Matthews v. Eslinger

292 S.W.2d 543, 41 Tenn. App. 116, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 7, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 292 S.W.2d 543 (Matthews v. Eslinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthews v. Eslinger, 292 S.W.2d 543, 41 Tenn. App. 116, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 118 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

AVERY, J.

Parties will be referred to as they appeared in the Court below. Matthews et al. as petitioner and the Appellant, R. R. Eslinger as respondent. *119 The pertinent facts are that J. E. Matthews et al. filed a bill in the Chancery Conrt of Blount County against Beulah French et al. for the purpose, among others, of selling the land of which Steve W. McReynolds died seized and possessed. "With other tracts there was a tract known as the “Jeffreys Tract” legally described and alleged to contain 146 acres, more or less. All proper orders and decrees were made by the Court and the real estate was offered for sale. After due advertisement by the Clerk and Master, it was sold on Saturday, October 20, 1951 pursuant to the Court’s order, and on that date R. R. Eslinger offered a bid of $4,000 and the referred to “Jeffreys Tract” was struck off to him at said bid, the next highest bid therefor being $3,800. The terms of the sale, as provided by the order of the Court, was for one-third cash and the balance due in six and twelve months, bearing interest from date of sale. Immediately after the said tract had been stricken off to Eslinger, he requested the Clerk and Master to permit him to return to the office of the Master on the following Monday to make the cash, payment and execute the required note. The excuse offered by Eslinger to the Clerk and Master for the delay being that he had certain business transactions which he had to make with the bank before it closed at noon. The Clerk and Master granted the request of Eslinger, who did return on said Monday and again, at his request, the completion of the transaction was postponed for’a few days, as the Clerk and Master understood. Eslinger returned to the office of the Master during that week and finally informed him that he did not expect to complete the transaction.

On about November 5, 1951, Eslinger was notified by counsel representing the original petitioners that the *120 “Jeffreys Tract” would, be readvertised for sale and if it did not bring as much as be bad bid at tbe first sale, be would be required to make up tbe deficiency. He did not comply with tbe terms of tbe sale at wbicb be had bid and tbe said tract was again advertised for sale, under tbe terms of tbe former decree, without any additional order from tbe Chancellor, on wbicb date tbe highest bid offered was by tbe Overlook Supplies, Inc. Its bid was $2,800, and tbe terms of sale were complied with and thereafter, on December 21, 1951 tbe report of tbe sale of this tract to tbe Overlook Supplies, Inc. at tbe aforesaid bid of $2,800 was confirmed by the Chancellor and title thereto divested and vested in accord with tbe report of tbe Master.

Eslinger was given notice of this last sale and confirmation at $2,800 and demand was made for payment of tbe deficiency with cost of readvertising and selling this tract.

On October 7, 1952, James E. Matthews, as Administrator of tbe Estate of Steve W. McReynolds and bis widow, Edna M. McReynolds, filed a petition against R. R. Eslinger, in tbe original cause, setting forth tbe facts with respect to tbe sale and tbe intervening action on tbe part of tbe parties and counsel, and by that petition, Eslinger was made a party of record to tbe original proceedings. The petition alleged that Eslinger was in contempt of court for bis failure to comply with bis bid and prayed that an attachment issue for bis body and that be be adjudged guilty of such contempt and punished therefor. Tbe petition also prayed for judgment against R. R. Eslinger for tbe $1,200 difference between tbe amount of bis original bid and tbe final sale bid for tbe Jeffreys tract, and for general relief.

*121 All proper process issued as prayed for and Eslinger was brought into Court by an attachment of his body and by subpoena to answer and he did answer the petition, seeking to set up several defenses by plea and answer. His plea was that of the statute of frauds to the effect that neither he or any person lawfully authorized to bind him ever executed a “contract or agreement in writing, or any memorandum or note in writing, or any contract or agreement for the purchase of the said ‘Jef-freys Tract’ or any part thereof.”

The foregoing plea was filed simultaneous with his answer, which admitted his personal bid of $4,000 at the original sale, but undertook to avoid liability for his bid on the grounds that the next highest bid of $3,800 was not a bona fide bid. He admitted that he had told the Clerk and Master that he would return on Monday, October 22, 1951, to complete the matter. The exact statement in his response or answer in this regard is as follows: ‘ ‘ This respondent admits that he informed the Clerk & Master he would return the following Monday, October 22, 1951, to complete the matter.”

His response denies, however, that he ever thereafter told the Clerk and Master that he would close and complete the transaction. He admits that he “did definitely inform the Clerk & Master, on about October 26, 1951, that he did not expect or intend to complete the transaction.” And in support of such action he avers that the tract was represented as having a river frontage, accessible for stock water, but that upon investigation he found the bank so steep that the water was not accessible to the stock. For further excuse he states that the Clerk and Master during the first sale and while crying the bids on this tract, had said that this tract of land had *122 “a lot of that good kind of pink marble on it,” and that his investigation shows that there was no merchantable marble thereon or therein, and he farther answered that it was announced at said sale, and not denied by the Clerk and Master, that the tract had a good road leading into it and a mail route, but that investigation revealed no passable road or mail route in or upon the tract. He admitted that he received a letter from attorneys for petitioners advising him of the course to be followed which lead up to the filing of the petition; that he attended the second sale only for the purpose of trying to further ascertain whether the $3,800 bid at the original sale was bona fide, and that after the second sale he received a letter from counsel for petitioners that the Overlook Supply, Inc. bid of $2,800 was the high bid and that the sale had been duly confirmed to it.

He denied the allegation in the petition to the effect that he had offered $1,000 and to pay the cost of readver-tising, but that he had told the Clerk and Master that it would be better business for him to forfeit $1,000 rather than take the property at $4,000, and that he, on a later date offered to pay $500 rather than have a law suit, after he had first made a proposition to pay the $200 between his bid and the $3,800 bid made at the first sale by some person, but that both propositions were rejected.

He denied that he was in contempt of court or that he had committed any act which justified that he be so declared.

The case was heard, on this petition, plea, answer and evidence before the Honorable George R. Shepherd, Chancellor, sitting by interchange with and for the Chancellor for the Chancery Court of Blount County, the *123

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 543, 41 Tenn. App. 116, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-eslinger-tennctapp-1955.