Murphy v. McIntosh

99 S.E.2d 585, 199 Va. 254, 1957 Va. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 6, 1957
DocketRecord 4698
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 99 S.E.2d 585 (Murphy v. McIntosh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. McIntosh, 99 S.E.2d 585, 199 Va. 254, 1957 Va. LEXIS 186 (Va. 1957).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Elsie B. Murphy filed a bill of complaint against George C. McIntosh and Nellie S. McIntosh, husband and wife, for specific performance of a contract, wherein the defendants agreed to purchase from the complainant a tract of land and certain personal property for the sum of $73,000. The bill charged that the defendants repudiated the contract without just cause, and that they demanded the return of the deposit which they had made when the contract was signed.

Defendants answered and admitted they had repudiated the contract on the ground that it was procured through the fraudulent misrepresentations and concealments of the complainant by her agent, John A. Johnston, with respect to a material fact, namely that the improvements on said property were not infested by termites.

During the pendency of the suit, Miss Murphy resold the tract of land for the sum of $57,500, excluding from the sale certain personal property listed in the contract with the Mclntoshes. Thereafter, upon motion of defendants, the cause was transferred from chancery to the law side of the court, without objection, and leave was granted Miss Murphy to amend her bill so as to conform to an action at law for breach of contract. Miss Murphy thereupon reformed her bill to motion for judgment, claiming damages in the sum of $16,802.50.

Defendants’ grounds of defense to the motion for judgment were the same as those set out in their answer in the chancery proceeding. They also asserted a counter-claim against Miss Murphy in the sum of $2,000.00, the amount of the deposit made by them at the time of the execution of the contract of sale.

Upon the issues the case was submitted to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the defendants for the sum of $2,000.00.

The court overruled a motion to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence, without evidence to support it, and con *256 trary to the weight of the evidence, and entered judgment in accordance with the verdict. We granted this writ of error.

The evidence was conflicting, and the jury resolved the conflict in favor of the defendants. The trial court has approved the verdict of the jury, and we must, therefore, under often repeated and settled principles, accept as true every credible fact which the evidence in favor of the defendants tended to prove, and which was essential to be proved to entitle them to the verdict. Stated in the light most favorable to the defendants, the evidence may be summarized as follows:

On April 8, 1952, George C. McIntosh entered into negotiations with John A. Johnston, a real estate broker, for the purchase of Miss Elsie B. Murphy’s farm in Loudoun County, Virginia. Johnston was the sole, exclusive agent for the sale of the property. George C. McIntosh, his brother, Robert, and Johnston went to the farm and inspected the house and its surroundings. While there, George C. McIntosh said he asked Johnston “if there had at any time been evidence of termites in the place?” McIntosh said that was all he asked Johnston, and Johnston told him “that the place had been inspected either two or three years prior to that, and it was coming up for either its third or fourth inspection under the terms of a contract that Miss Murphy had with the Terminix people.” They were then standing in the driveway of the property, and out of the hearing of any other person on the premises.

On the following day, April 9th, George C. McIntosh returned to the property with his wife, Nellie S. McIntosh, and after inspecting it, they went to Johnston’s office where a contract of sale was prepared. While Mrs. McIntosh was typing the contract, McIntosh said he asked Johnston “whether there was any activity so far as the termites are concerned?” Johnston replied there was none, and repeated his statements about inspections under the Terminix contract, saying he could not recall whether there had been two or three inspections, and that one more was due in June. He did not tell McIntosh what the inspections disclosed, or that the property had been infested with termites and had been treated therefor.

Certain changes were made in the contract typed by Mrs. McIntosh at Miss Murphy’s request. One of the changes required that the Mclntoshes maintain the property from the date of the contract. The contract as agreed on was dated April 19, 1952, although it appears from marks thereon that it may not have been signed by all of *257 the parties until April 24, 1952.

McIntosh testified that on April 8, 1952, the joists in the furnace room on the basement level were completely covered with a “composition celotex or celotex composition;” that between April 9th and June 10th, 1952, he and his wife and children visited the property frequently, worked on it, and maintained it as required under their contract; that in the meantime his wife, in preparation for removal to the farm, arranged to abandon some political activities in Arlington County in which she was then engaged; that on June 8th, he saw a celotex board hanging down from the overhead rafters in the basement, exposing the beams; that upon inspection the beams appeared to be eaten by insects, which he then thought might be termites, but which he was later informed were known as wood borers; that this made him suspicious and led him to consult W. O. Pruitt, a termite expert; that Pruitt went to the property with him, his wife, Johnston, and another person on June 10, 1952, and Pruitt pointed out to him live termites in action and evidence of considerable previous termite infestation; and that this was his first information of past or present termite infestation. Upon this discovery, Johnston told McIntosh that he would consult Miss Murphy or the Terminix people and have them make an inspection.

On June 26, 1952, Johnston, in response to a telephone conversation with McIntosh, wrote the latter that Miss Murphy had gotten the Terminix Company, employed by her, to make an inspection of her property as of June 24th; but that he had not yet received its report. Miss Murphy’s contract with the Terminix Company of Maryland and Washington, Inc., dated April 10, 1950, provided for an immediate insulation of her building against termites for the sum of $745.00, and for annual inspections thereafter, upon the payment of $45.00 per year, with the right of Miss Murphy to terminate the agreement as of any anniversary date, and the right of the Terminix Company to terminate the same as of the fifth or any later anniversary date.

On July 4, 1952, Johnston wrote McIntosh that he had received an inspection report from the Terminix Company to the effect that it had found “no evidence of any termite activity as of June 24, 1952.” Johnston suggested a further inspection of the premises by a firm agreed upon by Miss Murphy and the Mclntoshes. Following this letter, McIntosh consulted Pruitt again, and on July 10, 1952, McIntosh, his brother, Robert, Pruitt, and a friend went again to the *258 premises. There they watched Pruitt dig live termites from a window sash in the basement of the house. The termites were placed in a mayonnaise jar, kept alive for a month, and thereafter exhibited in evidence.

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99 S.E.2d 585, 199 Va. 254, 1957 Va. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-mcintosh-va-1957.