McKinney v. Primrose

162 A. 47, 18 Del. Ch. 417, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 29, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 162 A. 47 (McKinney v. Primrose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinney v. Primrose, 162 A. 47, 18 Del. Ch. 417, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 38 (Del. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

Upon the primary question of whether there was a contract of some sort between the complainant and Dr. Palmer for the sale and purchase of the land, there can be no doubt. T,he payment by the complainant and her mother, of the costs of a title search, the payment by the complainant on May 4, 1919, of $500 on account of the land and the admission in the so-called little black book which is in evidence, the taking and continuous retention ever since of possession by the complainant, free of rent, not to mention other facts less significant than the [419]*419foregoing, yet of some probative force—all convince me beyond doubt that there was a contract between the parties.

The only evidence we have as to the terms of the contract comes from the lips of the complainant and her two children. The consideration is stated by them to have been $2,400, and their testimony is fortified by the entries in the little book which was kept by Dr. Palmer’s wife, who seems to have been his agent in this particular matter. Mrs. Palmer was the aunt of the complainant. This relationship supplies an explanation for the liberality of treatment which Dr. Palmer, who was known generally as a kind hearted man, extended to the complainant.

The appearance of an unpaid note for $700 found among Dr. Palmer’s papers after his death, signed by the complainant and her mother, bearing the date of May 4, 1914, the day when the contract for the bungalow was made and the day on which the complainant gave the doctor her check for $500 in part payment, is a circumstance which the evidence leaves unexplained. The defendant argues that the existence of such a note is hardly consistent with the contract of sale, for it is said it is difficult to perceive why the complainant and her mother should be borrowing from the doctor $700 at the same time.that the complainant was giving him her check for $500.

The complainant repudiates the note, taking pains however not to deny her signature. She says she and her mother could not have signed such a note, for there was no occasion to do so. I am compelled to conclude however that the note was signed by them. I do not tax the complainant with deliberate misrepresentation with respect to the note. I apprehend that the circumstances attending the signing of the note have escaped her memory, after the lapse of eighteen years, and that, not remembering a need for the note, she argues in her mind that she never could have signed it. This is not an unreasonable way to regard the matter, when the other contemporaneous facts are considered.

[420]*420These facts are as follows: The original plan was for both the complainant and her mother to buy the bungalow. On May 4, 1914, the complainant gave her check to Dr. Palmer for $500, and her mother paid him $1,000. There can be no doubt about that, for it is admitted that Dr. Palmer on a later day returned the $1,000 to the complainant’s mother. The explanation is that the mother and the doctor had some sort of misunderstanding, that he returned to her the $1,000 and that she then dropped out of the transaction.

Now why should the complainant’s mother on May 4, 1914, have paid the doctor $1,000 and at the same time have signed a note to him for $700? The answer to this question is as difficult under the evidence as the other one of why the complainant at one and the same time should have given him a check for $500 and joined in a note to him of $700.

An explanation of this note matter might be as follows : The bill alleges, that the bungalow was contracted for on May 4, 1914, and that the adjoining unimproved lot was contracted for on May 6, 1914, and that the consideration to be paid for both parcels was $2,400. Now if the bungalow which was the only parcel agreed to be sold on May 4th was to be sold for $2,200, the joint note for $700 signed by the complainant and her mother, who were originally contemplated as the purchasers, would fall into a natural setting of concomitant facts, for if the complainant paid $500 and her mother, the then co-purchaser, paid $1,000, there would be a balance due of $700, and it would be quite natural to expect a note to be taken to cover that balance, especially if, as is alleged and testified to, Dr. Palmer was willing to await the convenience of the other parties in the matter of subsequent payments and he was not to take security on the land. If this was what really took place, the note loses all its. atmosphere of mystery, for when the doctor subsequently repaid the one thousand dollars to the complainant’s mother and she dropped out of the transaction, it is easy [421]*421to understand why the note should have been left to stand as it was.

The only trouble with this explanation is that in the little black book the doctor’s wife made a note that the consideration for the bungalow was $2,300 and for the lot $100. When she made that entry, does not definitely appear. It was probably in June, 1923. She of course may have been in error in her understanding of how the total of $2,400 should be allocated between the bungalow and the lot. The appearance of the name of the mother of the complainant on the note would strengthen the thought that the note was connected with the simultaneous transaction of a bargain for the bungalow, a transaction to which the two makers were parties.

I conclude from the evidence that the note is of no moment in this case unless it be to show an obligation for the balance then due. There is nothing to show the contrary and the reasonable probability, in view of the obscurity in which time has enveloped the matter, is that such is the case.

There was a contract for purchase. The terms are shown to be that the price for the two parcels was $2,400, a down payment of $500, and (considering the apparently mutual understanding that the complainant’s mother should have her refund of $1,000 and thereby dropped from the transaction) that the balance of $1,900 without interest should be paid according to the convenience of the complainant, with no requirement of mortgage or other security.

How much has the complainant paid? On this point there is a regretable lack of definiteness. The evidence is far from as satisfactory as could be wished. I do not place confidence in all of complainant’s exhibit No. 9 which to an extent shows a duplication of the entries in the little black book known in the case as complainant’s exhibit No. 8. The entries in complainant’s exhibit No. 8 are for the most part in the handwriting of Mrs. Palmer who acted for the [422]*422doctor. They purport to show payments by the complainant. I cannot agree that the handwriting on the last page is not Mrs. Palmer’s. I think it is. The critical figure five, appearing four times, looks to me like hers. So do the letters in the months. I have made the comparison between them and the other figures and letters admitted to have been made by her. These payments total $405. Adding that to the original payment, we have $905. There is a $200 credit entered on the first page. But I reject that, because it • appears to me to be an unexplained intrusion, not in Mrs. Palmer’s hand. The entries on exhibit 9 contain such an item, but for reasons which an inspection of the paper will reveal, I do not regard it as having been entered by Mrs. Palmer as claimed by the complainant.

Subtracting $905 from $2,400 will leave a balance of $1,495. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 A. 47, 18 Del. Ch. 417, 1932 Del. Ch. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-v-primrose-delch-1932.