Holmgren Brothers, Inc. v. Ballard

534 P.2d 611, 1975 Utah LEXIS 674
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1975
Docket13844
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 534 P.2d 611 (Holmgren Brothers, Inc. v. Ballard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmgren Brothers, Inc. v. Ballard, 534 P.2d 611, 1975 Utah LEXIS 674 (Utah 1975).

Opinion

MAUGHAN, Justice:

In June of 1973, Gerald Ballard (hereafter defendant) orally agreed with Holm-gren Brothers, Inc., (hereafter plaintiff) to convey to plaintiff approximately 160 acres of real property situated in Hansel Valley, Box Elder County. Plaintiff sued defendant, his wife Winona Ballard, and Seymour Greaves, a single man, defendant’s seller under a real estate contract covering the 160 acres, the subject matter of the oral contract. The court, sitting without a jury, decreed specific performance, and it is from this judgment that defendants appeal.

Pursuant to this oral offer to sell defendant and plaintiff (acting through one Nyman Holmgren, plaintiff’s president) drove to Logan, Utah, where defendant’s contract of purchase was held in escrow at the Walker Bank & Trust Company. There the abstract to the property was delivered to plaintiff, and the arrangements were that plaintiff should take clear title, but do so by taking a deed directly from defendant’s seller, one Seymour Greaves, because defendant was sure that title coming from Greaves would be clear, and plaintiff joined with defendant in thinking that was the best way to do it. Thereafter plaintiff and defendant called on a banker at First Security Bank in Tremonton. It was here that plaintiff drew a check in the amount of $18,500 payable to the order of “First Security Bank Agent,” with a note at the top of the check “160 acres ground.” The banker issued a receipt to plaintiff showing the $18,500 and containing the legend “To pay in full 160 acres of land when the title has been cleared and deed recorded.” Both the check and receipt are dated June 15, 1973.

At this time plaintiff knew that defendant was in financial trouble, that defendant wanted to sell because he needed the money, and that defendant was obligated to pay several judgments. Plaintiff and defendant discussed the arrangement of the deed moving directly from Greaves to the plaintiff, and defendant was under the impression that were this to be done the judgments could be avoided, so far as this transaction was concerned. Fortunately, plaintiff submitted the abstract to its attorney and was advised that, if the transaction proceeded in such fashion, plaintiff *613 would incur an encumbrance greater in amount than the agreed purchase price, and that such a deed, as proffered by defendant, was not acceptable. Thereafter, counsel for plaintiff and for defendant began negotiations in an attempt to put the arrangement together, all of which came to naught.

Shortly after plaintiff had refused to take the proffered conveyance from defendant’s seller, plaintiff entered the quarter section with defendant’s consent, weeded and disced it. Also, at this time, when plaintiff discussed the weeding with defendant, plaintiff testified he asked defendant if the deal were still on, and defendant replied that it was.

Approximately a month later, defendant had sold other property to satisfy mortgages thereon, and had retired the judgments and other obligations. The other property was sold to an uncle of plaintiff’s president. Shortly thereafter plaintiff approached defendant, asked about the “deal,” and was told there would be no sale. Thereafter, plaintiff, without permission or discussion with defendant, drilled the quarter section in wheat, and testified that was done because he thought that such action may be helpful in enforcing the contract. At this time defendant’s equipment was yet on the land.

The court found an oral contract for the sale of the described premises for the price of $18,500; that the purchase price of $18,500 was delivered by plaintiff to the defendant’s banker at defendant’s request, the defendants Ballard agreeing to perfect or clear the title and deliver marketable title to plaintiff; that pursuant to this contract plaintiff took the exclusive possession of said land, improved the property, weeding and discing and preparing the same for planting, and was in the process of planting the ground with wheat, when defendants Ballard stated they were disavowing their oral contract. It is on these grounds that plaintiff claims part performance and the right to enforcement.

The court concluded that plaintiff had performed the verbal contract by (1) payment of the purchase price, (2) taking possession of the premises, and (3) improving the land, and that such performance was sufficient to remove the contract from the prohibitions of the statute of frauds.

These findings are not supported by the evidence. There is no evidence to show that the banker was defendants’ banker or that the payment was delivered at defendants’ request. Indeed, the banker testified that he considered himself to be the agent of plaintiff, then speculated that he could have been the agent of defendant. There is no evidence showing that defendants Ballard agreed to perfect the title and deliver the same to plaintiff. There is no evidence to show plaintiff took exclusive possession of the land. There is evidence to show that plaintiff weeded and disced the land, but there is no evidence to show that plaintiff was in the process of planting the ground when defendants Ballard disavowed their oral contract. As a matter of fact, plaintiff testified that defendants said there would be no sale a week or two prior to plaintiff’s voluntary entry upon the land, for that purpose.

Our statute of frauds 1 provides:

Every contract for the . . . sale, of any lands, or any interest in lands, shall be void unless the contract, or some note or memorandum thereof, is in writing subscribed by the party by whom the lease or sale is to be made, or by his lawful agent thereunto authorized in writing.

A companion statute 2 provides:

Nothing in this chapter contained shall be construed to abridge the powers of courts to compel the specific performance of agreements in case of part performance thereof.

The doctrine of part performance, in the state of Utah, has not been reduced to a formula, as it has in some of our sister states. Thus, decisions of this court do not *614 stay the hand of equity in the equitable situations created by oral contracts for the transfer of an interest in land, but the statute is preserved and remains to serve its purpose — the prevention of fraud and injustice.

An analysis of our statute, with its qualifying companion allowing specific performance, and the decisions of this court, most of which, to 1964, are noted in Vol. 9, No. 1, Utah Law Review, p. 91, give us criteria describing conditions, which must necessarily exist before an oral contract for the sale of an interest in land can be enforced.

The oral contract and its terms must be clear, definite, mutually understood, and established by clear, unequivocal and definite testimony, or other evidence of the same quality. 3 In addition, there must be acts of part performance which in equity are considered sufficient to take the case out of the statute of frauds: (1) Any improvements made must be substantial, or valuable, or beneficial. 4

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Bluebook (online)
534 P.2d 611, 1975 Utah LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmgren-brothers-inc-v-ballard-utah-1975.