McClain v. Roberts

194 Iowa 1026
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 8, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 Iowa 1026 (McClain v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClain v. Roberts, 194 Iowa 1026 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Preston, J.

The real controversy between the parties is, as we view the record, in regard to 1.55 acres of land. In all probability, there would have been no controversy, even • over the 1.55 acres, but for the collapse of the Iowa land boom. There is little, if any, dispute in the record. The case is peculiar in some respects. At the time of the execution of the contract, [1027]*1027and at the time plaintiff, as the vendee of the land, commenced his action for specific performance, this and other lands were increasing in value, and plaintiff desired the land. The contract was not to be performed for some eight or nine months after it was executed. When defendants filed their cross-petition asking for specific performance, and at the time of the trial, land values were going down, and defendants, vendors, were anxious to sell, and plaintiff was not so strongly desirous of carrying out the sale. The parties switched positions. The plaintiff claims that, by amendment to his pleadings, he abandoned his plea for specific, performance; but the claim is not borne out by the record. In one of the amendments to the petition, filed about November, 1920, some eight or nine months after the date at which the contract was to have been- completed, plaintiff asked-judgment for the down payment made by him, and for damages for the difference between the contract price for said land and its market value on March 1, 1920; but nowhere in any of his pleadings did he withdraw his prayer for specific performance and for general equitable relief. On the contrary, in the different amendments to his petition and in the reply or answer to defendants’ cross-petition, he praj^ed as in his original petition. The prayer of the original petition is as follows:

“Wherefore this plaintiff renews his tender as hereinbefore set out, and asks the court to decree specific performance of said contract as against said defendants, and to render judgment against defendants for damages for their failure to perform at the proper time, and for such other and further relief as may be equitable in the premises.”

Such was the state of the pleadings at the time of the trial, and at the time the decree was entered below, and as they are now. By the contract, defendants agreed to sell, and plaintiff to buy, 128.05 acres. The petition further alleged that defendants were unable to perform their contract for land in excess of 126.50 acres, and that plaintiff tendered performance on his part as to that quantity of land, and demanded performance by defendants, so far as they were able to perform.

It seems to us that this is somewhat out of the ordinary in an action for specific performance, and that plaintiff in a sense abandoned specific and exact performance as to the full num-[1028]*1028bcr of acres; and the claim which he now makes and relies on is that the abstract of title did not show-a good and merchantable title, as required by the contract.' However this may be, the defendants did in fact own 128.05 acres. There were that many acres there, and defendants tendered a deed for that number of acres; and we think that, under the record, the abstract which plaintiff permitted defendants to amend and bring down shows that fact. The trial court so found. The plaintiff got all he asked, and all his contract called for. It appears that plaintiff and defendants entered into a written contract on June 23, 1919, by which defendants were to convey to plaintiff, on March 1, 1920, the west 128.05 acres of the southwest fractional quarter of Section 30-71-9, at $290 per acre: $2,000 down; $15,134.50 cash on March 1, 1920; and the balance by note, secured by mortgage back upon the land. Defendants were to convey the land to plaintiff by a good and sufficient warranty deed, and deliver to plaintiff an abstract of title showing a good and merchantable title. Defendants admitted the execution of the contract, and say they did tender to plaintiff a good and sufficient warranty deed and an abstract showing title as required, and that they have at all times been ready, able, arid willing to perform on their part; and they ask specific performance as against plaintiff. The deed to defendants when they purchased the land deeds the west 128.05 acres.

It appears that, in 1838, an original entry of the quarter section was made by one Benedict; and in 1841, a patent was issued to him. Both the original entry and the patent describe the land as a fractional quarter section, containing 165.82 acres. Surveys made afterwards showed that, in fact, it contained 171.55 acres. Different conveyances were made, until the title became vested in parties named Hollister. That was prior to January 24, 1874. On the date last mentioned, the Hollisters partitioned the quarter section by mutual conveyances among themselves, whereby the title to the east 43.50 acres, which became a separate farm, was vested in one Hollister, and the title to the ’west part, supposed to contain 126.50 acres, was vested in another Hollister. This west part also became a separate farm. Later, the title to the east farm, of 43.50 acres, became vested in one Carlson, who owned it on March 1, 1920. The [1029]*1029title to tbe wesf portion bad become vested in Cbatterton, prior to 1886. Tbe Chattertons conveyed to tbe defendants by warranty deed, and they owned it on March 1, 1920. As said, the deed to tbe defendants conveyed 128.05 acres. Up to that time, the part of tbe farm conveyed to Hollister in January, 1874, was described as 126.50 acres off tbe west side. At the time tbe Hol-listers made the division of tbe quarter section among’ themselves, they mutually agreed upon tbe line of division between the east 43.50 acres and what was supposed to be 126.50 acres to tbe west. Tbe line was evidenced by a division fence. From that time to tbe time of the trial, all parties owning land on both sides of tbe line maintained and recognized the line fence as tbe true division between tbe said farms, and acquiesced therein. Prior to tbe time tbe west part of tbe Hollister farm was conveyed to defendants, tbe Chattertons, defendants’ grantors, bad become convinced that there were more than 126.50 acres in tbe farm. The Chattertons sold the farm to defendants under a contract whereby defendants agreed to pay a stipulated amount per acre for the actual number of acres in tbe farm, when established by a proper survey. Prior to tbe deed to defendants, tbe parties had the county engineer make a survey of tbe land and a plat thereof, which was duly prepared and certified by the county engineer and filed of record. That survey and plat showed the actual acreage of the west portion to be 128.05 acres, which, with the east portion of the section, containing 43.50 acres, makes the total 171.55 acres, the amount of lánd which was actually there, as shown by the survey. The abstract of title was continued and amended so as to show said survey and plat and the entire history of the title to the land. As said, defendants prepared and tendered to plaintiff a deed to the entire 128.05 acres, and an abstract setting out the foregoing survey and plat and affidavits and the entire history of the record title from the government down. The owners of the east portion never did claim more than 43.50 acres.

About the time plaintiff entered into the contract with defendants to purchase the west part of the fractional quarter, he also entered into a similar contract with the owner of the east 43.50 acres to purchase the same from him, and both deals were to be closed on March 1, 1920. At that time, Carlson, the owner [1030]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sorenson v. Wright
268 N.W.2d 203 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1978)
Eland v. Carter
237 N.W. 520 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 Iowa 1026, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclain-v-roberts-iowa-1922.