Manuel v. Haselden

268 S.W. 554, 206 Ky. 796, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1047
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 554 (Manuel v. Haselden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manuel v. Haselden, 268 S.W. 554, 206 Ky. 796, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1047 (Ky. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

[797]*797Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

■On and prior to October 1,1919, appellees and plaintiffs below, J. R., S. G. and J. S. Haselden, were the joint owners of a tract of land in Garrard county containing about 80% acres. For the purpose of dividing it among the owners, they advertised its sale at public auction on the premises to be held on the date mentioned, and at that sale the appellants and defendants below, J. T. Manuel and wife, Fannie Manuel, became the purchasers at the price of $240.00 per acre. On the next day they executed a written contract to purchase the land on the terms stated therein, which wei*e the payment of $6,-400.00 in cash, the assumption of the balance of a prior mortgage amounting to about $3,500.00, and the execution of three notes for one-third of the balance payable in one, two and three years from and after January 1, 1920, at which time the vendors agreed to and did execute a deed. A lien was retained to secure the deferred payments and each note as well as the deed contained a precipitory clause whereby the entire indebtedness would become due upon the failure to pay any note or interest when due. The second and third notes were pledged to different banks, and after the first one matured and neither it nor the interest was paid, plaintiffs filed suit to collect it and also to declare the other two notes due and made the holders thereof parties. The petition also sought to foreclose the lien on the land in payment of whatever judgment was rendered. The holders of the other notes answered and by way of cross-petition sought the same relief.

The answer defended upon two grounds, (1), that the vendors on the day of the sale and on the next day when the contract was executed falsely and fraudulently represented that the title to the land was perfect and that it subsequently developed not to be so, and if not so then the purchaser would have the right to demand and receive a rescission; and (2), that the vendors procured a by-bidder at the sale who actually bid upon the land and ran it up on the defendants, which it was alleged rendered the sale at least voidable at the option of defendants, which option they sought to exercise. Those defenses were put in issue and after quite extensive preparation the cause was submitted to the court, who rendered judgment sustaining the prayer of the petition and those of the cross-petitioners and subjected the land [798]*798to the judgments rendered for the deferred payments, and to reverse that judgment defendants appeal, insisting here upon the same two defenses, and we will dispose of them in the order named.

1. It is admitted, hut if not so it is true, that defendants cannot rely on the alleged defective title under the warranty contained in the deed, since there has been no eviction and for that reason they alleged in their petition an express false representation or agreement between them and the vendors that, if the title should turn out to be imperfect, they should have the right to rescind. The husband testified somewhat positively to such an agreement both on the day of the sale, as well as on the following one on which the contract was signed. The wife was not so positive in her testimony as to that fact; but however that may be, it is proven by plaintiffs and by a number of other witnesses that when the question of title was raised on the day of the sale and before the purchase of the land at that sale, one of the plaintiffs, who was the auctioneer, and another of them who was present publicly announced the exact condition of the title and the facts creating the alleged defect,- and that the alleged defect under the facts was an extremely remote one, and that the event upon which an adverse claim could be asserted was so improbable that it was almost certain that it would never occur, but that the vendors were worth at least $100,000.00' and would warrant the title and stand behind anyone who might purchase the land should the title turn out to be defective followed by any interference from any contingent adverse claimant. The court found the issue as to the agreement for the right to rescind and as to the alleged false and fraudulent representations by the vendors against defendants, and that the finding is not only supported by the evidence, but is sustained by the great preponderance of it.

It is also insisted under this ground that the vendors announced at the auction sale as a fact sustaining the title that one of the cross-petitioners, the Commonwealth Life Insurance Company of Louisville, Kentucky, held a mortgage on the land which was the one defendants agreed to assume, and said in substance that insurance companies did not take liens upon land affected with a doubtful title when, as alleged, the truth was that the mortgage referred to was taken, not by that insurance company but by a bank and which later transferred the [799]*799indebtedness as well as the mortgage to the insurance company. In disposing of that contention it first may be said that there was conflicting testimony as to whether any such representation was made, but, whether so or not, in the papers executed to the defendants the true situation was stated and we do not think that defendants are in a situation to rely on that statement even if it was a material departure from the facts so as to evidence fraud, which we are not inclined to hold. It therefore follows that we are not authorized on this appeal to interfere with the judgment for any of the reasons stated in ground (1).

2. In the very recent case of Burdon v. Seitz, 206 Ky. 336, the law in this and other jurisdictions as to the effects, of by-bidding at auction sales was gone into and it was there held, under the authorities cited in the opinion, that where the vendor, or some, one authorized to speak for and bind him on the subject matter, employed a strictly by-bidder who made bids at the sale, the purchaser could avoid it either by rescission, or in defense to collect deferred payments, or by refusing to perform his contract, provided of course that his subsequent actions were not such as to bar him from doing so because of laches, waiver or other recognized' legal ground. Waiving the question of the existence of any such barring facts in this case and treating it as if defendants’ right of avoidance was in full force and effect, the question then is, was there such by-bidding in this case as to create that right on the part of the vendees Í

The undisputed facts are, that there was quite a crowd in attendance upon the sale. One of the plaintiffs acted as auctioneer, and there was in attendance one Mack Morgan, who was approached by S. Gr. Haselden, another plaintiff, and inquired of as to why he did not bid on the land. His answer, in substance, was that he was apprehensive of his ability to pay the probable price and using this language: “I said it was more than I felt I could take at the time, that I did not have the money and I finally said to Sam, ‘If you will go half, go fifty-fifty with me, we might buy it.’ He said he would, and we agreed upon the price,” which was to pay as much as $235.00 per acre, and they subsequently agreed to extend that price to not exceeling $240,.00i per acre. S. Gr. Haselden corroborates in every particular that statement. He and his brothers each testified that [800]*800the other two were not notified of that arrangement nor did they in any manner authorize it or consent to it, but that on the contrary it was the individual venture of S. U. Haselden alone.

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Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 554, 206 Ky. 796, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manuel-v-haselden-kyctapp-1925.