Partee v. Pepple

20 So. 2d 73, 197 Miss. 486, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 314
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1944
DocketNo. 35717.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 20 So. 2d 73 (Partee v. Pepple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Partee v. Pepple, 20 So. 2d 73, 197 Miss. 486, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 314 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

*492 McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the conrt.

This appeal is from a decree of the chancery conrt which dismissed the hill of complaint of the appellant, Charles W. Partee, a real estate agent who sned to recover of the appellees a 5% commission on the sale of a Delta plantation owned and sold by the appellees, W. 0. Pepple and wife, to their co-defendant and appellee, J. V. May, allegedly through the efforts of the appellant Partee and pursuant to a contract between him and the owners of said land in that behalf. At the conclusion' of the evidence offered by the complainant, there was a motion to exclude the same and to render a decree in favor of the defendants. This motion was by the conrt sustained, and the complainant has prosecuted this .appeal. ■

The bill of complaint was sworn to and waived answers under oath. There was filed as an exhibit thereto a written contract entered into between the complainant Charles W. Partee and the defendants W. 0. Pepple and wife, dated July 9, 1942, granting the right and option unto the complainant, or his designee, to purchase the lands therein specifically described and stated to contain “1,080' acres more or less,” and obligating the said owners to convey the same to the said Charles W. Partee, or his designee, at any time from and after that date up to and including the 5th day of September, 1942, at the purchase price of $75 per acre, less a 5% real estate agent’s commission thereon. Then, in a subsequent paragraph of the contract, it was provided that if such right so granted should be exercised on or before December 1, 1942, a contract of purchase and sale should be executed by the parties of the first part and the party of the second part, or his designee, and that thereupon the parties of the first part were to furnish promptly an abstract of title to said land and give fifteen days for an examination of the title after the delivery of such abstract, the delivery of possession of the property to be made on January 1, 1943. There was also filed as exhibits to the bill of complaint *493 certain correspondence between the complainants and the defendants dated subsequent to the execution of the above mentioned contract and which will be hereinafter discussed.

The answers, unsworn to, of each of the defendants were duly filed denying all of the material allegations of the bill of complaint. In the answer of W. O'. Pepple and wife, there was incorporated a cross-bill which reaffirmed all of the denials contained in their answer and asked that the contract between themselves and the said Charles W. Partee be reformed on the ground that the date for the expiration of the contract was originally written therein so as to read December 1,1942, and that by agreement of the parties it should have been changed at the time of its execution so as to read September 5,1942, and that the date was accordingly changed in one paragraph thereof, but through mutual mistake was left to read December 1, 1942, in a succeeding paragraph. This was the only relief sought by the cross-bill, which was unsworn to and did not waive answer under oath. The complainant’s answer thereto was under oath and denied the alleged mutual mistake; and upon the trial, he testified that the contract was actually executed was in accordance with the intention of the parties and that he was to have until September 5, 1942, to produce his prospective purchaser and be given until December 1, 1942, to close the sale. In this state of the pleadings, it will be readily seen that the pleadings filed on behalf of the defendants and cross-complainants did not avail them as evidence to meet such proof as was offered by the complainant Charles W. Partee.

The complainant testified as a witness in the case, after having taken an order dismissing his suit as to Mrs. W. Q. Pepple, who had died since the commencement thereof. At the time of the trial, W. 0. Pepple was still living but was in such state of ill health that he could not be present in court. There was an agreement to the effect that his deposition might be taken before the defendants were *494 required to rest their case, but which was not done.due to the fact that the trial court sustained the motion of the defendants to exclude the evidence offered by the complainant. The said W. 0. Pepple died subsequent to the trial, and the cause was revived against the administrator of his estate.

The complainant testified over the objection of the defendants that he advertised in the Commercial Appeal in January, 1942, for a Delta plantation consisting of eight hundred to twelve hundred acres of sandy loam land, for a client; that the Pepples answered such advertisement by writing him a letter, offering their land for sale; that thereupon and within less than two weeks he drove down from Memphis in his automobile to the home of the Pepples, located about four miles east of Ruleville, Mississippi, and obtained the' necessary information re-> garding the nature and character of the land, the kind and condition of the improvements, etc.; that he left a blank application with the owners to be filled out in confirmation and elaboration of the memorandum which he had taken on the occasion of his visit to their plantation, and that this blank application was later mailed to him by Mr. Pepple without being filled out or signed but with an endorsement thereon to the effect that “It will be 0. K. for you to handle the place. Might be well to come down and let,us have a little more definite agreement.” Objection to all this testimony was sustained on the ground that these negotiations occurred prior to the execution of the written contract on July 9, 1942, but the witness was permitted, to use the memorandum to refresh his memory. However, we can lay aside these prior negotiations in reaching our decision in this case and consider only the said written contract and what transpired subsequent to its execution and in pursuance thereof.

It was shown that, following the execution of this contract, the complainant inserted frequent and repeated advertisements in the Commercial Appeal, at his own ex *495 pense, disclosing the nature and character of the plantation, its approximate acreage, price per acre, location with reference to an improved highway, bus line and mail route, the number of tenant houses, character of the main residence, and the fact that it was supplied with artesian wells, electricity, telephone, commissary, gin system, etc., and that the land was encumbered by a 4%% easy term loan for much more than half of the purchase price required, and further stating that the land was offered for sale because of the serious illness of the owner.

On August 3, 1942, the defendant J. Y. May of May-hew, Lowndes County, Mississippi, who was acquainted with the complainant Partee and willing to negotiate with him for the purchase of the property in question, answered oxie of these advertisements, stating in his letter that he had sold his own plantation in the Delta several months prior thereto, made it known that he was interested in buying this land, that he wanted to see it, and requested the name of the owner and the location of the place in order that he might go and inspect it at such a time as he could arrange to do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 So. 2d 73, 197 Miss. 486, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/partee-v-pepple-miss-1944.