Jensen v. Bouwhuis

577 P.2d 555, 1978 Utah LEXIS 1263
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1978
DocketNo. 15198
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 577 P.2d 555 (Jensen v. Bouwhuis) 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
Jensen v. Bouwhuis, 577 P.2d 555, 1978 Utah LEXIS 1263 (Utah 1978).

Opinions

ELLETT, Chief Justice:

The defendants as sellers and the respondent as purchaser entered into an Earnest Money Receipt and Offer to Purchase Realty, the terms of which provided for the payment of the sum of $1,000 upon acceptance by the seller; $14,000 on delivery of the deed or final contract of sale; and the balance to be paid at the rate of $8,000 per year for ten years, plus interest at the rate of seven percent (7%).

The agreement was conditioned on the buyers being able to secure building permits and further conditioned on the parties being able to “negotiate on land release basis.” It was further agreed that the land would be surveyed, but the document was silent as to who would pay the cost thereof.

The Earnest Money Receipt also provided that the deed or final contract would be completed on or before March 1, 1976, and would be made upon the approved form of the Ogden Board of Realtors. The reason for this provision was that the land was under the Greenbelt law for tax assessment, and the seller needed to continue with his farming operation in order to have a low assessment on the land for tax purposes. He wished to mow the grass and put his cattle on the land by March 1, 1976, if the sale did not go through.

The purchaser intended to develop the land for commercial purposes and to sell the land to interested parties in order to raise funds for the annual payments. He testified regarding the need for a land release agreement in the document as follows:

I told him just whatever it takes, you know, as long as I can see that I am not landlocked. If I decide — I don’t want to be tied down to a certain deal. If I need another piece over here, something to put a particular type customer in, I want to be able to do that.

In order for the purchaser to know which lots he could offer to various customers, he said he needed a survey of the property, but he refused to have the survey made; and while the Earnest Money Receipt was prepared at his own direction, he neglected to make a provision for who would stand the cost. The seller emphatically stated at the time of the execution of the document that he would not bear the cost of the survey or any part thereof, because he knew how much land there was in the tract as the heirs had earlier caused a survey to be made when his father’s estate was probated. In fact, the seller never ordered a survey.

No final contract of sale was entered into by the parties and no money was ever tendered to the seller. Within a month after the March 1, 1976, deadline, the seller announced that he would not go through with the deal.

About the end of November, 1976, long after the seller refused to proceed, the realtor ordered and paid for a survey in the hope of getting the parties together so that he could receive his fee of $3,000.

While the purported deal was for the purchase and sale of land, the trial judge, sitting without a jury, misinstructed himself in the law and made the following findings:

[557]*557The land release was to be ‘negotiated.’ This is not a contract to make a contract in the future, but is actually as complete an agreement as was possible under the circumstances. The agreement is by its terms not an ordinary sale of real estate to be paid off in a certain period of time. It is actually the formation of a joint venture and/or partnership under certain terms. This agreement was made with the following clear understanding on both sides:
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That the seller’s tax picture would be hurt if he were forced to accept a complete purchase price at any one time, but would be able to turn the $100,000.00 into long-term capital gains spread over the years if there was a land-release arrangement worked out so that he could claim separate sales in separate years and also not destroy his security in the transaction.
There was no way at the time in question that the parties could have formulated a more complete agreement than the one actually formed (the word ‘negotiated’ had a clear meaning to the parties), in that IP [Earnest Money Agreement] states what was understood by the parties to be their full agreement, that is that they were going into a joint venture or partnership in the sale of the land.
. There was no way to know what size the lots would be nor what shape lots would be desired by various industrial users. There was no way to know whether the industrial users of the future would desire land in the rear or land in the front. The contract was in truth and in effect a completed contract.
It was the clear intent of both sides to leave the manner of acreage release to the future and to the desires of the available industrial park purchasers or leasors so long as it did not impair the defendants’ security interest.
The contract in effect has created a joint venture in the sale of industrial park lands wherein the plaintiff contracted to risk the purchase price of $103,-000.00, plus interest, and development monies. The defendants were to risk some loss of security during the sell-off stages, but in return therefore were to receive not only the purchase price but the tax advantage secured by a write-off over the years in question, to-wit: ten years.

The court then entered its judgment wherein the following language is used:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that if the joint venturers cannot agree on the matter so as to preserve some of the intended benefits, such as the ability of the plaintiff to make his payments over a long period of time and therefore not be required to raise capital and the sellers are to effect the tax advantage through long-term capital gains spread over certain years, they may do so. If the partners cannot make an agreement within the next thirty days so as to preserve these benefits, then the Court dissolves the partnership or joint venture by the following order: The plaintiff must pay into the court within thirty days after the expiration of the thirty-day negotiation period the sum of $102,000.00 minus attorney’s fees. If he does not desire to do this to secure land title, then he must be satisfied with the return of his $1,000.00 that he has paid in earnest money, plus the interest from the date that the money was paid in.

It clearly appears that the court could see that it could not enforce the agreement as a contract for the reason that there were too many things which were to be negotiated in the future, viz: (a) who would pay for the costs of the survey; (b) the negotiation of the land release; (c) the failure to enter into a final contract by March 1, 1976, and etc.

The unsettled matter of agreeing on a land release contract was of particular concern to both parties. Land is unique and the seller was to use the part that was not transferred away for a period of ten years. Neither party wanted to have land which had no outlet. Agreeing on the release was [558]*558clearly a matter for future contractual arrangements. The purchaser had dictated the terms of the Earnest Money Receipt and had he then been able to foresee what land he would need as he paid for it, he should have provided for it. It appears doubtful that the seller would have signed any contract that gave the purchaser the right to choose the land he wanted as he made the annual payments.

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Related

Jenkins v. Bailey
676 P.2d 391 (Utah Supreme Court, 1984)
BLT Investment Co. v. Snow
586 P.2d 456 (Utah Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
577 P.2d 555, 1978 Utah LEXIS 1263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-bouwhuis-utah-1978.