, the plaintiff, purchased from Jas. L. Tate was a “four hundred dollar tract,” and, if there were, its identity with the only tract described in the petition is neither alleged nor indicated, unless the words, [422]*422“the tract of land herein described,” can be construed to have this effect. To construe the words, “the tract of land herein described,” as referring to the land described in the first paragraph of the petition would necessarily involve a palpable contradiction; for how could Harper, in pursuance of a contract between himself and Kellar, entered into about the 20th day of .February, 1898, purchase of Tate a parcel of land which had already, on the 17th of February, 1898, been purchased by Kellar from Tate, and to which Tate had, on that very day, made Kellar a deed ? The fourth paragraph begins with the statement that, “when the said J. Frank Kellar was disappointed in raising the one thousand dollars which he was to furnish for the purchase of both of said tracts of land, he became dissatisfied with the purchase of the four hundred dollar tract hereinbefore described,” and then follows the allegation which we have heretofore quoted, setting up the parol agreement which the plaintiff seeks to have enforced.

Is it at all clear that “ the four hundred dollar tract hereinbefore described” is the tract described in the first paragraph, which Kellar purchased from Tate ? We think not. The use of the expression, “the four hundred dollar tract,” carries with it. the idea that there was more than one tract. The parties agreed to purchase two tracts, and, in pursuance of this agreement, the plaintiff purchased one tract from Tate, which, so far as can be ascertained from the petition, was the only land which was purchased under this agreement. When “Kellar was disappointed in raising the one thousand dollars which he was to furnish for the purchase of both of said tracts of land, he became dissatisfied with the purchase of the four hundred dollar tract.” One purchase, and only one, had been made in pursuance of the agreement, and that purchase was by Harper, the plaintiff, from James L. Tate. Does the plaintiff refer to the purchase of this tract, when he alleges that Kellar, being disappointed by his failure to raise the amount which he was to furnish to purchase both bodies of land, “became dissatisfied with the purchase of the four hundred dollar tract ?” If the court is to grope among obscure allegations and indulge in mere plausible guesswork, to arrive at the plaintiff’s meaning, is it not most natural [423]*423to suppose that this is the tract with the purchase of which Kellar became dissatisfied? But if this is “the four hundred dollar tract,” how can it be one and the same with the only land described in the petition, when that land was purchased, not by Harper, but by Kellar, and purchased by and conveyed to Kellar before the agreement between himself and Harper, in pursuance of which the latter made the purchase from Tate ? While it is alleged, in the eighth paragraph, “that on the 4th day of March, 1898, the said J. Frank Kellar, on a postal card written to your petitioner, made also a written agreement to carry out the terms of said parol agreement, and again on the 14th day of March, 1898, in a letter written to I. G. Swift, of Elberton, Georgia, expressed his willingness to carry out said parol agreement,” these allegations do not even tend, in any degree, to clear up the obscurity with reference to the particular land which was the subject-matter of the alleged contract. Neither the contents of the postal card nor those of the letter are stated, nor is a copy of either attached to the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 667, 110 Ga. 420, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-kellar-ga-1900.