Nolan v. Highbaugh

245 S.W. 146, 196 Ky. 563, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 559
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 146 (Nolan v. Highbaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nolan v. Highbaugh, 245 S.W. 146, 196 Ky. 563, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 559 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle —

Affirming.

This litigation arose out of the purchase by the appellees, IT. W. ITighbaugh and F. D. Perkins, from the appellant, J. W. Nolan, of a house and lot situated in the town of Harlan, this state, the contract of sale being evidenced by the following writing:

“This agreement and contract made and entered into by and between J. W. Nolan of 'the 1st part -and IT. W. ITighbaugh and F. D. Perkins, parties of the second part, all of Harlan, Kentucky, this 25th day of September, 1919, witnesseth: Agreed that parties of the -second part will pay to J. W. Nolan thirty-six hundred (3,600.-00) for the house and lot opposite the Kelly Hotel, now - occupied by the Kelly Hotel as sample room, just as soon as said Nolan obtains deed and title to same from [565]*565J. W. Greaver, the present owner. Agreed that the said Nolan will make this transfer and conveyance just as soon as he obtains title and deed from said Greaver. Agreed that the consideration will be cash.
“ (Signed) J. W. Nolan,
H. W. Highbaugh,
F. I). Perkins.”

On October 11, 1919„ the appellant received from J. W. Greaver a deed of general warranty conveying him the house and lot in question, and on that day following its delivery, the appellees offered to pay and tendered to the appellant in lawful currency the $3,600.00, expressed in the contract of sale as the purchase price of the property and at the same time demanded of him a deed of conveyance to same in accordance with the terms of the contract of its sale by him to them. The appellant refused, however, to accept the money tendered or execute the deed, and thereafter persisted in such refusal, in consequence of which this action seeking a specific performance of. the contract in question was brought against him by the appellees in the court below.

The petition as amended alleged substantially as above recited, the facts respecting the contract of sale and its terms and'properly alleged its breach by the appellant, whose answer admitted the latter fact, but attempted to justify it and his resistance of the enforcement of the contract upon the alleged ground that when it was made he had not consummated a contract with TI. W. Greaver, the former owner of the house and lot, for its purchase and therefore had not then acquired title to the property, which fact rendered invalid and unenforcible the contract for its sale made by him with the appellees. The affirmative matter of the answer was controverted by reply. Thereafter the appellees filed a second amended petition, setting up the marriage of the appellant after the institution of the action and making the wife a party defendant, who was later duly summoned as such. Following the taking of the proof by the parties and submission of the case, the chancellor granted the prayer of the petition by specifically enforcing the contract. The appellant’s complaint of the judgment entered in pursuance of this ruling, resulted in the granting of this appeal and his prosecution o.f same.

[566]*566. It will be seen- from what has been said that it is the contention of counsel for appellant that, at the time of entering into the contract with the appellees the appellant had not purchased of G-reaver the house.and lot he contracted to the appellees,, and theretofore then had no interest in the subject matter of the contract; and that a sale of real property in which the vendor has heither legal nor equitable title at the time it was made is 'uhenforeible. ■ ■ ' ' •

Without now stopping to determine whether the fact assumed in the appellant’s above contention, viz., that the appellant had not purchased from the former owner the property in question when he entered into the contract for its sale to the appellees, is or not established by the evidence, we have duly considered the- proposition of law, based on that assumption, presented by the contention, and are constrained to declare it unsound, for it has expressly been so declared in several cases decided by this court and also seems to have been so held by the weight of authority in- other jurisdictions. We find the rule governing such contracts as that here involved stated in 39 Cyc, 1317, as follows:

"While contracts for the sale of land may apply to property or an interest in or title thereto to be .subsequently acquired, they will ordinarily, unless a contrary intention clearly appeals, be construed -as having reference to the title and interest of the vendor at the time of the contract and not to such as may be subsequently acquired. ’ ’

Again at page 1529, same volume, it is further'said on the same subject:

"In general unless there is some agreement to the contrary, the vendor need not have a good title, or any title at all, nor need the land be free from encumbrance at the time the contract is made, but it is sufficient, provided the contract is made by him in good faith, if he has such an interest in the subject matter of the contract, or he is so situated with reference thereto, that he can convey a good title free from encumbrances at the time of performance. ... ”

The first paragraph from Cyc, supra, is supported by the case of Fleming v. Harrison’s Devisees, 2 Bibb 171, cited and commented on in a footnote of the same page. In that case it was held that where a vendor covenanted by title bond to convey 400- acres of land located along a certain stream, upon his obtaining it from the [567]*567Commonwealth, and he subsequently acquired by patent from the Commonwealth two different tracts of land on such stream, it was then completely within his power to perform his covenant by conveying by proper deed the 400 acres of land to the vendee, which he must do; but that as he had acquired by patent from the Commonwealth two tracts of land on such stream, he had the right of election to convey the stipulated number of .acres to the vendee out of either tract. As the case, supra, was decided in 1810, it may well be said that the doctrine declaring that the validity of a contract for the sale of real estate does not depend upon the vendor’s ownership of a legal or equitable title to the property at the time of the making of the contract of sale, is of ancient origin in the jurisprudence of the state.

No case decided by this court since that of Fleming v. Harrison’s Devisees, supra, will be found to conflict with the doctrine therein announced. On the contrary, other cases subsequently decided, such as Tapp, etc. v. Nock, 89 Ky. 414, and Smith, etc. v. Causler, 83 Ky. 367, though arising out of dissimilar facts, give it full recognition. In the first of these cases it was held that a vendor who undertakes to make a good title and give a general warranty deed, does not undertake that he has the legal title, and is entitled to a reasonable time in which to perfect his title and make a deed; and in the second case it. was held that the inability of the vendor to make a good title at the time of the contract, or at the time agreed upon for performance, will not entitle the vendee to a rescission, the vendor’s title being subsequently made perfect; and even though the vendor is not able to comply with his contract when the suit for rescission is instituted, yet if he can perfect the title within a reasonable time, the court will give him an opportunity to do so.

In the more recent case of Jenkins v. Hamilton, etc., 153 Ky.

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Related

Highbaugh v. Nolan
270 S.W. 64 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 146, 196 Ky. 563, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolan-v-highbaugh-kyctapp-1922.