Le Vine v. Whitehouse

109 P. 2, 37 Utah 260, 1910 Utah LEXIS 50
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1910
DocketNo. 2069
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 109 P. 2 (Le Vine v. Whitehouse) 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
Le Vine v. Whitehouse, 109 P. 2, 37 Utah 260, 1910 Utah LEXIS 50 (Utah 1910).

Opinion

McCARTY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in the district court of Tooele County, Utah, wherein the plaintiffs sought to have specifically enforced a written contract signed [263]*263by the defendants J. W. Whitehouse and his wife, Eíttie Whitehouse, in which they agreed to sell and convey to the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs agreed to buy of them, certain real estate situate in Tooele County, Utah, consisting of about two hundred acres of land, for the sum of $2000. This agreement was signed by Louis Le Vine for Catherine E. Le Vine, his wife, as her attorney in fact, and by Milando Fratt for Elizabeth It. Pratt, his wife, as her attorney in fact. Seven hundred dollars of the purchase price was to be paid in shares of stock of the Bingham West Dip Tunnel Company, a corporation, which stock the vendors agreed to accept in lieu of $700 in cash. The balance of the purchase price, $1300, was to be paid as follows: “$100 in cash' upon the delivery of the agreement, and $100 to be paid1 to the vendors at Lincoln, Utah, each sixty days thereafter for a period of fourteen months,” within which time the whole of the purchase price was to be paid. The vendees were to pay all taxes for the year 1905 and thereafter should the agreement be extended. The agreement further provided that: “In the event that the second parties (plaintiffs herein) .shall fail or neglect to make any of the payments as hereinbefore provided for the period of sixty days after the same shall become due, then the first party shall be released from all obligations to convey said property, and second parties shall forfeit all right thereto and to any mloney paid under this agreement, and this agreement shall become null and void. And the said parties of the first part, on receiving such payments as hereinbefore provided, agree to execute and deliver to said parties of the second part, or their assigns, ai good and sufficient deed to said property herein described, the title thereto to be free from all incumbrances (except that the second parties shall pay the taxes for the year 1905.) . . . .First parties further consent that second parties may have possession of said premises upon the execution and delivery of this agreement.” This agreement was filed for record, and recorded, February 21, 1906, in the office of the county recorder in -Tooele County, Utah.

[264]*264It is alleged in tbe complaint that tbe plaintiffs, shortly after tbe date of said agreement went into possession of tbe land therein described, and, at tbe time of tbe execution and delivery of tbe agreement, paid and delivered to tbe vendors 1400 shares of the stock of tbe Bingham West Dip Tunnel Company which tbe vendors accepted in lieu of $700 in cash; that tbe vendees paid tbe vendors $100 at tbe time tbe agreement was entered into and $100 on January 1, 1905, and $100 each sixty days thereafter, tbe last payment being made on November 8, 1905, for the installment due on November 1, 1905; that before tbe expiration of sixty days from January 1, 1906, when the next installment fell due, tbe plaintiffs offered' and tendered to tbe vendors, at Lincoln, Tooele County, Utah, tbe balance of tbe purchase price, amounting to $600, together with interest at tbe rate of eight percent, per annum on tbe sum of $100 from January 1, 1906, and tbe taxes assessed against said property for tbe year 1905. Plaintiffs further allege a full performance of all tbe conditions in tbe agreement on their part to be performed, and further allege that tbe vendors refused to perform; and, after setting out that tbe vendors were contriving to defraud plaintiffs of tbe land described in tbe agreement by executing a deed of conveyance to Theodore G-. Schulte, prayed a specific performance of the agreement, and that said “Schulte may be decreed to surrender and convey tbe said lands to tbe plaintiffs, tbe plaintiffs being ready and willing, and hereby offering, specifically to perform tbe said agreement”

Defendants admit tbe execution of tbe agreement in question, and admit tbe payments alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint, but they allege that tbe payments were made by Louis Le Vine on behalf of himself and Milando Pratt and not otherwise; that neither Louis Le Vine nor Milando Pratt bad power of attorney or other written, or any, legal authority from plaintiffs or either of them to execute or enter into tbe agreement mentioned on behalf of plaintiffs or either of them; that neither of tbe plaintiffs were bound, or in any manner obligated, thereby; and that no mutuality ex[265]*265isted in relation thereto between tbem and defendants. It is further alleged in the answer that Louis Le Vine and Milando Pratt, as agents of plaintiffs, falsely and fraudulently represented the value of the 1400 shares of stock, at the time it was received- by defendants as part of the purchase price of the land in question, to be of the value of fifty cents a share, and further falsely and fraudulently represented that, if defendants would accept the 1400 shares of stock as part of the purchase price of the land at fifty eetns a share, the said Louis Le Vine and1 Milando Pratt would purchase the said 1400 shares of stock from the defendants at any time after the execution of the agreement that defendants would make demand upon them for the purchase of the whole of said stock; that defendants relied upon these statements, and were thereby induced to enter into the contract mentioned and to accept said stock in lieu of $700; that the stock was not worth fifty cents per share or any other amount whatever; and that the same was, and still is, entirely worthless, all of which was known to Louis Le Vine and Milando Pratt, and unknown to the defendants. Defendants further allege: “That the said defendants J. W. Whitehouse and his wife thereafter upon numerous and divers occasions requested the said Louis Le Vine to take the said stock and pay them the said sum of fifty cents per share, or to sell the same for them at that price according to his said promise and agreement, but that he failed, neglected, and' refused, and still does fail, neglect, and refuse, to do so.” Defendants further -allege that the plaintiffs failed and neglected to pay the taxes assessed against the land in question for the year 1905. They also allege that a few days prior to November 15, 1905, Louis Le Vine informed the defendants that the plaintiffs would not pay the taxes or any part thereof, neither would they pay any more money on the purchase price of the land, and that Louis Le Vine then and there requested defendants to sell the land on such terms and conditions as they thought proper, provided Louis Le Vine should receive what money had been paid thereon and the 1400 shares of stock which [266]*266had been issued to defendants as part of the purchase price of the land; that thereupon the defendants began to negotiate for the sale of the land, and on or about the 29th day of January, 1906, the defendants J. W. Whitehouse and his wife sold the land in question to Theodore G-. Schulte, their codefendant. ,

Upon the issues thus tendered, a trial was had, and the court, after hearing the evidence, made and filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and entered its decree denying to plaintiffs the relief prayed for in the complaint and dismissing the action.

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Bluebook (online)
109 P. 2, 37 Utah 260, 1910 Utah LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-vine-v-whitehouse-utah-1910.