Overboe v. Overboe

160 N.W.2d 650, 1968 N.D. LEXIS 70
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1968
DocketCiv. 8443
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 160 N.W.2d 650 (Overboe v. Overboe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overboe v. Overboe, 160 N.W.2d 650, 1968 N.D. LEXIS 70 (N.D. 1968).

Opinion

STRUTZ, Judge, on reassignment.

The plaintiffs brought this action for specific performance of an option to sell real estate. It appears from the record that the plaintiff Peter Overboe owned a quarter-section of land on which he resided with his family. The plaintiff David is his son. The defendant, Edwin Overboe, is a brother of Peter Overboe.

For some years, Peter had financial reverses and he was quite heavily indebted to a number of persons, including his brother, Edwin Overboe. On February 14, 1961, Peter and Edwin entered into an agreement under the terms of which Edwin was to pay all of Peter’s debts, including those which Peter owed to him. These debts, with advances made by the defendant, totaled slightly more than $24,000. It was agreed between the parties that the quarter-section of land was worth $150 per acre, or a total of $24,000. At the time of this agreement, and simultaneous to the delivery of the deed to the land by Peter and his wife to< Edwin, the parties signed the following agreement:

“AGREEMENT
“It is mutually agreed by and between Peter Overboe, Agnes Overboe, his wife, and Edwin Overboe that Peter Overboe, or any member of his immediate family, shall have the option to purchse the SE 1/4 Section 2-136-51 (the same premises to which a deed was executed this day) at the price of $24,000.00 plus the cost of any improvements made or sustained by Edwin Overboe. This option shall expire Ten years from this date, or within one year after the date of Edwin Over-boe’s death, whichever date is the earliest.
“Dated this 14th day of February 1961.
[Signed] “Peter Overboe
[Signed] “Agnes Overboe
[Signed] “Edwin Overboe
“Witnesses
[Signed] “Ralph L. Trom
[Signed] “John G. Ottis”

After the agreement had been completed and title to the land had been delivered to Edwin, Peter discontinued farming operations but he continued to live on the land until this action for specific performance was brought against Edwin.

Early in 1966, David, with his father, Peter, decided to exercise the option to repurchase. They wrote to Edwin, and they received a reply stating that the option could be exercised and David could have the land—

“ * * * for $150 per acre plus a reasonable sum ($10,000) for the improvements made to the farm. All in cash.”

Thereafter, the plaintiffs had their attorney serve upon Edwin a written notice of intent to exercise the option. In it, they declared their intention to exercise the option and stated that they were ready, able, and willing to perform the terms of the option, and they requested that “within fourteen of the date of this instrument” the defendant present a warranty deed to the premises and furnish an abstract of title, together with proof as to the cost of any improvements which he claimed to have made. In reply to this demand, the defendant, Edwin, advised the plaintiffs that he was ready to turn back the land at $150 per acre together with reimbursement for improvements, the value of which he fixed at $10,000.

*653 After some further correspondence, all of which proved fruitless, the plaintiffs served a summons and complaint upon Edwin, demanding specific performance of the option agreement and praying that the defendant be required to convey merchantable title to the plaintiffs and that the court determine the specific amount of cost of improvements due the defendant under the option. The defendant denied that the option had ever been exercised; and he alleged that the plaintiffs failed to comply with its terms, that the plaintiffs’ acceptance of the option was qualified and conditional, that the defendant had made improvements which were of the reasonable value of $10,-000, that the plaintiffs had not tendered the amount due under the option, and that the option was unenforceable because there was no consideration for its execution.

The trial court found for the defendant on the ground that the option was indefinite in its terms and that therefore it could not be enforced. From a judgment for the defendant entered by the trial court, the plaintiffs have taken this appeal, demanding trial de novo.

It will be conceded that the option agreement, which was drawn by a layman and not by an attorney, is not a model instrument. However, the agreement is definite as to the land to be conveyed, for it is clearly described. The period within which the option must be exercised is definite, for it provides that it be exercised within ten years of its date — which was February 14, 1961 — or within one year after the death of Edwin, whichever shall occur first.

The defendant contends that there was no consideration for the option, but this contention clearly is without merit. Here, the plaintiff Peter Overboe had delivered to the defendant a deed to his land in exchange for the payment of the plaintiff’s debts by the defendant, which debts were listed in writing. Thus there were mutual promises for the agreement: a delivery of title to land by the plaintiff and a payment by the defendant of listed debts.

The option agreement was a part of these mutual promises, for it was drawn at the bottom of the last sheet on which the debts of the plaintiff Peter Overboe were listed. Where mutual promises are made, each furnishes a sufficient consideration to support an action on the other. 17 C.J.S. Contracts, § 97, p. 781.

We next must determine whether the option agreement is indefinite and uncertain, as found by the trial court, because it fails to set forth any guidelines or definition as to the improvements for which the plajntiffs must pay the cost in the event of exercise of the option. When the plaintiffs notified the defendant that it was their intention to exercise the option, the defendant demanded $10,000, in addition to the $24,000 fixed in the agreement, as consideration for the repurchase of the land. The defendant stated that the $10,000 was the value of improvements made by him. Under the agreement which he had signed, however, he is not entitled to the value of improvements made, but is entitled to collect for the cost of improvements.

When a word is used in an agreement between two parties, and the courts are called upon to interpret the agreement, such word is to be given its ordinary, popular meaning. Section 9-07-09, N.D.C.C., provides that the words used in a contract are to be understood in their ordinary sense. Therefore, we must determine the ordinary meaning of the word “improvements.”

Webster’s Third New International Dictionary defines “improvement” as a permanent addition to, or betterment of, real property that enhances its capital value, that involves the expenditure of labor or money, and that is designed to make the property more useful or valuable as distinguished from ordinary repairs. Applying this ordinary and popular meaning of the word “improvements” to the word as used in the option agreement, it must *654 be held that what the parties contemplated by using the word “improvements” was improvements which are permanent, lasting, and fixed in character.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 N.W.2d 650, 1968 N.D. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overboe-v-overboe-nd-1968.