Miller v. Carmody

384 P.2d 77, 152 Colo. 353, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 427
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 27, 1963
Docket20214
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 384 P.2d 77 (Miller v. Carmody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Carmody, 384 P.2d 77, 152 Colo. 353, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 427 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice McWilliams.

Miller brought suit against Lawrence and Mary Ellen Carmody on an option agreement, Miller being the optionee and Carmodys the optionors. After answering the complaint, the Carmodys filed a motion for summary judgment, with several affidavits in support thereof. Miller filed two affidavits in opposition to this motion. After argument the trial court granted the motion and dismissed Miller’s several claims for relief. By the present writ of error Miller seeks reversal of the judgment of dismissal.

Before proceeding to analyze the various pleadings and the several affidavits filed in connection with the motion for summary judgment, it is deemed advisable at this juncture to consider the option agreement.

The option agreement, signed by Miller and the Carmodys on October 10, 1959, provided, inter alia, that for a consideration of $5,000 the Carmodys “do hereby grant unto Miller . . . the option to purchase . . . [from the Carmodys] on or before October 10, 1960” certain described land in Jefferson County, the property being approximately 235 acres. The agreement went on to provide that “if, on or before September 10, 1960, the said purchaser, his heirs or assigns, shall notify sellers *355 in writing of his intention to exercise said option, and shall on or before October 10, 1960 make a further payment unto sellers of a sum equal to 20% of the total purchase price, sellers do hereby agree ... to execute and deliver unto said purchaser a . . . warranty deed ...”

In this option contract Miller agreed “to pay for the property at the rate of $1,100 per acre, the total purchase price being determined by multiplying by $1,100 the exact acreage of the property above described . . . and deducting therefrom at the rate of $500 per acre for each and every acre constituting Carmody Lake.”

This agreement further provided that simultaneously with the execution and delivery of the warranty deed, Miller agreed to execute and deliver to the Carmodys a promissory note for the unpaid balance of the purchase price and a deed of trust securing payment of the same. In regards to this contemplated deed of trust it was “further agreed and understood that upon exercise of the option any and all monies paid . . . by . . . [Miller] . . . to . . . the [Carmodys] shall allow . . . [Miller] . . . to obtain title unencumbered to the amount of acreage paid for at the rate of $1,100 per acre and the trust deed . . . shall not include such acreage; provided, however, that the location of such acreage shall be determined by mutual agreement of the seller and purchaser.”

Proceeding then to a consideration of the pleadings, Miller in the first claim of his amended complaint alleged that on or about October 10, 1959, he and the defendants entered into an option agreement whereby he agreed to buy and the Carmodys agreed to sell 235 acres of land situate in Jefferson County; that he has performed all of the terms and conditions of the “said option agreement on his part to be performed and stands ready, willing and able to make tender of the sum required by him to be paid as decreed by this Court, pursuant to and in accordance with the terms of said option agreement”; and that upon payment by him to the Carmodys “of the purchase price ascertained by the *356 Court with reference to the option agreement between the parties,” the Carmodys be ordered to convey to him the aforementioned 235 acres.

In what he chose to denominate as a second claim, Miller alternatively asked for damages in the amount of $329,000, in the event specific performance could not be had, this sum allegedly representing the difference between the purchase price called for in the agreement and the appreciated market value of the land as of the time the Carmodys “refused to convey.”

In his third and last claim for relief Miller alleged that he had fully performed all of the acts required of him by the option agreement, “except such acts which, because of the defendants’ breaches . . . [he] was prevented from performing”; that the defendants, inter alia, “have drained water from . . . Carmody Lake for the sole purpose of exacting a higher price from . . . [Miller] than that originally agreed upon . . . ”; that if neither “specific performance nor damages for breach of contract can be had,” the aforementioned option agreement should “be rescinded and rendered null and void” and the defendants ordered to pay Miller the amount of $29,402.41, this sum representing monies paid by Miller for engineering services, advertising, promotion, lawyer’s fees, and the like, all “in reliance upon defendants promised performance.”

By their answer the Carmodys admitted that an option agreement was entered into on October 10, 1959, whereby Miller was given an option to buy 235 acres owned by them, denied that Miller “had performed [all] the terms and conditions of the option,” pled that the option agreement specifically “required, inter alia, the payment by . . . [Miller] on or before October 10, 1960 of 20% of the total purchase price of the property” and alleged that Miller failed to make the aforesaid payment, nor did he make any tender thereof.

Thereafter the Carmodys filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging that there was no genuine issue as *357 to any material fact and that the pleadings and the affidavits filed in support of the motion showed that they were entitled to judgment in their favor as a matter of law.

The affidavits of the Carmodys, together with one from their son, Lawrence, Jr., were filed in support of the motion for summary judgment. The gist of each affidavit was that on October 10, 1960, Miller came to the Carmody home in Jefferson County and exhibited a plat whereon he had indicated the acreage which he desired transferred to him unencumbered by any deed of trust; that controversy then arose for the reason that the Carmodys felt Miller had picked out the most valuable acreage to be free from the deed of trust, whereas the agreement expressly stated that the acreage to be unencumbered by any deed of trust was to be mutually agreed upon by the parties; that accordingly they felt that such unencumbered acreage should be representative of the entire 235 acres; and that there was some minor discussion regarding the size of Carmody Lake, drainage of the lake, the “no trespass” signs which had been posted on the premises, but that in any event Miller did not at any time pay, or offer to pay, “the amount which was then payable under the option, or any portion thereof.”

In opposition to the motion for summary judgment both Miller and his wife filed similar affidavits, Miller making no allegation of timely payment of a sum equal to 20% of the total purchase price, or any tender thereof, but as his excuse for not so doing averring that “at all times ... [I have] been ready, willing and financially able to comply with the terms of the agreement and exercise the option, but I have been thwarted in this because the Carmodys refused to consummate the transaction except on the basis that Carmody Lake be less than 26 acres.” Miller stated in his affidavit that he wanted to consummate the transaction on the basis that Carmody Lake was 26 acres, which was what his *358

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
384 P.2d 77, 152 Colo. 353, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-carmody-colo-1963.