Nuttall v. Holman

173 P.2d 1015, 110 Utah 375, 1946 Utah LEXIS 135
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1946
DocketNo. 6852.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 1015 (Nuttall v. Holman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nuttall v. Holman, 173 P.2d 1015, 110 Utah 375, 1946 Utah LEXIS 135 (Utah 1946).

Opinion

*377 KELLER, District Judge.

The plaintiff brought this action in the District Court of Utah County, Utah, to compel the specific performance of a contract whereby the defendants Willard' H. Holman and his wife agreed to sell and the plaintiff agreed to buy for the sum of $20,000 a 110 acre farm in Utah County, together with 30 shares of stock in the Provo Water Users Company, 74 shares of stock in the Pleasant Grove Irrigation Company, certain farm machinery and tools on the farm, 5 work horses, 25 chickens, 3 weaner pigs, 1 brood sow, and 1 cow. The contract was oral and resulted from negotiations which began about the middle of June, 1943, and continued until the 19th day of August, 1943, at which time the plaintiff paid' to the defendant, Willard R. Holman, $1000' as a part payment on the agreed purchase price. No further payment was made except that it was understood between the parties that the plaintiff was to receive a credit of $1,000 which would be paid to the defendant, Willard R. Holman, by some Japanese farmers who had one 40' of the farm under lease until the following January. The plaintiff was unable to pay the purchase price agreed upon except through funds to be raised by borrowing or through the sale of other property. This seems to have been well understood by the defendant, Willard R. Holman, and to enable the plaintiff to use the farm as a security in the borrowing of money, the defendants Willard R. Holman and his wife on August 24, 1943, executed a warranty deed to the property naming the plaintiff as grantee and placed the same with one George W. Brown an agent of the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley to be delivered to the plaintiff in the event that the whole of the purchase price was paid.

The plaintiff executed notes and mortgages covering the farm and in due time said bank made available to the plaintiff to apply on the purchase price of said contract a net amount in the sum of $9,313, which amount was held by the agent Brown for delivery to the defendant Holman at such time as the plaintiff was ready and able to pay the *378 balance of the purchase price. Throughout the period between the 19th day of August, 1943, and the 11th day of December of said year, the defendant Willard E. Holman made numerous demands for payment and at the request of the plaintiff granted extensions of more or less indefinite duration. On the 4th day of December, 1943, George W. Brown, the agent for the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, advised the plaintiff that he had received a communication from the bank directing that the money held by Brown be returned to the bank unless the loan could be consummated within a period of 15 days. On or about the 11th of December, 1943, the defendant Willard E. Holman gave notice to the plaintiff that all of the money to make full payment for the farm must be raised by December 18th. A. Eay Ekins and Diantha Ekins, his wife, and L. Stanford Patten and Ellen Patten, his wife, were made parties defendant because on or about the 22nd day of December, 1943, the property covered by the contract was transferred to them by the defendant, Willard E. Holman, and his wife. The parties are in dispute as to what occurred with relation to the contract in the period between the 18th day of December and the 22nd day of that month, and so far as it is material to the determination of the issues in this case will be discussed hereafter.

On the issue of plaintiff’s claim for specific performance of the contract, the trial court found against the plaintiff and entered a judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s action with prejudice.

To obtain a reversal of the trial court’s judgment, the plaintiff makes 26 assignments of error. Most of them relate to rulings of the Court which resulted in testimony being admitted! from which the trial court made the following findings:

“That on or about the 20ith day of December, 1943, at the request of plaintiff, it was agreed that plaintiff and defendant should meet at the National Farm Loan Association office on December 22, 1943, at 2:00 o’clock P. M., and close the deal.
*379 “That pursuant to said previous arrangement, defendant, Willard R. Holman, went to the National Farm Loan Association office on December 22, 1943; that plaintiff failed to appear at the National Farm Loan Association office on December 22, 1943.
The Court further finds that on the 20th or 21st day of December, 1943, and subsequent to the time the agreement was made for plaintiff and defendant, Willard R. Holman, to meet on December 22, 1943, at the office of the National Farm Loan Association, plaintiff called at the office of the National Farm Loan Association and informed Miss Joyce Fage, official of said association, that he was unable to raise the balance of the money and would be unable to meet the requirements and accept the loan of the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley.
“The court further finds that the plaintiff, by the notice given to Willard R. Holman on or about the 21st day of December, 1943, through Miss Joyce Fage, officer of the Utah Central National Farm Loan Association, and by his falure to appear at the office of said association on December 22,1943, in accordance with the agreement of the parties, abandoned the contract and all his rights including the right to specific performance.”

If these findings are within issues made by the pleadings and are sustained by competent evidence, the preponderance of which supports them, and if under the law they support the judgment it becomes unnecessary to determine what merit, if any, there is in the assignments of the plaintiff going to subjects other than those covered by the quoted findings, except the assignment hereinafter specifically dealt with.

Did the answer of the defendants Holman and wife tender an issue warranting the quoted findings?

The plaintiff advances the contention that it does not, because it contains no allegation of an abandonment of the contract. It is of no importance that the court in its findings characterize alleged and proven facts as falling in the category of an abandonment if such facts however designated or characterized are such as relieved the defendants Holman and wife of an obligation to specifically perform the contract. It is true that Holman’s answer does not contain an allegation that on a day or two prior to the 22nd of December the plaintiff notified Brown and defendant Holman that he was unable to raise the balance *380 necessary to make the full payment of the purchase price. The answer does allege the promise of the plaintiff to pay the full purchase price on December 22nd and his failure to do so. To sustain this1 allegation1, it was competent to offer the proof of the plaintiff’s announced inability to pay, and if this proof was competent for that purpose and the plaintiff was given a fair opportunity, as he was, to meet it, it is difficult to see how the plaintiff was prejudiced if the trial court drew a conclusion from the proof that might be said to be something more than a deduction that the plaintiff failed to pay. The quoted findings may, therefore, be said to be within the issues made by the answer of the defendants Holman and wife.

Is there competent proof to sustain the quoted findings?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 1015, 110 Utah 375, 1946 Utah LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nuttall-v-holman-utah-1946.