Klapka v. Shrauger

281 N.W. 612, 135 Neb. 354, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 187
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1938
DocketNo. 30395
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 281 N.W. 612 (Klapka v. Shrauger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klapka v. Shrauger, 281 N.W. 612, 135 Neb. 354, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 187 (Neb. 1938).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This is an action for the rescission of a land sale con[356]*356tract and to recover the payment of $1,000 made by the plaintiff to the defendant at the time the contract was executed. The defendant denied breaches of contract set out in plaintiff’s petition, and alleged the delivery of possession of the land to the plaintiff and his entry into possession, and his continued possession thereof for six months, and asked that the contract be reformed. The court entered a decree finding for the plaintiff, and giving him judgment for $1,000, with 6 per cent, interest, and dismissed the cross-petition of the defendant, from which defendant appeals.

The evidence of the defendant is to the effect that she first met the plaintiff when he came to her home with his wife in the summer of 1934 and asked her if she would sell him a 120-acre farm located east and north of .Pawnee City, Nebraska. She told him she would think it over and let him know, and finally offered to sell it to him at $75 an acre. Plaintiff said the price was too high, as it had a lot of bindweed on it, and he was not interested at that price. Plaintiff later had a friend correspond with her to get a lower price. This man, Frank Oxner, of Belle Plaine, Iowa, concealing the fact that he was acting for plaintiff, finally made an appointment by long distance telephone to meet them at the bus station in Wymore, but when she and her daughter went to Wymore to meet, the bus on August- 20, 1936, it turned out that the plaintiff, Rudolph Klapka, was there instead of Frank Oxner. He did not want anybody to see. him as he was driven through Pawnee City. He was driven out to the farm, and looked around a little, and told her he knew the place better than she did. Plaintiff was anxious to buy the place, and insisted that a contract be drawn up that night. The terms of the contract were agreed upon. Defendant testifies that he wanted to move on the place immediately, and defendant said that she had another farm to which Mr. Yarpe, her tenant, could move. Plaintiff would not go to town, but stayed at the farm which he was buying and talked to the tenant while the defendant, drove to Pawnee. City and had Mr. Halderman, a business man, pre[357]*357pare the contract, because she could not get her attorney. After the contract was drawn, the defendant and her daughter and Mr. Halderman drove back to the farm, about six miles from Pawnee City. Plaintiff was not at the farm, but was found at the defendant’s home, waiting for them. It was then between 9 and 10 o’clock at night. Mr. Halderman read the contract over to plaintiff, and plaintiff and defendant signed the contract.

The contract was dated August 20, 1936, and provides for the sale of the 120-acre farm for $7,000, of which $1,000 cash was paid by check that night. Defendant was to pay one-half of the 1936 taxes, and possession of the premises was to be given March 1. Then follows this paragraph: “Party of the first part to execute a warranty deed showing the above land to be clear of all encumbrance,- and deposit the same in escrow with the Citizens State Bank, Pawnee City, Nebraska, and to be delivered to the party of the second part upon his paying $3,000 and executing a first mortgage on the above land for $3,000 at five per cent, to run for two years from March 1st, 1937, to the party of the first part.”

A careful examination of this contract discloses that it contains no statement to the effect that time is of the essence of this contract.

The next day after signing the contract plaintiff came back to the farm with Mrs. Shrauger, the defendant, and told the tenant he had bought the place and wanted to get possession. Defendant thereupon gave the tenant another farm. Plaintiff took possession of the said real estate on September 1, 1936, moving his family, consisting of his wife and two sons, with all live stock, farming machinery, and equipment onto said farm he had purchased, and continued in such possession and control until on or about March 6, 1937.

In February, 1937, the' plaintiff came to defendant’s home and complained that there was a shortage of water on the farm he had bought, and demanded that she give him back $500 on his first payment of $1,000 on the purchase [358]*358price, which she refused to do. A few days later the defendant received a written notice, dated February 27, 1937, from Attorney Witte, a copy of which appears in the bill of exceptions as exhibit No. 3, and in which she is notified that said attorney has examined the agreement signed up August 20, 1936, and the abstract of title, and that she has breached the agreement by not depositing in escrow a deed that would convey title to said real estate, and that she must of necessity breach the agreement further on March 1, 1937, because it will be impossible for her to convey title that day; that his client elects to and does rescind the agreement; that she may have her abstract by demanding the same at the office of said attorney, and that his client will in no way interfere with her possession of the real estate, and in conclusion said notice demanded the immediate payment of $1,000 which had been paid by the plaintiff to the defendant on August 20, 1936.

The petition of the plaintiff admits the execution of the contract, and charges that upon the date the contract was executed the defendant owned only a one-third interest in the land. she contracted to convey, one-third interest belonging to her son, John Shrauger, and the other one-third interest belonging to her daughter, Ena June Shrauger, who was then a minor and incapable of conveying said real estate, and that such defendant had led the plaintiff to believe that on the date of the execution of the contract she was the sole owner of the real estate, and that he relied thereon until February 26, 1937, when he discovered the defendant’s inability to perform said contract; that the defendant’s breaches of said contract are material, and for that reason the plaintiff has elected to> and has rescinded the contract, and asks judgment for return of the $1,000 cash payment made upon the signing of the contract.

Plaintiff also alleged in his petition that on March 1, 1937, the defendant tendered to the plaintiff a deed executed by the defendant and by her son, John Sterling Shrauger, and also executed by Ena June Shrauger, who was a minor, who would arrive at her majority June 13, [359]*3591937. The evidence discloses that this daughter, Ena, was in her twentieth year, and drove the automobile to the bus station in Wymore to meet the plaintiff when he arrived, and was with her mother the night the contract was drawn up, and brought the same out to their home, where it was duly read to the plaintiff and executed by him and by her mother, the defendant herein. She assisted materially in all of the negotiations leading up to the signing of the contract, and duly executed a warranty deed conveying her interest therein, although she was not yet 21 years of age at the time of signing the first deed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 612, 135 Neb. 354, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klapka-v-shrauger-neb-1938.