Mobley v. Quattlebaum

85 S.E. 585, 101 S.C. 221, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 116
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 10, 1915
Docket9064
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 585 (Mobley v. Quattlebaum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobley v. Quattlebaum, 85 S.E. 585, 101 S.C. 221, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 116 (S.C. 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice; Watts.

*231 This was an action by plaintiff against the defendant for the purpose of enforcing specific performance of a contract to purchase a piece of real estate in the city of Columbia. After issue joined the cause was referred to A. D. McFadden, Esq., master, to take the testimony and report the same to the Court without any finding or recommendation on his part. Upon coming in of this report the case was heard at the Spring term of the Court for Richland county, 1914, by his Honor, Judge Prince, who filed his decree on July 17, 1914, by which he denied the plaintiff the relief prayed for, and dismissed the complaint. By Judge Prince’s decree the facts are fully set forth and his decree should be reported in the case. From this decree the plaintiff appealed after entry of judgment and seeks reversal by fourteen exceptions. He complains of error on the part of his Honor in his findings of facts and conclusions of law, and in not granting the relief asked for by the plaintiff in the case.

We will not attempt to take up each exception separately.' The contract was entered into by the parties. The defendant refused to comply and accept the deed which was tendered him by the plaintiff, upon the ground that the plaintiff had induced the defendant to enter into the contract by material misrepresentations contained in the paper in the evidence, marked exhibit “Y,” as to the rental value of the property, as to an ordinance having been passed for the paving of the street in front of the property sought to be sold and as to the removal of the Southern Railway shops in front of the property.

Defendant also took the position that he had contracted for a title in fee “free from encumbrances” and that the property was encumbered at the time the plaintiff undertook to convey it by three separate mortgages, all past due, and plaintiff did not tender any title free from encumbrances or any indemnity against them. It appears from the evidence in the case that the plaintiff some time previous to the execution of the contract in question had been *232 endeavoring to sell the property, that he lived in Fairfield county, that the property is one acre of land, situate in the city of Columbia, on Blanding street, and has on it one fourteen-room house, one store, one set of rooms back of the store, and two small negro dwellings, and part of the lot unoccupied by any of the buildings and being used by one of the tenants for garden purposes. J. T. Reese, a real estate agent of Columbia, offered to sell the property to the defendant, but defendant declined to buy it. Later on Kelly, another real estate agent, had the property for sale and had a plat made of fhe same, and about that time submitted to the defendant a statement that the plaintiff had prepared, but had not signed, setting out the different features and advantages of the property; this statement was typewritten and contained thirteen statements and was long prior to the time that it was put in the hands of the Keenan Agency for sale. Later 'on the plaintiff, who had been asking $25,000, placed the property with the Keenan Agency to sell for $22,000, and gave them the plat and list of .statements with regard to the property, with the explanation to them that the statement in regard to paving the street and removal of the railway shops were mere rumors. The evidence shows that the property was reason-bly worth the price it was listed for sale. A member of the Keenan Agency went to the defendant and showed him the statement of plaintiff, but told defendant that Mobley did not in any manner guarantee the same. It does not appear by any evidence in the case that the defendant made any inquiries or attached any importance to the statements of plaintiff prior to the bringing of this suit.

The defendant signed the contract in question, and after defendant had signed it, it was carried to plaintiff by the Keenan Agency and signed by plaintiff, and the defendant immediately listed it with W. A. Keenan, another member of the Keenan Agency, for sale at' a profit of $5,000, Keenan telling the defendant that he believed he could sell *233 it at that advance price before the time expired between making the contract and the time to comply, which statements were made before defendant signed the contract with plaintiff, and actuated the defendant in buying. Keenan, as agent for defendant, used the same statement (exhibit “Y” in evidence) in endeavoring to sell the property for the defendant up to the time defendant refused to comply with his contract with plaintiff, more than thirty days. There was convincing evidence that the defendant wanted the property not for the buildings on it, but bought it for the number of front feet it contained. That the defendant lived in the city of Columbia, and according to all the evidence in the case of real estate agents and business men that he was an extensive operator in real estate, and had bought and sold numerous pieces of real estate property and was a wide-awake, shrewd real estate operator, making careful investigations and keeping well informed as to prices and changes in value as to real estate in Columbia, and that, he owned a house and lot on Blanding street, and had lived in it for years, and, along with other citizens, a year or more before this transaction, and before he moved off of this street, signed a petition, which petition had a sufficient number of signers to warrant the city in having this street paved. It is in evidence that the firm of Messrs. Melton & Belser were attorneys of both plaintiff and defendant in arranging the details of the transaction, both in the examination of the titles and financing the matter for the plaintiff, and when the time arrived to close the transaction defendant refused to comply on the grounds that the property did not rent for as much as $95 per month. At that time no question was raised as to the paving or removal of the railroad shops; plaintiff thereupon made his offer in writing to defendant’s attorney, who was also his attorney, to guarantee the rents set out in statement,' which proposition was submitted to, and refused by, the defendant. On the date provided for in the contract *234 plaintiff tendered the defendant a deed of the property in question and. demanded a compliance of contract on part of defendant. Defendant refused to comply and notified plaintiff that at no time did he intend to comply; and gave as his only reason at that time as his refusal for complying that he found the plaintiff was paying the water rate, which reduced the rent. No complaint was made until the bringing of this suit that the rents were not as represented. It was in evidence that in the spring of 1913, about the time of the transaction, that there was a considerable change in the money markets of the city of Columbia, owing to Federal legislation in reference to currency, and by reason thereof, property was not at that time as salable and in as much demand as it had been previous to that time. It also appears in evidence that after the contract between plaintiff and defendant was signed, and after defendant had placed it with Keenan for sale, the defendant made a proposition to take it up. before the sixty days were out, if plaintiff would make á cash discount, and wanted plaintiff to fix it up before the sixty days expired, and offered plaintiff a consideration' therefor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 585, 101 S.C. 221, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobley-v-quattlebaum-sc-1915.