Jameson v. Wurtz

396 P.2d 68, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 253
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1964
Docket431
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 396 P.2d 68 (Jameson v. Wurtz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jameson v. Wurtz, 396 P.2d 68, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 253 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

Virginia Jameson, plaintiff below, has appealed from an adverse decision of the superior court holding her equity as buyer under a long term real estate purchase contract forfeited because of her failure to comply with certain provisions of the contract.

On September 18, 1953, the plaintiff and her husband, Dick Jameson, who had been forced to dispose of his engineering business in Fairbanks because of a disabling illness, entered into a contract with W. S. and Zeila Wurtz, defendants below, to purchase from the latter a Fairbanks automobile service station for the purpose of an invest *69 ment. 1 The total purchase price of the property was $47,000, of which amount the Jamesons made a down payment of $15,000 and were required to pay the balance in installments of $500 on the 15th day of each month, plus interest at the rate of six per cent per annum. The contract also required them to pay the taxes, proyide insurance and keep the property free of liens. It made no provision for the giving of notice between the parties in any respect. The property was under lease to Gilstrap and Martin at the time the Jamesons purchased it. The lease yielded a monthly rental income of $750. Its expiration date was January 1, 1957.

The Jamesons left Alaska shortly after their purchase of the service station. Gil-strap and Martin surrendered possession of the service station on January 1, 1957, as they were not interested in renewing the lease. So Virginia returned to Fairbanks, without her husband, to find a new tenant for the station.

Mr. Jameson died on January 31, 1957, leaving Virginia as his sole heir and devisee under his will. At the time of his death the assets of the couple consisted of about $600 in cash, Virginia’s half interest in a $12,000 model or display home in Fairbanks, three or four $75 monthly payments remaining due from the sale of Mr. Jameson’s former home, a $1,500 balance owing on an industrial building sold by Mr. Jameson, some corporate stock (value not stated in the record) and the service station.

Unable to find a new tenant, Mrs. Jame-son decided to operate the station herself and to that end purchased the stock, supplies and equipment of the vacating lessees, Gil-strap and Martin, for $10,000. She used over half of the proceeds of her husband’s life insurance to pay $3,500 of the purchase price and retired the $6,500 balance by an assignment of her $6,000 equity in the model home, plus some cash. In April of 1957 she borrowed $6,000 from the First National Bank of Fairbanks (hereinafter referred to as the bank) for the construction of a small addition to the service station building and for working capital.

It appears that Mrs. Jameson was advised by her doctor not to remain in Alaska, so she made arrangements with T. J. Williams, mentioned in note 1 above, to operate the service station for her and then left for Tacoma, Washington. However, the service station did not prosper under Williams’s management and Mrs. Jameson had to' return to take charge early in 1958. She found the inventory depleted and many bills unpaid. The payments on the purchase price of the service station and on the loan from the bank were not being met. Virginia herself was not employable because of ill health and she testified .that she had no income or resources from which to make the payments which were due. The last payment made under the contract was on February 17, 1958, in the amount of $500 on the principal and $32.54 on interest, leaving at that time an unpaid balance of $5,500 on the purchase price; plus interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date of such last payment.

At about this time Mrs. Jameson contacted her supplier Union Oil Company of California in an effort to obtain a $25,000 loan from Union to be used to pay the Wurtzes and the various creditors of the service station business. Negotiations for. the loan were carried on during the balance of 1958 and during 1959. In the meantime she leased the station on April 12, 1958, on a short term basis to one Herb Mayr, who had been recommended by Union.

In April of 1960 Mrs. Jameson, who was then in the State of Washington, received word from her attorney at Fairbanks that Union had decided not to make the 'loan. Mi-. Wurtz seems to have been fully cognizant of Mrs. Jameson’s efforts to obtain a loan from Union, for in January of ,1960 he had inquired of Union about the status of *70 the loan and was told at that time that there would he río loan. Thereafter, on May 17, I960,' he withdrew the contract from escrow at the bank as provided for in the contract in the event of default by the Jamesons and then informed Mrs. Jameson’s attorney that he intended to finally forfeit the interest of Virginia Jameson in the property. At this time he also made an offer to certain officials of the bank to turn the contract over to the bank if the bank would pay him off. Concerning this offer he testified:

“ * * * i put the papers down right in front of them, and I says ‘here’s the papers,’ I says ‘pay me off.’ I says ‘my indebtedness on this here contract of sales’ I says ‘are yours.’ I says ‘you can have them. All I want is my money.’ And so Eddie [referring to Edward Stroecker, president of the bank] says ‘no, we can’t do it’ * *

Wurtz had made a somewhat similar offer to the bank by letter dated January 27, 1960.

On May 19, I960, Robert Parrish as attorney for Mr. Wurtz sent a letter to Virginia, in care of her attorney, Charles Cole, advising her that her interest in the property had been forfeited and the escrow papers withdrawn from the bank on account of her default on payments. Shortly thereafter, Herb Mayr caused the keys to the service station to be delivered to Mr. Parrish, pursuant to the latter’s request.

In July of 1960 one of the officers of the bank called Mrs. Jameson at Portland and informed her that “there had been a fore- ’ closure on the property” and that the bank would lend her $7,000 to pay up the balance of principal and the interest owing on the ' contract. She accepted the offer and executed a promissory note secured by a mortgage on the service station for the amount of the loan.

It was not until September 1960 when Mrs. Jameson returned to Fairbanks and called at Mr. Cole’s office that she saw the “forfeiture” letter addressed to her by Mr. Parrish in May. Until this time she had not even learned that' Herb Mayr was no longer operating the service station and that it had been closed down. She spent several months, in Fairbanks trying to get additional funds from the First National Bank, as she had none of her own, with which to take care of all of her debts. Shortly before Christmas she left Fairbanks again, without having personally tried to contact Mr. Wurtz.

Late in 1960 the executive vice president of the bank called Mr. Wurtz in Oregon and told him that the bank was ready to lend Virginia Jameson enough money to pay the balance owing on the Jameson contract, if that was satisfactory with him. Wurtz advised his caller to discuss the matter with Mr. Parrish. When approached on the subject by the bank’s officer, Mr. Parrish gave the impression that payment would not be accepted and that action would be taken to “retrieve the property.”

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Bluebook (online)
396 P.2d 68, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jameson-v-wurtz-alaska-1964.