McGowan v. Shearer

195 S.W. 485, 176 Ky. 312, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 12, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 485 (McGowan v. Shearer) 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
McGowan v. Shearer, 195 S.W. 485, 176 Ky. 312, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 46 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing..

This suit was brought by appellee (plaintiff) against the appellant (defendant) to enforce specific performance of what the plaintiff claims, to be a valid executory contract made by him with defendant whereby she agreed to convey to him a tract of land located in Wayne county and containing 100 acres, more or less.

[313]*313A demurrer was filed to the petition, which was overruled, followed by answer which denied the contract and further pleaded that the negotiations which were had between the parties, and which are claimed to constitute the contract, required plaintiff to perform certain conditions precedent “at once,” and that he had failed in these particulars and for that reason the alleged contract should not be enforced, although it might be held that the negotiations were sufficient in law to constitute a valid enforcible contract for the sale of the land.

Proof was taken, and upon submission judgment was rendered enforcing the contract, not as plaintiff claimed, but as defendant intended by the. language she used in her letters forming the contract, if any, and as interpreted by the court.

Prom the judgment requiring her to convey to plaintiff any land the defendant prosecutes this appeal, and plaintiff has obtained a cross-appeal, insisting that defendant should have been required to convey to him all the land which he understood from the correspondence he was purchasing.

The parties did not meet at any time during the negotiations,' which were carried on entirely by correspondence, and the contract for the sale of the land, if any, is to be gathered from such correspondence. The defendant lived in Tennessee, while the plaintiff’s home was in Kentucky, and we learn-from the evidence in the case, but not from the correspondence, that the land involved is a part of a much larger tract which defendant obtained as devisee under her deceased husband’s will. The part of that tract involved herein, and about which the correspondence occurred, is the south part of the larger tract which the defendant’s husband devised to her.

The first letter opening up the negotiations was written by plaintiff to defendant oñ December 7, 1914, which, after proposing to buy certain kinds of timbers, says:

“Well Any I want you to write me the best price you can on part of your, land beginning on B. R. Twyford corner on the road that leads to Jake Bell’s & running a straight line to the old flat field & with the flat field fence up in the mountain above Barnes. ’ ’

In defendant’s answer to that letter, written on the 9th of December, she says:

“I will ans. your letter rec. yesterday evening. Will say in regard to the land I will sell you the mountain place if you want to buy it making the fence the line by [314]*314the poplar, then a straight line to a little scrub oak just on the outside of the fence that goes around that field, then a straight line to the mill tract corner at the old church house spring branch.- Yank knows where it is, also Mr. Jode Abbott and Castillo knows where the scrub oak is I mention. ’ ’

Further on in the letter she states that she will accept $700.00 for the land as laid off by the line which she describes, on condition that plaintiff would arrange with her tenant who was occupying her farm, and pay her’ $400.00 cash, retaining a lien for the balance, but stating that she wanted to know “at once” whether the proposition would be accepted.

Plaintiff replied to that letter, but in which he changed the line as described in the letter of defendant so as to include more land, and offering her only $600.00 for the increased .quantity, which letter was written December 12, 1914.

In response to that letter defendant wrote on December 16, 1914: “I will make the line by the fence at the poplar, then straight to the road, then to the mill corner at the spring branch where I spoke about, and give you all that boundary. There would be no use to run the outside lines, just the line between us, I reckon I will take the $600.00, if you can pay it all now, and you settle with , Mr. Dobbs. . . . That is the very best I can do, and I am really ashamed to do that but I just thought as we had made so many trials to trade and never had made one I would trade for once. Now if you want to do this let me know at once, for this offer wont stand for very long.”

In response, plaintiff, on December 21, wrote:

“Well Any we are very close to a trade. Now Any you know when a man buys anything he wants it. Mr. Dobbs says he will do what is right about the rent of the tract you are offering to sell me & I know he will now if you will credit his note & fix for me to have possession. I will take the place and pay you $600.00 down or you knock off the interest one year which would be $36.00 & I will fix it up with Mr. Dobbs, so you see that we are close to a trade but it may be a dear trade to me as it is rough & will cost a heep to fix it up. Sometimes I think I ought not to trade & then I think I need it for pasture so if you want the $600.00- & fix for me to have possession, it is a trade & I will have the deed drawn & send [315]*315it and the money to you. Now if this is a trade I want to know at once so I can go to work. ’ ’

In reply to that letter defendant, on December 22, wrote plaintiff, saying:

“Will say if you can manage to send me the money in the next few days 1 will accept your offer of the $564.00, and you settle with Mr. Dobbs. Now if you can do this at once I will trade, as there is a deal I can make if I can get the money in time. I know that is awful little to take for the place, but Maybe I can live over it. Well I suppose you know where to make the line. You can send the deed and checks, if it is convenient send the checks three hundred dollars ($300.00) and $264.00 separate.

“Awaiting your reply, I am as ever your friend, Anna McGowan. ’

That letter was not answered by plaintiff until December 28, at which time he wrote, in substance, that he would, as soon as the weather would permit, run the line and make the necessary surveying and prepare the deed and enclose it, together with checks, to the defendant.

Other correspondence followed not material to the case, but in which the plaintiff makes a proposition to buy the entire farm owned by the defendant upon certain terms, which were refused.

On January 7,1915, plaintiff sent to the defendant his checks and a prepared deed describing the land by metes and bounds with the division line as he understood it, but different from what defendant claims that she stated in her letters of December 9 and December 16, 1914.

* In the meantime, defendant, through other arrangements, had obtained the money to supply her pressing needs at that time, and which she had mentioned in some of her first letters. On January 12, 1915, defendant returned the deed unsigned, as well as the checks, and declined to carry out the alleged contract.

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Related

Vidt v. Burgess
136 S.W.2d 1080 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)
Weintraub v. Ware
27 S.W.2d 694 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 485, 176 Ky. 312, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-shearer-kyctapp-1917.