Lamar v. Scales

36 N.W. 850, 71 Wis. 159, 1888 Wisc. LEXIS 121
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 N.W. 850 (Lamar v. Scales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamar v. Scales, 36 N.W. 850, 71 Wis. 159, 1888 Wisc. LEXIS 121 (Wis. 1888).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The learned judge, in the twenty-second finding, states it as his opinion that if the question of contract or no contract is to be determined by the evidence of what was done and said at the time the deed was executed and when the contract was in fact made, the preponderance of the evidence confirms the agreement as claimed by the plaintiff. Upon this question there does not seem any reasonable doubt. The plaintiff and her son, an intelligent young man, testify very clearly to the agreement as set up in the plaintiff’s complaint, and their evidence is confirmed by the evidence of the brother-in-law of the defendant, Mr. Hardy. In opposition to this evidence there is nothing except the general denials of the defendant, and his contention that he had no conversation with the plaintiff, at the time of the purchase, as to the price he was to pay or as to any other matter relating to the sale; but that the transaction was in fact between him and the plaintiff’s husband. And when they had "concluded the trade she signed the deed presented by her husband, and then asked him, “Now, Frank, what are you going to do with that land?” and that Mr. Lamar replied, “Why he is going to make money out of it if he can; we have sold it;” and to that remark of the husband she made no reply. If defendant’s version of what took place be the true one, it certainly shows a great want of interest on the part of Mrs. Lamar in a business in which she would naturally have the greatest interest.

The learned circuit judge was, as he says, influenced in arriving at the conclusion be did from the fact that certain [165]*165negotiations were had in regard to the sale of this land between the plaintiff’s husband and the defendant previous to the day when the transaction was finally completed. In our view of the previous transactions shown in the evidence they do not, we think, tend to disprove the claim made b3r the plaintiff as to what in fact took place at the time the sale was made. It is said that the correspondence shows that the plaintiff was willing to sell her interest in the land, unqualifiedly, for the sum of $4,000. If any force is to be given to the correspondence as against the plaintiff, it ought to appear from the evidence that Mrs. Lamar knew rvhat the correspondence was, or that she had directed the correspondence. All the correspondence there ever had been was between her husband and the defendant. To make this correspondence weigh against Mrs. Lamar it should appear that she expressly authorized it, or, if not, that she knew what it was, and so impliedly, at least, authorized it. Upon this point the plaintiff testified “ that her husband, Charles H. Lamar, was present and took part in the conversation at the time the sale was made, and that he had not previous to that time done any business in regard to this Chicago land. There was a letter or two passed between my husband and a Mr. Potwin, a real-estate man in Chicago. I think there were no negotiations for sale with Mr. Potwin. We inquired of him its value. He made no offer for the land that I know of.” Again she says, “ I was not aware that my husband was corresponding with Franh [the respondent] as well as Potwin about this land.” Again she testifies, after the letters had been received in evidence: I have read the letters in evidence purporting to have been written by my husband, and the letters written by Franh, the defendant, also in evidence. I had no knowledge that my husband-wrote those letters, or either of them, when they were written, nor did I ever know of his ever receiving any of the letters from Franh which were in evidence. ... I [166]*166never heard, until this trial, anything of Franks letter to Mr. Lamar of the 14th of November, 1819, saying he accepted our offer to sell.” “I knew nothing of the existence of any of these letters from Mr. Lamar to Franje, until the last year in Chicago. I don’t remember but one presented to me then. I did not read that. To-day is the first I have known of the contents of either of these letters written by my husband.” The son of the plaintiff testified “ that on the day the deed for the land was made no allusion was made to any correspondence between Scales and father or mother respecting the land in question.” There is no evidence in the case tending to show that Mrs. Lamar ever authorized her husband to negotiate for a sale of this land on her behalf, except so far as he took part in the negotiations at the time the sale was actually made.

Upon this state of the evidence it is very doubtful whether the letters were competent evidence against the plaintiff, had they been objected to by her, and, having been given in evidence without objection, they should have no influence in determining the question at issue when it cleaidy appears that she neither authorized the correspondence nor was aware of its nature. The evidence in this case to bind the plaintiff by the acts and correspondence of her husband is no stronger, if as strong as in the case of Hadfield v. Skelton, 69 Wis. 460, where it was held that the wife ivas not bound by the acts of the husband done in her behalf but without her knowledge.

But if this court had the right to consider this correspondence between the husband of the plaintiff and the defendant for the purpose of determining the question as to what the contract of sale was, we do not think they should destroy the case as made by the evidence as to what took place at the day the trade was actually consummated. The facts are that at the time of the sale plaintiff was one of the tenants in common of the land in question, with [167]*167her brother Frank and the other sisters and brother, and, it was claimed by the defendant, with her mother; that Frank was a lawyer, and lived in Chicago, near where the land was situated, and could look after the land better than the plaintiff, who was living in the state of Iowa. She had given him a power of attorney in October, 1878, authorizing him to make leases and collect the rents to become due on such land, and to institute suits necessary to perfect the title to said land, and to do all and every act necessary to be done about said premises, etc. There was no power of sale given in this writing. The correspondence opens between the defendant and the husband of the plaintiff by a letter from defendant to Mr. Lamar, dated October 1,1879, in which he inquires whether he would like to put his interest in the market at $75 per acre. To this a reply was made, October 5 th, by Mr. Lamar, saying that he did not know what it was worth, and asking if the other owners would be willing to sell at that price, and intimating that they would trade their interest for a stock of merchandise. To this the defendant replied, October 14, 1879, saying he did not want to advise about the land, but said he thought he coulcl get $3,500 for their interest. To this Mr. Lamar replied, October 31, 1879, in which he says he had delayed answering until he had received a letter from Mr. Potwin, who vras anxious to buy for some parties in Chicago, and saying he would give $3,500 for their interest. I said you had offered us that, and if I sold for that you should have the refusal,” and then saying he thought it was worth more, and would not take less than $4,000 cash down.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 N.W. 850, 71 Wis. 159, 1888 Wisc. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamar-v-scales-wis-1888.