Posey v. Kimsey

142 S.W. 703, 146 Ky. 205, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 77
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 16, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 703 (Posey v. Kimsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Posey v. Kimsey, 142 S.W. 703, 146 Ky. 205, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 77 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

On September .5, 1910, the appellee, Kimsey, signed arid delivered to James E. Cheatham, a real estate agent in Henderson, Kentucky, the following paper:

“I hereby authorize Jas. E. Cheatham to make in the next five days the following trade, namely: I will sell my farm, known as the Jno. Baskett home farm, of which I am to cut off in this sale 250 acres, taking in all the northwest of the Texas R. R. track and enough of the south side, east of the railroad, lying next R. H. Soaper’s cut parallel to Soaper line to make the 250 acres, at the price of two hundred ($200) dollars per .acre, and possession to be given Jan. 1, 1911, and the lease I have with Lee Kimsey is to be assigned to purchase for year 1911. I am to throw in all my interest in the mules, ten or twelve head, and farming equipments, we own jointly, mineral rights reserved, and I agree to pay in case of above sale to Reichert and Posey, one [207]*207hundred ($100) dollars per acre for their Anna Yeaman farm of 500 acres, the lease of present tenant to be assigned to me for year 1911. Reichert and Posey to have rent for 19Í0 and twelve months to take off half of the timber from Jan. 1,1911, and the other half by January 1,1912. Reichert and Posey to reserve all the timber and posts for said two years they may take off, and to reserve all the coal and mineral rights, and all gas rights to and under said 500 acres of land. And Reichert and Posey are to pay all ditch taxes on the 500 acres up to the date of deed.

On September 6th, the appellants, Reichert and Po-sey, signed on the paper the following acceptance:

“We accept the above purchase, and sale and agree to make deed immediately as soon as we can.”

Kimsey refusing to perform his part of the contract, this action for specific performance was brought against him by Posey and Reichert, the prayer of the petition being that: ;|

“The defendant be required to perform specifically the terms and conditions of the written contract aforesaid, and that he be required to execute and deliver to them a deed conveying said 250 acres of land and his interest in said personal property, in exchange for the deed herewith tendered to him; and if for any reason this can not be done, then they pray that the defendant be required to accept the deed from them herewith tendered, and that they recover of the defendant the s,um of $50,000, with interest from the 21st day of September, 1910; that to secure,same, they be adjudged a lien on the said 500 acre tract of land, and that their lien be foreclosed and said land of such part thereof as is necessary for that purpose be sold to satisfy said demand; and they pray for their costs herein, and all proper and equitable relief.”

With the petition, a sufficient deed, reciting a cash consideration of $50,000, made by Posey and Reichert to Kimsey for the 500 acres of land was tendered.

After a general demurrer to the petition was overruled, Kimsey filed an answer, in which after traversing generally the averments of the petition,, he set up (1), that the. paper, delivered, to Cheatham, was intended to be signed and executed in duplicate and that it was not to be in force until so. executed, and, that it was never executed in duplicate or at all, and never went into effect. (2) He further averred that the paper was not a [208]*208contract or evidence of a contract, that it did not locate, describe or designate any land, and was within the statute of frauds and void for uncertainty. (3) He denied that within five days after the execution of the paper he had any notice that the proposition was accepted, and denied that any acceptance of the proposition contained in the paper delivered to him by Cheatham was ever tendered to or received by him. (4) He further stated that on September 5th, and at the time the suit was instituted, there was a valid subsisting lien upon the 500 acres of land for $16,000, and for this reason specific performance of the contract should not be enforced.

In reply, after controverting the affirmative matter in the answer, Posey and Reichert charged that Kimsey knew at the time he delivered the paper sued on to Cheatham that there was a lien on the 500 acres of land for the amount mentioned, and that there was also a lien upon his 250 acres of land for several thousand dollars, and that it was agreed and understood that these liens were to he adjusted in a satisfactory manner when the trade was closed.

The evidence of Posey and Reidhert was in substance that the paper delivered by Kimsey to Cheatham was signed by them on September 6th, and given to Cheat-ham, and on the same day they saw Cheatham hand to Kimsey the paper they had signed, and observed Kimsey give it hack to Cheatham. They testified that on September 8th, they met Kimsey in company with Cheatham, and told him that they were ready to make deeds, and that Kimsey replied that his wife would not sign the deed to his land, and that he had concluded that he did not desire to close the trade. It also appears that on September 21st, they offered in a writing addressed to Kimsey to satisfy and have released the lien on the 500 acres of land whenever life was ready to accept the deed; and also notified him that if he preferred he could retain a lien upon the 250 acres of land he was to convey to them to protect him from any loss on account of the lien on their land. Cheatham testifies in substance that shortly before the paper delivered to him by Kimsey was written, hut on the same day, Kimsey proposed to him to negotiate the trade and that in the course of the conversation the hen upon the land owned by Kimsey as well as the encumbrance upon the land owned by Posey and Reichert was discussed. That when the conversation ended, the paper was prepared in duplicate, Kimsey re[209]*209taining one copy and delivering the other to him. That on the following day, after Posey and Eeichert had accepted the proposition, he handed the executed paper to Kimsey, who read it over, and returned it to him.

Kimsey testified in substance that he signed the paper, and that on the following day Cheatham informed him that the proposition had been accepted by Eeichert and Posey and after reading-to him their acceptance he put the paper into his pocket. He also admitted that on September 8th, he notified them that he and his wife had concluded that they would not perform the contract; that he knew there was a lien upon the 500 acres of land, but denied that there was any agreement or arrangement made about adjusting this lien or. the lien upon his land, which lien he removed subsequent to the contract.

After considering the ease, the lower court dismissed the petition, and the plaintiffs appeal.

It is apparent from the evidence that on the 5th of September, Kimsey signed and delivered to Cheatham the paper in controversy, and that on the following day the proposition contained in it was accepted in writing by Posey and Eeichert, and that on the same day Kim-sey was notified of the fact that they had accepted it. It is also very clear that in a few days after being notified that his proposition had been accepted, he concluded not to execute the contract. Aside from the legal questions presented, there is little doubt that upon the facts Posey and Eeichert made out a case against Kimsey entitling them to relief.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 703, 146 Ky. 205, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/posey-v-kimsey-kyctapp-1912.