Keator v. Colorado Coal & Iron Development Co.

3 Colo. App. 188
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Colo. App. 188 (Keator v. Colorado Coal & Iron Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keator v. Colorado Coal & Iron Development Co., 3 Colo. App. 188 (Colo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Bissell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

If the evidence produced on the trial were conceded to be admissible it would not support the judgment entered. The [189]*189action was brought by the Colorado Coal & Iron Company against the plaintiffs in error, Keator, Barclay and Townsend, to recover $64.12 which the company had paid as taxes on certain lots in Pueblo, which had been sold to those parties prior to the payment and the suit. When the cause was tried in the justice’s court, it was submitted on an agreed statement of facts under a stipulation that the statement should be all of the evidence used during that or any succeeding trial of the case. A copy of the original agreement of sale was incorporated into the stipulation, under a proviso that it might be changed to conform to the original when that should be produced. To render the decision and the controversy intelligible the agreed statement of facts must be summarized, though much of it would have been inadmissible as evidence had it been objected to in a proper and timely manner. From this statement it appears that in July, 1889, the company contracted to sell to Keator and his codefendants three lots in the town of Pueblo. The consideration was $1,435, represented by certain promissory notes payable at fixed dates, and “ the further payment of all taxes hereafter levied on said premises.” The company agreed, on the payment of the expressed consideration, to execute a deed for the premises. It is recited that on the 9th of October, 1889, taxes to the extent of $64.12 were levied by the proper authorities. On the 15th day of February, 1890, the company delivered to the defendants their warranty deed for the property bearing date the 10th of February, and put them in possession. After this transfer of title and delivery of possession, on the 28th of February The Coal andiron Company paid to the proper county treasurer the taxes which had been levied and assessed against the property. At the time these taxes were paid the company made no demand or request that the defendants should pay them, nor did they call on the defendants to pay at any time prior to suit. The copy of the contract, which was a part of the stipulation, lacked sundry indorsements which were on the original, and the parties agreed that “ whereas the defendants claim that [190]*190there are certain indorsements or writing and figures on the hack of the duplicate contract surrendered to plaintiff which is in New York, when said duplicate contract is obtained, any and all indorsements, writings, figures, etc., thereon, shall be copied on the back of Exhibit A and become part thereof,” etc. * * * When the original was produced at the trial there appeared on the face of it these words : — “ Canceled by substitution of deed to property ; ” and the defendants asked leave to so change what purported to he a copy as to make it a duplicate according to the spirit, if not the tenor, of the stipulation. This privilege was refused apparently on the hypothesis that the stipulation only applied to the indorsements on the back of the instrument. The county court affirmed the judgment which had been rendered by the justice, and held that the defendants were bound to pay the taxes which the company had settled with the treasurer.

On very plain and well settled principles this judgment must be adjudged erroneous. In view of another trial the questions raised and argued by counsel will be determined, though a decision of one proposition might suffice to reverse the ease.

The defendants ought to have been permitted to change the instrument attached to the stipulation, so that the contract set out should, in all of its particulars, recitals and indorsements, conform precisely with the original on which alone the case ought to have been heard and tried. It is quite possible that a very narrow, strict and technical construction of the stipulation might suggest that the purpose of counsel was to permit only the addition of what might appear on the back of the original contract. Such is not a proper or an accurate interpretation of the language of the stipulation. The concluding phraseology provides that all indorsements, writings, figures, etc., thereon shall be copied on the back of the exhibit. These terms do not exclude the right to place on the copy the indorsements on the original, even though they might be on the face of the instrument; [191]*191they are broad enough to confer the right to duplicate all indorsements. It is manifest that this must be the proper construction, since it was the evident purpose of the parties to use a copjr in place of the original, and we cannot assume that counsel entertained a covert purpose to compel the trial of the cause on an inaccurate copy. Whenever it is stipulated that a copy of an instrument may be used, and it can in any wise be gathered from the stipulation that the copy is incomplete, and that it is to be made to conform to the original for the purposes of the trial, the agreement must be construed, unless the construction is inhibited by the precise terms of the agreement, to intend that the copy may be completed so that in all of its particulars and details it shall exactly correspond with the original paper. No other construction is consonant with good faith, and with what must be assumed to be the honest purpose of attorneys who stipulate with reference to such matters. The amendment by the addition of that indorsement should have been permitted.

It is doubtful whether the contract thus amended, more completely than the other facts contained in the stipulation, demonstrates the nonexistence of a cause of action as against these defendants. The recited facts show that the several parties to this action entered into an executory agreement for the sale and conveyance of certain specified property, upon a definite consideration, payable at a named date, prior to the transfer of the title by the deed of the grantor, who was one of the contracting parties. There are but two things to be done; — the payment of the consideration, and the execution and delivery of the deed evidencing the title. The proof was that on the 15th day of February, 1890, the deed was delivered to the defendants who were put in possession. According to well settled principies the delivery and acceptance of this conveyance annulled and abrogated the prior executory agreement, which may be no longer resorted to for the purpose of ascertaining the terms on which the land was sold, unless it is shown by otherwise competent testimony that [192]*192something remained to be done after the transfer of title. It is probably true that the defendants were bound to pay not only the $1,435, which was the expressed consideration, but likewise the taxes assessed against the property prior to the conveyance. This is evident from the terms of the written agreement, and it results from specific legislation on this subject. The statute provides that as to all land conveyed between January and May the grantee must pay the taxes which stand assessed against the property. On any hypothesis, then, the taxes which the company paid and sought to recover stood as a legitimate lien on the property conveyed to the defendants, and they took it subject to that lien, which they were bound to discharge.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Colo. App. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keator-v-colorado-coal-iron-development-co-coloctapp-1893.