Hasenauer v. Durbin

346 N.W.2d 695, 216 Neb. 714, 1984 Neb. LEXIS 982
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1984
Docket83-002
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 346 N.W.2d 695 (Hasenauer v. Durbin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hasenauer v. Durbin, 346 N.W.2d 695, 216 Neb. 714, 1984 Neb. LEXIS 982 (Neb. 1984).

Opinion

Shanahan, J.

Clinton and Mary Hasenauer and Albert and Arnella Corliss filed suit against Oliver and Mildred Durbin in the Lincoln County District Court, namely, a suit seeking specific performance of an agreement tó convey real estate, and damages. Summary judgment was granted to Durbins, and the suit was dismissed by the court. We affirm.

Hasenauers lived at Wallace, Nebraska. Corlisses lived at Yuma, Colorado, where Albert Corliss was a farmer and rancher, and a realtor licensed in Colorado. Albert Corliss is the brother of Mary Hasenauer. Oliver Durbin is a retired farmer living in North Platte.

On March 14, 1979, the personal representative of the estate of Bemiece A. Moore, deceased, held a real estate auction at the Lincoln County Courthouse to sell estate land consisting of approximately 1,040 acres of pasture.

At the auction a mutual friend introduced Oliver Durbin to Clinton Hasenauer and Albert Corliss. As bidding progressed at the auction and while Durbins were bidding on the entire tract of 1,040 acres, Hasenauer and Corliss indicated their interest in acquiring the south half of Section 27, a part of the tract on which Durbins were bidding. Hasenauer and Corliss claim that an agreement was reached with Oliver Durbin during the auction, namely, Hasenauer and Corliss would receive the south half of Section 27 for a payment of $301.50 per acre for the half-section, if Durbins were successful bidders on the entire tract. Durbins were high bidders, and *716 at the conclusion of the auction paid a downpayment to the estate, 15 percent of the Durbin bid.

Shortly after the auction on March 14, Durbins, Hasenauers, and Corlisses went to Durbins’ residence, where Oliver Durbin signed and delivered to Hasenauers the following receipt:

“3-14-79
$7,236
Received of Clinton or Mary Hasenauer Seven Thousand Two Hundred Thirty Six «fe no/100 Dollars. 15% of South 160 acres of Sec. 27-9-33. Balance of $41,004.00 on this 160 acres when papers are finished by Att Don Pederson. All paper, revenue stamps and split abstract cost at expense of buyer.
phone 532-0874 /s/ O. L. Durbin
Buyer /s/ Clinton Hasenauer 601 South Elm
/s/ Mary L. Hasenauer No. Platte, Nebr.”

Oliver Durbin contemporaneously gave the same form of receipt to Albert and Amelia Corliss. In exchange for the receipts, Oliver Durbin received separate checks from Hasenauers and Corlisses. Each of the two checks was dated March 14, 1979, and was in the amount of $7,236, as indicated by the receipts.

There was no contact involving Durbins, Hasenauers, and Corlisses until March 20 when the parties met at an attorney’s office in North Platte. Early on the morning of March 20, Oliver Durbin gave the attorney some information concerning the Hasenauer-Corliss transaction. When the parties arrived at the attorney’s office at midmoming on March 20, a memorandum prepared by the attorney was submitted for inspection by Durbins, Hasenauers, and Corlisses. Among the terms of sale contained in this initial memorandum was a “buy-back” provision, namely, before there was a sale of the south half of Section 27 during a period of 15 years from March 14, 1979, the land would first be offered to Durbins at $301.50 per acre. In the course of the meeting on March 20, Durbins also demanded “water protection,” that is, irrigation on the south half of Sec *717 tion 27 would be stopped pending determination of the cause of any water deficiency in stock or domestic wells on Durbin land adjacent to the half section in question. Later in the course of the morning on March 20, a second memorandum was prepared and signed by each of the parties before a notary public. In addition to the provision for “water protection,” as proposed by Durbins, the second memorandum contained a “buy-back” arrangement existing for a period of 10 years from March 14, 1979, at $301.50 per acre, and a reservation of a 30-foot right-of-way across the Hasenauer-Corliss half section to Durbins’ land lying north of the half section. There is no question that the parties read, signed, and acknowledged this second memorandum on March 20.

On April 10 the personal representative of the Moore estate delivered a deed to Oliver Durbin. On April 23 Hasenauers and Corlisses met with Oliver Durbin in the attorney’s office in North Platte. Hasenauers and Corlisses had sought financing from the Federal Land Bank of North Platte to buy the half section. However, when a representative of the federal land bank noticed the “buy-back” provision in the agreement of March 20, he indicated that any federal land bank loan to Hasenauers and Corlisses would have to be “restructured,” that is, Hasenauers and Corlisses would have to provide additional security for the federal land bank loan. Eventually, additional security was supplied and the loan was approved.

On April 27 the attorney placed a telephone call to Albert Corliss in Colorado. In that telephone conversation Corliss refused to go through with the March 20 agreement due to the “water reservation.” Shortly after and on the same day as the attorney’s telephone call to Albert Corliss, Hasenauer also refused to complete the transaction in view of Corliss’ refusal to carry out the agreement of March 20.

Durbins never gave a deed to Corlisses or Hasenauers, and on June 5 Durbins returned the *718 March 14 checks to Hasenauers and Corlisses. Accompanying return of the checks was a request by Durbins that any personal property of Hasenauers or Corlisses be removed from the half section. Durbins gave Hasenauers and Corlisses until May 28, 1979, to perform the agreement of March 20, 1979.

The next event concerning the real estate transaction occurred on June 13, 1980, when Hasenauers and Corlisses sued Durbins for specific performance based on the agreement claimed to have been achieved on March 14, and also sought damages for Durbins’ failure to convey the real estate. In their answer to the petition Durbins alleged the written agreement signed by the parties on March 20, 1979, and recited that any prior agreement between the parties was “merged” into the March 20 agreement which was the “sole agreement” of the parties. In their reply Hasenauers and Corlisses did not raise any affirmative defense to the agreement of March 20.

At a pretrial conference on June 21, 1982, the trial court determined that the nature of the action was specific performance and that the issues were: (1) Whether there was an agreement between the parties for acquisition of the real estate; (2) The terms of such agreement; (3) Whether the agreement of March 20 was a complete written agreement superseding any agreement existing before March 20; and (4) Whether there was consideration for the agreement of March 20. None of the parties objected to the pretrial conference order.

Durbins, on June 28, moved for summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
346 N.W.2d 695, 216 Neb. 714, 1984 Neb. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasenauer-v-durbin-neb-1984.