Points v. Turner

226 P. 282, 39 Idaho 50, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 11
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 226 P. 282 (Points v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Points v. Turner, 226 P. 282, 39 Idaho 50, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 11 (Idaho 1924).

Opinion

*53 BRINCK, District Judge.

This is an action for specific performance of a contract for the purchase of land. From a judgment and decree for plaintiffs, the defendants, vendees, appeal.

The respondents, Mr. and Mrs. Hart, plaintiffs in the court below, are husband and wife. On November 19, 1919, appellants, having been negotiating for the purchase of 120 acres of land belonging, as hereinafter stated, to the respondents, submitted to respondents a written memorandum of a contract for the sale thereof by respondents to appellants. The writing later was lost and its contents were proved at the trial by oral testimony. The trial court found that the contract showed the names of the parties, the description of the property, the purchase price, an acknowledgment of the payment of $500 that day made thereon, and the statement that the remainder was to be paid when the abstract of title was furnished, and the deeds ready for delivery. The purchase price was $150 an acre or an aggregate of $18,000. Appellants and Mr. Hart signed the memorandum, and the court found, on conflicting testimony, that Mrs. Hart either signed it or ratified it in a way that made it binding upon her. It is not claimed, nor does it appear in the evidence, that the contract was acknowledged by any of the parties.

Upon receipt of the abstract, it was discovered by the appellants that 70 acres of the land stood of record in the *54 name of Mr. Hart, which the court found to be community property, and that the other 50 acres stood of record in the name of Mrs. Hart, and that she was an American Indian, and could not dispose of the 50 acres without the approval of the government. The precise nature of the restriction on her alienation of the land is not shown in the record, but the pleadings admit, and the court found, that she could dispose of the land only with the approval of the government of the United States. The court further found that this 50 acres had been bought with her money.

After making this discovery, the appellants and Mr. Hart, on December 4, 1919, agreed that appellants should pay to him at that time a further sum of $10,000 and receive the deed of respondents to the 70 acres, which was done; and at that time Mr. Hart stated to appellants that the deed to the remaining 50 acres could be had in 10 or 12 days and the appellants replied that they would give respondents 30 days in which to deliver it. Mrs. Hart was not present on December 4th, but had executed and acknowledged the deed on December 3d and testified that she understood the transactions of December 4th and that Mr. Hart acted for her there.

The respondents immediately took up with the government the matter of approving the sale, without result so far as the record discloses, until the receipt by Mrs. Hart of a letter of date May 21, 1920, from the chief clerk of the Office of Indian Affairs in the Department of the Interior at Washington, stating:

“The office will take favorable action on the sale of your land at Twin Falls, whenever the consideration is deposited with the Superintendent of the Umatilla School. When the approved deed is sent to the Superintendent, instructions will be given as to the disposition of the proceeds of the sale.”

Respondents thereupon notified appellants of the receipt of this letter. Appellants then told them that they would not accept the deed or make payment for the land and respondents brought this action for specific performance. *55 The court decreed specific performance, ordering that respondents deposit with the clerk their deed to the 50 acres, showing approval thereof by the Secretary of the Interior, or the Commissioner of Indian Affairs of the United States, and that within fifteen days thereafter the appellants complete their contract with the respondents by paying to the clerk the sum of $7,500, with interest from May 26, 1920, and costs of suit; and that if appellants do not make such payment, the 50 acres be sold and the proceeds thereof be applied so far as necessary, to the satisfaction of the amount due respondents, and if the proceeds are not sufficient to pay the same, that a deficiency judgment be entered against the appellants, and that execution issue thereon. No time is designated within which the respondents shall deposit their deed.

Various errors are assigned. Included among them is the court’s finding that the defendants contracted to purchase the 120 acres of land in question, and the conclusion of law “that after the defendants had partially performed their contract by making payment of a large part of the purchase price of the property, and taking a deed for the most valuable portion of the land, and as they had not restored or offered to restore to plaintiffs the property deeded to them, the defendants cannot rescind or repudiate any portion of their contract.”

These assignments of error go to the question of whether the contract of November 19, 1919, was a valid contract. A serious question is raised by the evidence and the assignments of error as to whether Mrs. Hart signed the contract. The evidence on this point is conflicting and the finding is that she either signed it or ratified it in such a way as to make it binding upon her. The latter portion of this finding is a conclusion of law, rather than a finding of fact. It cannot be determined what were the facts upon which the court based this conclusion; but notwithstanding this question, it is clear that the original written contract, in so far as it related to the 70 acres of community property, was invalid. Even if it were signed by Mrs. Hart, it is not *56 claimed that the contract was acknowledged either by her or by Mr. Hart, and there is no evidence to that effect; and without acknowledgment by both of them, the contract was to that extent invalid, under the provisions of C. S., sec. 4666. (McKinney v. Merritt, 35 Ida. 600, 208 Pac. 244; Fargo v. Bennett, 35 Ida. 359, 206 Pac. 692.)

The portion of the contract as to the community property was, however, performed, when on December 4, 1919, the respondents conveyed to appellants the 70 acres, and appellants paid them the balance of the purchase price therefor at the rate named in the original contract; and by agreeing at the same time for an extension of time within which to perform as to Mrs. Hart’s land, the parties left that portion of the. contract in effect as an executory contract. It would seem, however, that this transaction constituted a severance of the original contract by the act of the parties, inasmuch as there was now left unpaid merely the purchase price for the 50 acres figured at $150 per acre, and in view of Mr. Hart’s statement that as to the remaining 50 acres, he would take a chance on getting a deed, and if he did not get it, he would take the loss himself. Therefore this suit as it seems to us, is to be viewed, not as an action for specific performance of a contract to convey 120 acres, which has been partially performed, but as an action for the specific performance of a contract for 50 acres at $150 an acre, which is wholly executory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P. 282, 39 Idaho 50, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/points-v-turner-idaho-1924.