Hutton v. HUTTON, ETC.

119 So. 2d 369, 239 Miss. 217, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 280
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1960
Docket41428
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 119 So. 2d 369 (Hutton v. HUTTON, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutton v. HUTTON, ETC., 119 So. 2d 369, 239 Miss. 217, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 280 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

*223 Lee, J.

Sam D. G. Hutton, by his bill of complaint against J. B. Hutton, Jr., Mrs. Rosalind Hutton Johnson, and Mrs. Mary McCutchan, sought to require specific performance by them of an alleged executory contract to sell to him a 507 acre tract of land, known as the Cooper Place, in Holmes County, Mississippi.

The defendants had received their interest in this land under the last will and testament of their mother, Mrs. Rosalind Gwin Hutton, who died on November 23, 1955. The testatrix had divided the place into three separate tracts, insofar as the surface was concerned, and had left the east 169 acres to Mrs. Johnson, the center 169 acres to Mrs. McCutchan, and the west 169 acres to J. B. Hutton, Jr. Insofar as mineral rights were concerned, the place was divided into five separate tracts of 101 2/5 acres each, and these rights in those tracts *224 were devised to .Sam, Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. McCutchan, Susan Van Honten Smith, and Charlton D. Hutton.

The alleged contract to sell arose in this way: On March 2, 1957, Sam, from Tchula, Mississippi, called his brother-in-law, Russ M. Johnson, husband of Mrs. Rosalind Hutton Johnson, over the telephone at Jackson and expressed his desire to buy the Cooper Place. Johnson let the defendants, who were all in the city at the time, know what had happened, and they, in turn, formulated their proposition for the sale, based on two letters, which Johnson, by prearrangement, delivered to Sam at Canton that afternoon.

The letters were dated March 2, 1957. One was as follows: “Hear Sam: Before we transact• business with you it will be necessary for you to give written expression of regret for and retraction of the statements you made to Mary Ryburn and Charlton on March 1, 1957. Yours sincerely, /s/ Rosalind /s/ Jim.” The other,, signed by J. B. Hutton, Jr., Mary Ryburn Hutton McCutchan and Rosalind Hutton Johnson, was as follows: “We will sell our rights by warranty deed in the 497 acres, more or less, (consisting of 209 acres of cultivated land and 298 acres of woodland), being the land devised us# by the will, of Mrs. R. Gr. Hutton,.and duly described in it, for $30,000 cash, reserving our mineral rights therein as given in the will. We will waive interest and fees on the 1956 rent note, and accept $1600 principal, as offered by you. We will ask you to pay the $1600 balance of 1957 rent agreed to with Mother and due 1 November 1957, because this item is governed by the will, as an asset applicable to estate debts, and the balance thereafter left is %th Susan’s. We will pay 1957 taxes. We would like for you to accept this offer, or decline it by letter within 2 weeks, and hold the offer open that long. If you accept it, and use due diligence, we will of course give reasonable time to close the transaction. * excluding of course the 112 acres in the cypress brake in a separate tract.”

*225 On March 4, 1957 Sam wrote as follows to Mrs. Johnson: “Any statement I made to any of yon that any of yon took offense to I express my regrets & or hereby retract same.” On the same date, he had his attorney to prepare a deed to the property and the same was left in the hands of W. H. Cox that day.

In a lengthy letter dated March 5, 1957, J. B. Hntton, Jr., among other things, advised Sam that he wonld have to pay over cash in exchange for the deed. On the same date Mrs. Johnson wrote Sam as follows: “Before Mary Byburn, Jim and I confirm in writing any terms offered since the letter sent to yon on March 2, 1957, and signed 'by the three of ns, it will be necessary for yon to comply with the requirement of the letter sent to yon on the same ' day, by the same messenger, and signed by Jim and me.

“Mary Byburn, Jim and I have agreed that every binding term or condition of any proposed business transaction between you and ns must be in writing.

“Until you receive further written terms from the three of ns the proposition stands as of our letters of March 2, 1957.” On the next day, Mrs. Johnson wrote Sam again as follows: “I received today, your note of March 4, 1957.

“The letter sent to yon on March 2, 1957 by Jim and me was very specific. It applied to, and specified, a definite time, place and persons.

“I refer yon once again to our letter of March 2, for the note I received from yon today does not fulfill its requirements.”

On March 6, 1957, Sam wrote the defendants at Jackson, Mississippi as follows: “This is to acknowledge receipt of your letter of March 2, 1957.

“I hereby accept your offer as set forth in this letter.

“Upon-the execution of the deed which I left in Mr. Harold Cox’s hands on Monday March 4, 1957, I will deliver to Mr. Cox for said deed a cashiers check for *226 $30,000.00, and also a cashiers check for $3,200.00 to cover rent for 1956 and for 1957.

‘ ‘ Please have Mr. Cox notify me hy telephone at 4071 Tchnla (Collect) when he is ready for me to deliver checks.”

On March 8, 1957, Sam wrote Mrs. Johnson and J. B. Hntton, Jr. at Jackson, Mississippi as follows: “In regards to yonr letter of March 2, 1957, which was delivered to me hy Russ at Canton, and for which I suppose you have a copy.

“This is my written expression of regret for and retraction of the statements I made to Mary Ryburn and Charlton on March 1, 1957.” Mrs. Johnson, on March 9, 1957, acknowledged receipt of this letter as follows: “Your letter of March 8, 1957 was received this morning.

“I have sent it, along with your first registered letter which was received earlier in the week, to Jim.

“As Mary Ryburn is here in Jackson at present, she has already had the opportunity to read these two letters from you.

“When Jim has had the same opportunity you may expect a written reply from the three of us.”

In regard to the preparation of the deed, Mrs. Johnson, on March 20, 1957 wrote Sam as follows: “In my most recent letter from Jim, which came yesterday, he suggested that I write a note to you to let you know that we are working on the terms of a deed based on the offer you made to purchase his, my and Mary Ry-burn’s parts of the Cooper Place.

“When this work is done, we will of course send a copy to you so that you too can review it and give it your careful consideration.

“I hope that you and yours are well — ” In another letter to him, of date of April 13, 1957, she said: “We are sending you a copy of the draft of a deed to Mother’s part of the Cooper Place upon which we have been working for sometime, as you already know.

*227 “ Jrn, Mary Ryburn, and I have given it our careful thought, consideration and approval. We are sending it to you now for your review and consideration. We are also sending a photo of the map of the place.

“If you approve the deed, or if you wish to make changes for our further consideration, please return both the deed and the map directly to Jim or to me. If you desire any other correspondence regarding the deed, please also send that

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 2d 369, 239 Miss. 217, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutton-v-hutton-etc-miss-1960.