M. F. & G. Trading Co. v. Jensen

107 S.E.2d 441, 200 Va. 744, 1959 Va. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 16, 1959
DocketRecord 4898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 107 S.E.2d 441 (M. F. & G. Trading Co. v. Jensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. F. & G. Trading Co. v. Jensen, 107 S.E.2d 441, 200 Va. 744, 1959 Va. LEXIS 163 (Va. 1959).

Opinion

Snead, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Clifford V. Jensen and Mary A. Jensen, his wife, instituted action against “Leslie Realty Agency, Inc. and M. F. and G. Trading Co., *745 a limited partnership, Poplar Corporation, General Partner,” in the Civil Justice Court of the City of Norfolk to recover $600 with interest from December 22, 1956, which sum they had paid on a contract to purchase a dwelling to be constructed. Judgment was entered against defendants for that amount. On appeal to the Court of Law and Chancery, the case was heard by the court without a jury. The court struck the evidence as to defendant, Leslie Realty Agency, Inc. and entered judgment for it. Judgment was rendered against “Poplar Corporation, General Partner for M. F. and G. Trading Co., a limited partnership” for $600 with interest from February 22, 1957 and costs.

Defendant’s assignment of error follows:

“The Court erred in entering final judgment against the Defendant in the principal amount of Six Hundred Dollars ($600.00) on the grounds that the Plaintiffs were not entitled to recover the monies paid on account of the purchase price as a matter of law, in that they had breached their contract with said Defendant without fault on the part of said Defendant by falling short in compliance with the terms of their contract, and thereby breaching the same.”

The parties will be referred to at times as plaintiffs and defendant in accordance with the positions they occupied in the court below.

Mary A. Jensen, the mother of two children, is a veteran of the armed forces of the United States and as such was entitled to the benefits of financing the purchase of a home under Title III, Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, as amended. Her husband, Clifford V. Jensen, was an active member of the armed forces at the time.

On June 20, 1956 plaintiffs entered into a written contract with M. F. and G. Trading Company to purchase a house which was to be constructed by the company on Lot 30, Block C, Plat of Poplar Halls, Section 1, in Princess Anne County for the sum of $15,950 “in substantial accordance with plans and specifications submitted with the G. I. Panel.” The contract was prepared by defendant. A down payment of $500 together with an additional sum of $100 to be applied toward closing costs, insurance etc. was made when the contract was executed. The balance of $15,450 was to be financed through a “G. I. loan to be obtained”. The contract contains a provision that it is “subject to vendee’s eligibility and lender’s approval” of the loan, and that in event vendee is unable to obtain the loan vendee would be refunded the cash deposits made. It further provides:

*746 “All taxes, insurance, rents, and interest are to be prorated as of settlement and settlement to be made on or about December 22, 1956, or as soon thereafter as title can be examined and papers prepared, allowing a reasonable time to correct any defects reported by the title examiner. In any event, the completed dwelling will be tendered for delivery within eight months of the date of this contract.”

A statement of Joanne Ady, Manager of Community Mortgage and Realty. Corporation, who processed loans for defendant, was read in evidence on behalf of defendant. It was stipulated that it contained what her testimony would be if she were present. She said there was an unavoidable delay in filing the application for a guaranteed loan with the Veterans Administration because the necessary Master Certificate of Reasonable Value had not been issued by the Administration. The record fails to disclose why this certificate was not issued until approximately four months after the date of the contract of sale. After it was received by defendant, the Application for Home Loan Guaranty or Insurance, VA Form VB4-1802, was forwarded by Mrs. Ady to Mrs. Jensen for her signature as she was the veteran applying for the benefits under the Act. It is dated October 22, 1956 and was signed by Mary A. Jensen. According to Mrs. Jensen it was “filled out” when she signed it. In answer to a question concerning the purpose of the loan there is typed therein: “To Purchase Residence for Veteran’s Use” and immediately after this statement there was written in ink by Mrs. Jensen “or rental if transferred”. In another place there is printed on the form: “I now occupy or intend to occupy, as my home, the property described herein.” Following this statement Mrs. Jensen wrote “or rent or sell if transferred”. The application was returned to defendant about October 27, 1956.

Thereafter Mrs. Ady sent other papers to Mrs. Jensen for her signature in order to complete the processing of the application for a G. I. loan. She stated she made several efforts to secure a return of them in signed form without success. She then turned the matter over to counsel for defendant for his attention. She also stated that plaintiffs refused and failed to execute the papers in a form which would qualify for G. I. financing, and that in a certificate styled “Exhibit A”, dated January 28, 1957, which was the last form signed and mailed by Mrs. Jensen to counsel for defendant, Mrs. Jensen deleted “I actually intend' to occupy as my home the property to be purchased with the proceeds of the loan applied for and to move *747 into the property personally within a reasonable time after completion of the loan” and substituted therefor “Do not intend to occupy home personally.”

Mrs. Jensen testified that the delay in returning some of the papers was occasioned by the fact she received them in blank and that she had “always been told not to sign things in blank”. After receiving letters dated December 5th and 27th, 1956 from counsel for defendant requesting a return of the papers and indicating court action if they were not returned completed and signed, she contacted her attorney, Macie V. Marlowe, who wrote counsel for defendant on January 2, 1957:

“Mrs. Mary A. Jensen has referred to me the enclosed papers and sought my advice in regards to filling the same out. I have advised Mrs. Jensen to sign the papers but to answer all inquiries therein with the utmost veracity which she has done. Accordingly we forwarded the same to you, all of which have been signed except Exhibit A, which Mrs. Jensen does not wish to sign while blank.”

Exhibit A, the last form needed to process her application for a loan, was executed and returned to counsel for defendant on or about January 28, 1957.

In order to qualify for a G. I. loan, the purchaser must intend to occupy the house personally. Defendant contends that Mrs. Jensen made it impossible to secure the loan when she stated in “Exhibit A” that she did not intend to occupy the house personally.

Mrs. Jensen testified she was not cognizant of the fact it was necessary for her to intend to occupy the dwelling personally in order to be eligible for a G. I. loan, and that when she added “or rental if transferred” to the application for the loan she thought her husband would be assigned to another base shortly.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.E.2d 441, 200 Va. 744, 1959 Va. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-f-g-trading-co-v-jensen-va-1959.