Presbrey v. Kline

20 D.C. 513
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1892
DocketNo. 12,160
StatusPublished

This text of 20 D.C. 513 (Presbrey v. Kline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Presbrey v. Kline, 20 D.C. 513 (D.C. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cox

delivered the opinion of the Court:

I am requested to deliver the opinion of the court in the case of Presbrey & Green against Effie H. Kline, whose maiden name was Ober. On the first of April, 1887, the defendant, by her agent, one Mrs. Baker, agreed to sell to the complainants a tract of land known as Cliffbourne, for the price of $110,000. The evidence of the agreement was con[517]*517tained in a receipt signed by Mrs. Baker, a receipt for $5,000 as a deposit on account of this purchase, the further sum of $xo,ooo to be paid within 30 days, on delivery of a good and sufficient deed, with perfect title, satisfactory to the Real Estate Title Insurance Company, to such person or persons as said Presbrey & Green shall designate; and the receipt then goes on to name the different installments to be paid, and further describes the application to be made of each payment, partly to the amount due the defendant and' partly to a prior incumbrance of $40,000. It also provides that if the title cannot be made to a certain fraction of an acre, there shall be an allowance made for the same, to be deducted from the purchase money. The concluding clause of this paper is, that if the Real Estate Title Insurance Company of the District of Columbia shall report the title imperfect, the $5,000 shall be returned to the said Presbrey & Green, otherwise to be forfeited if the terms of sale are not complied with’.

On the 30th of November, 1889, Presbrey and Green filed their bill for specific performance of this contract, and they allege that the complainants have been at all times ready and willing to perform all the conditions, of said contract which were to be performed by them, and to take said property and pay the agreed price therefor, according to the true intent and purpose of said agreement, but the defendant will not perform her part of the contract, but has refused and still refuses to deed the property to the complainants or either of them, or to perfect the title thereto, or to remove the imperfection in the title. It then goes on to allege that the defendant would not procure a perfect title to said premises, and further shows that the title was examined by the Real Estate Title Company, and mentions about a dozen supposed defects in the title, which remain to be cured, and alleges that by reason of these things the defendant has not fulfilled her agreement, whereby the complainants have been unable to secure or obtain a good and valid title to the said estate known as Cliff bourne, which is of great value, to wit: of the value of $250,000, as hereinbefore stated, and have therefore suffered great and irreparable injury.

[518]*518And they further say, that the said sum of $5,000 has not been returned to them, but they have been unjustly kept out of the same and deprived of the use of the same wrongfully, and which sum and interest thereon is a charge and lien upon the said premises known as Cliffbourne.

They then pray that the agreement entered into be specifically performed by the defendant, and that said defendant be decreed to convey by good and sufficient deed a good and valid title, free and discharged of all taxes, liens, and encumbrances to said title, excepting the trust of %40,000, and that she shall be required to pay the cost and charges incurred by the complainants; and they then ask as an alternative relief, if she cannot make a good title, that she be required to return to them the sum of $5,000 deposited, and as a further alternative relief, damages for the non-performance of her contract.

The defendant, in her answer, admits that Mrs. May Cole Baker signed the memorandum set out in the complainants’ bill.

She denies that she undertook to make a perfect title and denies that the title is imperfect, except as to the fraction of an acre, and goes on to say that the complainants undertook to have the title examined, and that they purposely neglected to have it reported upon, and formally refused to carrj»- out the alleged contract, abandoned all rights thereunder, surrendered possession of said property, and demanded the return of said $5,000.

She says that, pending this examination of title, the complainants placed said property in the hands of said Fitch, Fox & Brown for sale, and she believes and avers that, being without means to pay said $10,000 in cash, due July 1, 1887, and to meet the first note for $10,000, which if given would become due on December 1, 1887, together with interest for six months on $95,000, they expected that said real estate agents would make a sufficient number of sales of lots to warrant their entering upon the completion of said alleged contract of purchase, and to that end delayed report upon title to said property until, finding that the anticipated sales [519]*519were not made and they would be unable to make said cash payment, they concluded to abandon their enterprise, 'procured a report of alleged imperfections in said title from an employe of said title company, surrendered possession, and as above stated, demanded a return of said $5,000, and she says she has since arranged to sell to other parties.

She denies that complainants have, ever since the execution of said alleged agreement, been ready, willing and prepared at all times to complete the purchase on their part, and she denies the right of complainants, after abandoning said alleged contract and waiting two years, until said property has greatly enhanced in value, to demand in a court of equity that she should be now required to convey said property and specifically perform said contract.

Then she sets out the correspondence between herself and the complainants, and alleges that they never procured a report that the title was imperfect from the title company.

Before examining the evidence, I would remark, that the bill seems to proceed upon one erroneous assumption of law, and that is, that the defendant, by virtue of this contract, was under a legal obligation to correct any defects in her title, and that the complainants had a right to claim damages from her for not doing so. We do not understand that to be the " effect of a sale at common law. In the ordinary sale of land, there is no such thing as an implied covenant of warranty, so that if the title proves defective the purchaser can recover damages as for a breach of warranty. There is, it is true, an implied condition in such sale, that the title shall be good; otherwise, the buyer may simply decline to take it and may recover his deposit if he has made one; and that is the whole consequence of the defect in the title. So that all the allegations in the bill as ground for a claim for damages, for not perfecting the title, may be eliminated from the case.

Proceeding .to the evidence: According to local usage, the complainants employed the Real Rstate Title Insurance Company to investigate the title, as it is the right of the purchaser to alwajrs have that done by his own counsel, and Mr. Ridout, [520]*520who was the vice-president of that company, at the time, proceeded to examine that property. He discovered various imperfections in the title and brought them to the notice of the defendant’s attorney; and the latter, in turn, employed the title company to cure the supposed defects.

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Bluebook (online)
20 D.C. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presbrey-v-kline-dc-1892.