Robbins v. Porter

88 P. 86, 12 Idaho 738, 1906 Ida. LEXIS 95
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 88 P. 86 (Robbins v. Porter) 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
Robbins v. Porter, 88 P. 86, 12 Idaho 738, 1906 Ida. LEXIS 95 (Idaho 1906).

Opinion

STOCKSLAGER, C. J.

This is an action for the specific performance of a contract to convey land. It is alleged in [741]*741the complaint that in November, 1903, plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract, wherein plaintiff was to procure from Nora Hart, Cora Jackson, her husband, William Jackson. Ellen Winnier and Dunbar Winnier, her husband, deeds to all their rights and equities in certain lands in Asotin county, Washington, for defendant, and for the procuring of said deeds defendant agreed to pay to plaintiff $1,500. It is then alleged that plaintiff procured such deeds, and there was a payment of $250 to plaintiff by defendant on the contract; that subsequent to making the foregoing contract and performing the deeds aforesaid, and the payment of said $250 to plaintiff by defendant, Leslie A. Porter, to wit, on or about the -day of March, 1904, plaintiff and Leslie A. Porter modified their former agreement, and entered into another agreement wherein said Leslie A. Porter agreed to execute and deliver to plaintiff, in full payment of said balance of $1,250 due plaintiff from defendant for procuring said deeds, a good and sufficient warranty deed to certain lands in Nez Perce county, covering about three and one-half acres; that such lands were surveyed by the county surveyor of Nez Perce county at the instance of defendant Leslie A. Porter, and defendants executed their deed to said premises to plaintiff for the consideration of the said sum of $1,250 balance due on the original contract, and put plaintiff in the quiet and peaceful possession thereof; that at the time of making said subsequent agreement, survey and deed, the premises were occupied by one Miss Bashor, as tenant, who paid the rental to defendant, Leslie A. Porter, who turned the same over to plaintiff; that defendant, Leslie A. Porter, has refused, and still refuses, to deliver said deed to plaintiff, although the full purchase price of said premises has been paid by plaintiff, and plaintiff put into possession of said premises, and the delivery of said deed requested by plaintiff of defendant L. A. Porter; that Lolo C. Porter is the wife of Leslie A. Porter. The prayer is that defendants be ordered and adjudged to deliver to plaintiff the deed they executed and agreed to deliver, and if they have otherwise disposed of the [742]*742property or encumbered the same, that plaintiff have judgment against defendants for the sum of $1,250.

The defendants answered this amended complaint and denied the original contract set out in the complaint; also that plaintiff procured the deeds as alleged in the complaint, and deny generally all the allegations of the complaint excepting the allegation that Leslie A. Porter and Lolo C. Porter are husband and wife. For a further defense defendants aver that on or about the tenth day of March, 1903, plaintiff represented to defendant that he had powers of attorney from all the heirs having any property rights or interest in the property in Asotin county, Washington, for which plaintiff alleges that he procured the deeds; that the plaintiff did not have such power of attorney, and could not have procured such title to said lands, and did not know the persons in whom the title was vested, and did not, and could not, procure the title therefor to said land, or any part thereof, except the title and interest of one Nora Hart, an undivided one-twelfth interest in and to said land, and the right, title and interest of all other persons owning the remaining eleven-twelfths interest the plaintiff never did procure for defendant, and defendant lost nearly all the other interests, and was obliged to sell out and dispose of the interests that he had secured in and to said land, which was too inconsiderable for any use whatever, and because he could not procure the other interests which the said plaintiff had agreed to procure for him, and which he did not, and never could, procure; that plaintiff never had any power of attorney whatever from the heirs owning a larger portion of the interest in said land, and was never in any position to deal with them in any way whatever and other interests, to wit, the interest of Cora Jackson néeCora McBeam, for which he claimed to have a power of attorney to act, has been conveyed and disposed of by said Cora Jackson and William Jackson, her husband, prior to said plaintiff having any authority whatever to convey or to deal with the same. .It is then averred that defendant has been damaged in the loss of said property, and by virtue of the [743]*743representations and inability of said plaintiff to secure for bim and convey said property to defendant in the sum of $5,000, for which amount he demands judgment.

Plaintiff answered the separate defense of defendants by denying each and all of the averments thereof. Defendant, Leslie A. Porter, filed his cross-complaint in which it is alleged that he is the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of the three and one-half acres of land in dispute, and alleging that on or about the twenty-second day of August, 1904, plaintiff, without any right, title or authority, entered into and upon said land and ejected his tenant, Miss Sadie Bashor, and cross-plaintiff, and ever since has by force and threats excluded and kept off from said land cross-plaintiff, and since last-mentioned date has taken from said place all of the fruits and products grown thereon, the rents, issues and profits thereof, without any right, title or authority, to the damage of cross-plaintiff in the sum of $50, for which amount he demands payment and for the immediate possession of said premises. All of the allegations of this cross-complaint are denied by plaintiff, and he avers that he has fully paid defendant Porter therefor, and was put into possession thereof by said defendant, and is now in such possession by reason thereof and no other.

A jury was waived and trial to the court, judgment for plaintiff entered and filed' January 15, 1906. The court found that the contract as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint was entered into by plaintiff and defendant, Leslie A. Porter, on or about November 10, 1903; that in pursuance of such agreement plaintiff procured the deeds and delivered them to Leslie A. Porter, and that said Porter accepted them, had them filed for record and duly recorded in the office of the recorder of the county of Asotin, state of Washington; that only $250 of the contract price has been paid, leaving a balance due from defendants to plaintiff of $1,250; that subsequent to procuring said deeds and delivery of same by plaintiff to defendant and the payment of said $250, to wit, on or about January 28, 1904, plaintiff and defendant, Leslie A. Porter, [744]*744entered into another and second agreement, wherein and whereby said defendant agreed to and promised to execute and deliver to plaintiff, in full payment of said balance of $1,250 due plaintiff for procuring said deeds, a good and sufficient warranty deed to certain lands in Nez Perce county, Idaho, plaintiff agreeing to accept, in full payment of $1,250, the same lands, which second agreement was evidenced by a memorandum in writing and signed and acknowledged by said defendants, and is a warranty deed to said premises, and contains the terms of said agreements and a correct description of the property agreed to be so conveyed. The findings contain a full copy of the deed which is the ordinary form of warranty. When the plaintiff had concluded his evidence, defendants moved for a new trial, alleging that “plaintiff had wholly failed to prove any of the material allegations alleged in the complaint;

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Raff v. Baird
283 P.2d 927 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1955)
Anselmo v. Beardmore
219 P.2d 946 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1950)
Nelson v. Altizer
144 P.2d 1009 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1943)
Creem v. Northwestern Mutual Fire Ass'n
74 P.2d 702 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1937)
Cameron Lumber Co. v. Stack-Gibbs Lumber Co.
144 P. 1114 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1914)
Panhandle Lumber Co. v. Rancour
135 P. 558 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1913)
Whitney v. Woodmansee
99 P. 968 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1909)
Later v. Haywood
99 P. 828 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1909)
Thompson v. Burns
99 P. 111 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1908)
Prairie Development Co. v. Leiberg
98 P. 616 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P. 86, 12 Idaho 738, 1906 Ida. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-porter-idaho-1906.