Hotz v. Equitable Life Assurance Society

276 N.W. 413, 224 Iowa 552
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1937
DocketNo. 44052.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 276 N.W. 413 (Hotz v. Equitable Life Assurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hotz v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 276 N.W. 413, 224 Iowa 552 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Hamilton, C. J.

The transaction out of which this litigation arose is a very simple one, but the legal questions involved are not so simple or easy of solution. The contract, if there was a contract, consisted of a paper designated “FARM OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE BLANK”, pertinent provisions of which are as follows:

“Cedar Rapids, la., June 24,1935.

“To R. J. Harrison, Realtor, Agent for owner of the property hereinafter described:

“-hereby offer to purchase the following described real estate, to-wit: (Here follows a description of real estate) for the sum of $47,500.00, Forty seven thousand and five hundred dollars, and I agree to pay said sum for the purchase of said property, to the owner thereof or to his agent, on terms as follows: Three thousand dollars ($3000.00) on execution of *554 this contract, receipt of wbieh is hereby acknowledged. (Here follow provisions referring to deferred payments, and with reference to taxes and insurance and possession.)

“-hereby tender three thousand dollars ($3000.00) as part purchase price of the above described property, said amount to be returned to purchaser in case this offer is not accepted; otherwise, to be applied upon the cash payment above provided for; but in case - shall fail to complete this contract, the amount paid hereon may, at seller’s option, be retained as liquidated damages. In consideration of $1.00 in hand paid and for other good and valuable consideration, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged I hereby agree that this offer shall be good and binding upon - if accepted by the owner of the above described real estate on or before July 15, 1935.

“ [Signed] Ed F. Hotz.

“-, the owner of the above described property, hereby accepts the above offer and agrees to sell the said real estate according to the terms thereof.

“Accepted--“Acceptance dated -, 19-.

Accompanying this written offer was the check for the down payment, made payable to the appellant. Written thereon in the lower left hand corner are these words: “Tobe cashed when contract is signed. ” It is established without dispute that plaintiff refused to sign the offer until these words were written upon the check.

The question of whether or not there was an enforeible contract depends upon the question of acceptance of this offer. It is not claimed that there was any formal acceptance. The agent of the company, in disregard of the conditions written on the cheek, deposited the same in the company’s account in the Merchants National Bank at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in the regular course of business. It is claimed by appellant that this was done by inadvertence, mistake or accident, and the legal question presented is whether or not the cashing of this check under such circumstances amounted to an acceptance of the plaintiff’s offer.

The pleadings present further collateral issues, namely, the limited express authority of the agent, and whether or not such *555 secret limited authority would avoid the effect of the cashing of the check; the question of estoppel on the company in setting up limited authority, in the face of apparent authority on the part of the agent to endorse and deposit checks of the company, and the question of estoppel, due to the alleged acceptance and retention of the $3,000; the ambiguity of the contract when the statement on the check is considered with the statement in the written offer; whether the plaintiff has sustained the burden of proof in establishing either actual or apparent authority on the part of the agent to make the contract or bind the company to acceptance by depositing the check.

The case is ably argued on both sides, but counsel on neither side has been successful in presenting the court with any authority where the facts are parallel with the facts in the instant case. Appellant cites and relies upon a line of cases which discuss the question of accident, fraud or mistake in the contract itself, or where there are uncertain provisions in the terms of the contract, and the court has refused to grant specific performance because of such conditions. But there is no mistake in any of the terms and provisions of this offer. It is a simple offer to purchase at an agreed price certain real estate on certain terms, and the only shadow of ambiguity which- the appellant points out is in regard to the $3,000 down payment in the contract. This is tendered as part of the purchase price, and the amount is to be returned to purchaser in case the offer is not accepted, and the restriction is written on the check, “To be cashed when contract is signed. ” It is contended that this ambiguity is such as to render the contract unenforeible in an action for specific performance. We think the alleged ambiguity is more fanciful than real, and the authorities relied upon are not applicable.

Appellant’s only other contention is that the agent in charge of the Cedar^ Rapids office, with whom all the transactions were had, had only limited authority, and that the burden was on the plaintiff to establish the authority of the agent to bind the company, where the agent ivas one with limited authority. It is undisputed in the record that in the written instructions to the agent he was given no authority to dispose of real estate or to enter into real estate contracts. His authority, according to the written instructions introduced in evidence, was limited to the submission of proposals for the sale of real estate *556 to tbe borne office. In our examination of these instructions we discovered no specific authority for receiving down payment checks, or even depositing’ them in the company’s bank account. There is no claim that the plaintiff had any knowledge of the secret instructions existing between the company and its agent. The appellant is a foreign corporation with its home office in New York, and the one avenue of approach to this great corporation was through its manager and agent who was in absolute control of its business in the Cedar Rapids area. The evidence shows that this corporation had title to some 1,000 farms and held loans on 1,500 other farms situated in 42 different counties in this area, the investment amounting to more than twenty-five million dollars. It maintained an office force which occupied the whole sixth floor of a large office building in Cedar Rapids and displayed a sign on which was inscribed, ‘! The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, Farm Investment Department, A. J. Stanfield, Manager.” Mr. Stanfield was also held out to the public as “Loan Supervisor,” and “Loan Supervisor, Mortgage Loan and Real Estate Department. ’ ’

The evidence shows without dispute that the customary and usual way of handling deals of this character, namely, offers to purchase with accompanying down payments, was to forward the offers to the home office for their approval, deposit the down payment cheek in the company’s account at the Merchants National Bank at Cedar Rapids, along with other money belonging to the company in a single account, and keep a separate account of these down payments on the company’s books in the Cedar Rapids office in what was designated “suspense account.” In 1935, 1,025 such deals were handled through this office. Whether down payments accompanied all of them is not shown. The plain implication from the evidence is that this custom had been followed habitually.

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Bluebook (online)
276 N.W. 413, 224 Iowa 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotz-v-equitable-life-assurance-society-iowa-1937.