Mid-State Homes, Inc. v. Brown

256 So. 2d 894, 47 Ala. App. 468, 1971 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 488
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedNovember 3, 1971
Docket6 Div. 104
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 256 So. 2d 894 (Mid-State Homes, Inc. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mid-State Homes, Inc. v. Brown, 256 So. 2d 894, 47 Ala. App. 468, 1971 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 488 (Ala. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

BRADLEY, Judge.

Appellee filed suit against appellant in the Circuit Court of Lamar County claiming that appellant owed her a certain amount of money resulting from an agreement to purchase some real estate. The complaint contained three counts. Count One claimed that appellant owed appellee $476.60 plus interest; Count Two claimed that appellant owed appellee $476.60 due by *470 account stated; and Count Three claimed $476.60 because of the failure of consideration for the agreement to purchase certain described real estate. A demurrer was filed to the complaint, but never ruled on by the trial court. The record is devoid of any formal plea or answer being entered by the appellant prior to trial, but the trial judge, in his charge to the jury, stated that appellant had pled the general issue. Trial was had before the court and jury, with a verdict and judgment for the appellee in the amount of $525.45. There was no motion for new trial.

The first four assignments of error contend that the trial court erred to reversal when it refused to give the written general affirmative charges with and without hypothesis as requested by appellant.

The evidence showed that appellee signed an agreement with appellant on October 27, 1967 wherein appellant agreed to sell appellee a particularly described parcel of property in Lamar County, Alabama. In return, appellee agreed to pay $100.00 upon signing the agreement and to make monthly payments of $53.80 until the balance of $7,747.20 was paid. Appellee paid the $100.00 and stated that she made seven monthly payments thereafter.

The agreement further provided that appellant was to retain title to the property until' the total amount agreed upon ($7,747.20) was paid.

Appellee .testified that the agreement she signed described the property she was buying and that she was shown the boundaries of the lot by the surveyor who had surveyed the lot and placed stakes on the corners . of said lot. A copy of the survey, dated September 22, 1967, was introduced into evidence as appellee’s Exhibit “B”.

Appellee stated that Mr. Connie Noland, the adjoining property owner, came out and had erected a chain link fence on a part of the property she had agreed to purchase. • She stated she told him not to put the fence up on that property and showed them—Noland and Dixie Craft Co., the erectors for Noland—the first survey, but. they still put the fence up. Appellee further stated that Noland claimed to own the parcel of land enclosed by the fence.

Appellee said she informed appellant about the fence and asked them to do-something about it. She also stated she requested of appellant a second survey and this was done, as reflected by the copy of the survey introduced into evidence as appellee’s Exhibit “C”. Exhibit “C” showed the boundaries of the property to be the same, except for the existence of a fence-on said property running from the northeast corner to a point on the south boundary line indicating an encroachment on said’ property of some 18 feet at that point.

Appellee says she stayed in the house for seven months, during which time she was trying to get appellant to do something about the fence. She said she told a representative of appellant that unless they moved the fence she was moving out of the house. She stated that she was told “not to move out until they straightened it out, * * *” The evidence shows that nothing was done by appellant.

Appellee stated that at the end of some seven months she moved out and asked for-her money back, i.e., money paid down and the monthly payments made plus interest.

Appellee, in this suit, is claiming that she agreed to purchase a certain described parcel of property from appellant for a particular amount of money, and that appellant was to give title to this described' property when paid the full amount agreed upon.

She contends that there has been a failure of consideration because appellant will be unable to give her title to the property she agreed to purchase due to the encroachment of the fence and the assertion by someone else of ownership to this piece of the property she had agreed to purchase.

*471 The agreement provided that appellant. would give appellee title to the property-described in Exhibit “B” upon the payment of the final monthly installment on the total sum of $7,747.20. Appellee went into possession of the property upon entering into the agreement and paying $100.00 down. She lived there for 6 to 7 months, making each monthly payment as it became due. She also made certain repairs to the premises while living there. During this period she was trying to get appellant to remove the fence from the property she had agreed to buy. This was not done prior to her moving out.

Appellant says the question presented by this controversy is whether a “vendor is under a duty to remove a fence erected by third parties upon property possessed by the vendee under an ‘Agreement for Deed’ ■contract which makes no provision for such duty.”

Appellee counters by saying that appellant, at the time of entering into the agreement and placing appellee in possession of the property described in said agreement and evidenced by the survey marked Exhibit “B” impliedly covenanted that it had good and merchantable title and was holding that title in trust for appellee who would be entitled to receive it upon completing the required number of payments; and that six months was a sufficiently reasonable period for her to wait on appellant to assert its ownership to the portion of the lot fenced off by Noland who’ claimed to own the property enclosed by the fence, so that she could have the enjoyment of the property she had contracted to purchase.

It is the law in Alabama that every contract for the sale of real estate, unless the contrary is specifically pointed out in the instrument itself, implies that the vendee will receive good and merchantable title. Kirkland v. O’Kelly, 218 Ala. 68, 117 So. 420.

In the instant case, there were no provisions in the contract of sale indicating that the vendor did not have good and merchantable title to the property described in the survey. Furthermore, the record of the present case is devoid of any suggestion that the vendor did not have good title at the time the contract of sale was consummated.

The record further shows that upon the signing of the contract of sale and the making of the down payment, the vendee was placed in possession of the premises.

At this point in the arrangement, the vendee now in possession of the premises could expect to become the owner thereof upon completion of her part of the bargain, i.e., complete the payment of the purchase price; and the vendor could expect to receive, in time, the purchase money and upon receipt of it, would be called upon to give a deed to the vendee conveying good title.

About a month after the contract of sale was entered into, a fence was erected by the adjoining landowner on a portion of the property which was the subject of the contract of sale between appellee and appellant. The adjoining landowner enclosed, the property in question under claim of ownership.

The vendee called on the vendor to do something about the encroachment, and the vendor said that it would take care of it.

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Bluebook (online)
256 So. 2d 894, 47 Ala. App. 468, 1971 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-state-homes-inc-v-brown-alacivapp-1971.