Padgett v. Bon Air Realty Co.

143 S.E. 291, 150 Va. 841, 1928 Va. LEXIS 354
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 24, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 S.E. 291 (Padgett v. Bon Air Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Padgett v. Bon Air Realty Co., 143 S.E. 291, 150 Va. 841, 1928 Va. LEXIS 354 (Va. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

McLemore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Arlington county, entered February 25, 1927, sustaining a demurrer and dismissing complainant’s bill as to Bon Air Realty Company, Incorporated.

Bon Air Realty Company, Incorporated, was the owner of a sub-division in Arlington county known as Bon Air, and in December, 1921, entered into an agree[843]*843ment with Walter P. Harlow, whereby it contracted to sell him certain lots in said sub-division among which were lots Nos. 37, 38, 39 and 40, and which furnishes the basis for this controversy. These were only a part of the lots covered by the agreement between the realty company and Harlow, whose numerous purchases and resales to the public extended over a period of several years.

While the bill is not in all respects clear in its allegations, we gather therefrom that the realty company had contracted with Harlow in a manner that gave him sole control of the development and marketing of the unsold lots in Bon Air. The land company from time to time would agree to sell, and Harlow would agree to buy certain designated lots at a stipulated price, and subject to certain conditions as to buildings, etc., but the title to the lots was retained in the vendor until the purchase money was paid, with a forfeiture clause which could be invoked by the land company, if payments were not paid as provided in the contract.

Armed with this contract of purchase, Harlow, in turn, undertook to sell the land to purchasers generally, when, and as, they might be found. He fixed his offering prices, terms, etc., signed his contracts for sales “Walter P. Harlow, vendor,” and usually when a purchaser to whom he had made a sale had paid for his property, Harlow would arrange with the land company to execute the deed direct to the purchaser, as a matter of convenience and of economy.

Keeping in mind the foregoing outlines, or modus operandi, as between Bon Air Company and Harlow and we reach the point where Harlow agreed to sell to Raymond D. Padgett for $560.00 the four lots heretofore referred to, and the following contract of sale was entered into:

[844]*844“Alexandria, Virginia.
“Received of Raymond D. Padgett, this 20th day of August, 1923, the sum of twenty dollars ($20.00), to be applied on the purchase price of lots No. 37, 38, 39, 40, Bon Air, in Block No. 1, Arlington county, Virginia.
“Terms: Purchase price. . .$560.00
“Above deposit .. 20.00
“Balance........ 540.00 payable by fifty-four notes of $10.00 each, bearing interest, to be drawn by the purchaser to the order of Walter P. Harlow, vendor, dated the 20th day of August, 1923, and payable on the 20th day of each month thereafter. In the event of default of purchaser, all amounts paid hereunder shall be forfeited to vendor as liquidated damages after sixty (60) days notice in writing to vendee.
“When purchase price is fully paid, purchaser shall receive deed in fee simple to said lot; subject, however, to the following restrictions:
“1. No building shall be erected on said property nearer than fifteen (15) feet to the street line of any lot.
“2. No dwelling shall be erected to cost less than two thousand dollars ($2,000.00).
“3. Every dwelling, single or double, erected in said sub-division shall stand at least two and one-half .feet from the side line of lots.
“4. No lot or lots shall ever be sold, leased or rented or in any way conveyed to any person or persons of African descent.
“Walter P. Harlow, Vendor.”

The vendee made seven monthly payments of $10.00 each on the purchase price, the last payment being March 20, 1924, and alleges in his bill that he has always been ready to pay the residue of said notes, but that Harlow has failed and refused to make a deed [845]*845for the property. The bill in which this allegation is made was filed November 2, 1926 (more than two and half years after complainant discontinued meeting the installment notes), and is asking for relief against both Harlow and the realty company.

During the year 1921, 1922 and 1923 Harlow was actively engaged in buying and selling Bon Air lots, and in order to make conveyances to those of his clients who had paid for their lots, induced the land company to make deeds to these purchasers when the company had not been paid therefor by Harlow; the result being a considerable indebtness from Harlow to the Bon Air Company; a refusal to continue the relationship further, and the suit of May 29, 1926, for the termination of their agreements, the settlement of their differences and collection of the money due from the Harlows to it.

This last mentioned chancery cause was entitled Bon Air Realtr Company, Incorporated v. Walter P. Harlow and H. Richard Harlow, and was finally disposed of on July 3,1926, by a consent decree cancelling all contracts which had been entered into between the parties for the sale of lots, and establishing in the complainant company the title to all undeeded lots referred to in the several agreements, which were contracts on the part of the Bon Air Company to convey certain lots therein designated to Harlow when the purchase money had been paid. Among the lots covered by this decree were those referred to as the basis for the cause in judgment.

To the decree appealed from in the instant cause which sustains the demurrer there are four assignments of error which may be summarized as follows:

1. That Harlow was the agent of Bon Air Company, and his acts bound the realty company.

[846]*8462. That in the suit last above referred to Padgett should have been a party.

3. That said suit was a secret, collusive and fraudulent proceeding, with the purpose of defeating Padgett’s claim to the lots in question, and that therefore the decree can now be collaterally attacked.

4. That Padgett is not bound because there is no such privity between him and Harlow as will preclude him from asserting his rights independently against the principal, the Bon Air Company.

The first assignment presents the real issue in the cause, a proper solution of which renders a disposition of the others of no great difficulty.

The contract with Harlow is not unusual, but is one in which Harlow, it may be presumed, was anxious to enter. He was given entire control of the sale of the Bon Air lots, under a contract which might prove quite profitable, depending upon the popularity of the property; the spread between the price agreed to be paid for the lots by Harlow and the sales price to his customers, with which Bon Air Company had nothing to do, as well as the intelligently directed energy of Harlow.

The record title remained in the land company, Harlow being protected by a written agreement fixing the price, of the lots, and the other requirements to be performed, before deeds for the property could rightly be demanded.

Appellant had agreed with Harlow for the purchase of the four lots, Nos.

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143 S.E. 291, 150 Va. 841, 1928 Va. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/padgett-v-bon-air-realty-co-vactapp-1928.