Horner v. Allah Farms, Inc.

17 N.E.2d 844, 106 Ind. App. 655, 1938 Ind. App. LEXIS 28
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1938
DocketNo. 16,081.
StatusPublished

This text of 17 N.E.2d 844 (Horner v. Allah Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horner v. Allah Farms, Inc., 17 N.E.2d 844, 106 Ind. App. 655, 1938 Ind. App. LEXIS 28 (Ind. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Curtis, C. J.

This action in the trial court was commenced by the appellee against the appellant upon certain purchase money promissory notes given by the appellant to Melrose Properties, Inc., a Florida corporation, in connection with the purchase by the appellant from it of a .piece of Florida real estate, it being alleged in the complaint that the appellee is the assignee and owner of said notes. The purchase price of said real estate was $3,600.00 and the principal amount of the notes sued upon is $2,250.00.

The complaint was in one paragraph to which the appellant filed answers in general denial; payment; that the plaintiff (appellee) was not the owner of said notes; and no consideration. An amended answer of failure of consideration was also filed as well as additional paragraphs of answer setting up alleged inequity and hardship upon the appellant and unjust enrichment of the appellee together with rescission and fraud. Two more affirmative paragraphs were also filed by the appellant based respectively upon damages for the alleged breach of the contract to convey the said real estate and for cancellation of said notes. The appellee replied in two paragraphs, to the second of which the appellant filed a general denial closing the issues.

*657 Upon the issues thus made the matter was submitted to the court for trial without the intervention of a jury. Upon proper request the court made a special finding of facts and stated its conclusions of law thereon, pursuant to which judgment was rendered in favor of the appellee against the appellant upon the complaint and against the appellant also upon each paragraph of answer or counterclaim.

The appellant seasonably filed a motion for a new trial which was overruled but no question is brought before us as to that ruling. The errors assigned in this court and relied upon for reversal are alleged errors as to each of the court’s five conclusions of law.

By the failure of the appellant to challenge, in this court, the finding of facts, we will assume that the facts found by the court were correctly found by the court under the evidence and within the issues. In the appellant’s brief he expressly admits that “there are no disputed facts.”

The five conclusions of law stated by the trial court and challenged in this court are as follows:

“1. The law is with the plaintiff that it is entitled to recover of the defendant the principal and interest on said notes sued upon, and $700.00 attorney’s fees.
“2. The fact that the defendant did not receive the deed of conveyance made in 1925. does not afford the defendant any defense to the notes sued upon.
“3. The fact that the value of real estate, particularly the value of the lot purchased by the defendant from Melrose Properties, Inc., rapidly declined between the time defendant was entitled to receive the deed and the time that the deed was forwarded to him in March, 1927, does not constitute any basis for defense by the defendant to the notes sued upon nor any cause of action for damages on his several paragraphs of counter-claims.
“4. The defendant is not entitled to recover upon *658 any paragraph of his counter-claim and plaintiff is entitled to have its costs.
“5. The plaintiff is entitled to recover upon the several notes sued herein, $2,250.00 principal, $1,-972.55 interest and $700.00 attorney’s fee, a total of $4,922.55, which judgment should bear interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, from March 16, 1937, until paid and plaintiff is entitled to recover its costs herein laid out and expended, taxed at $.....................”

The appellant in his brief, in respect to conclusions of law numbered 1, 2, and 3 says: “These three conclusions are so inter-related that we consider them together, conclusions 2 and 3 being explanatory of conclusion No. 1.” We, therefore, will consider said three conclusions together.

The special finding of facts is as follows:

“Melrose Properties, Inc., from 1925 to 1930 was engaged in the sale of real estate at Miami, Dade County, in the State of Florida, selling individual lots for a large subdivision owned by it. Defendant, at all of said times, was a resident of the city of Knox, Starke County, Indiana, and had never personally inspected any of the land of said Mel-rose Properties, Inc., but had acquired knowledge concerning the same through two of his friends who had purchased lots from said Melrose Properties, Inc., one Guy Wells and one Mrs. Methel Kreuter, wife of the defendant’s partner, and who was sales agent for Melrose Properties and its general sales agent, E. D. Noe & Son, Inc., on a, commission basis.
2.
“From 1925 and shortly prior thereto, up to the spring of 1926, highly inflatory values had occurred in the real estate field, especially in and about Miami in the State of Florida, and said property of Melrose Properties, Inc., is located at the northwest outskirts of Miami, and in the'year 1925 the limits of said city of Miami were extended to embrace the said real estate holdings of Melrose Properties, which as late as 1924, was farm land, much of it in pasture. The wild speculative boom in Florida in 1924 to 1926 prompted its subdivision into lots and *659 a program to build on part of it a large hotel to cost from one to two million dollars. These facts were communicated to- the defendant by Mr. Wells and Methel-Kreuter and he was urged by them to invest in lots so subdivided by said Melrose Properties, Inc., and from such reports believed he could make money by purchasing such lots. Being so induced to act, he did, on the 28th day of August, 1925, agree to purchase a vacant lot No. 19 in Block 56 of Melrose Heights for $3,600.00, of which he agreed to and did then pay ten per cent to wit: $360.00 in cash and the balance of $3,240.00 payable in semi-annual payments of $450.00 each, it being agreed in writing by Melrose Properties, Inc., that when one-quarter of the purchase price was paid there should be given to the defendant a warranty deed for the property. Construction of said large hotel was started but was never completed.
3.
“On September 28,1925, Melrose Properties, Inc., having been paid a total of one-quarter of the purchase price by the defendant, mailed to him six promissory notes, each in the sum of $450.00 and a mortgage to secure the same on the real estate purchased, for his execution, the promissory notes representing the balance of the purchase price. Transmittal of these notes and mortgage was accompanied by a letter by E. D. Noe & Sons, Inc., to the effect that as soon as notes and mortgage were executed and returned a warranty deed, which was then ready for delivery, would be mailed to the defendant. Defendant followed the instructions contained in the letter, executed the notes and mortgage upon said lots, and forwarded the same to said selling agents. When the notes and mortgage were received by Melrose Properties, Inc., the selling agents recorded the mortgage, and procured from the owner a warranty deed to the defendant for the lot.

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Related

Allah Farms, Inc. v. Horner
200 N.E. 740 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 N.E.2d 844, 106 Ind. App. 655, 1938 Ind. App. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horner-v-allah-farms-inc-indctapp-1938.