Rule v. Link

267 P. 1005, 84 Colo. 82, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 28, 1928
DocketNo. 11,771.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 267 P. 1005 (Rule v. Link) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rule v. Link, 267 P. 1005, 84 Colo. 82, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 297 (Colo. 1928).

Opinion

Mir . Justioe Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action by plaintiffs Link and Kerr against defendant Rule is for recovery of possession of a section of farm lands which plaintiffs had, by written contract, agreed to convey to the defendant; for $5,000 damages for wrongfully withholding possession of the same; for the further sum of $2,500, the value of the use and occu- ' pation thereof. The defendant, after denying the wrongs alleged in the complaint, in his answer set up a counterclaim for damages in the sum of $2,460 for failure of the plaintiffs to carry out the sale contract. 'Upon the issues joined there were two separate verdicts: one was for plaintiffs against the defendant for $2,000; and upon defendant’s counterclaim for $2,460, the second verdict was for the plaintiffs; and thereupon the court, on plaintiffs ’ motion therefor, rendered judgment against the defendant in the sum of $2,000. Defendant is here asking to have this judgment set aside.

We are constrained to say, in the light of the record, that the trial court must have been embarrassed, as we are on this review, by the failure of counsel below — and this does not apply to counsél appearing here — to give that aid to a trial judge which is part of their professional duty. Our examination of the record as a whole convinces us that the judgment is wrong and should be set *85 aside. Referring to our preceding statement of the issues tendered by the pleadings, it will be seen that plaintiffs sought to recover possession of lands "wrongfully withheld, damages for the wrongful withholding of possession thereof, and further damages for the value of the use and occupation. Verdict number one was- for damages in the sum of $2,000, but without indicating what they consisted of, whether this sum was the value of the use and occupation, or the wrongful withholding of possession. The second separate verdict was against the defendant on his claim of damages for plaintiffs’ failure to carry out the sale. There was no finding or verdict on the issue of the right of possession. The judgment was only for the damages awarded in verdict number one.

This controversy grows out of a written contract between plaintiffs and the defendant executed January 30, 1925, whereby plaintiffs agreed, for a consideration of $16,000, to convey by good and sufficient warranty deed a section of land in Kiowa county, Colorado, and to furnish an abstract of title showing merchantable title, the land to be free and clear of all liens and incumbrances (except certain liens not important here). The contract called for a cash payment of $1,000, which was paid to the plaintiffs on the day the contract was signed, $5,000 on or before April 5, 1925, and $10,000 on or before five years from the date of the contract. The deed of conveyance was not to be delivered until all payments were made, but in the meantime the deed, when, and if, executed, was to be deposited in escrow in a bank and when it was delivered, if before all payments were made, deferred payments were to be secured by a deed of trust on the property. It will be observed that the contract was executory. There is no provision therein which gives to Rule, the proposed purchaser, the right of possession before the entire purchase price is paid. But at, or soon after, the date of the contract, the defendant Rule, desiring to plow the land which was in sod and produce a crop during the year 1925, actually entered into the pos *86 session of the land. The record is entirely clear from the testimony of the plaintiff Link himself that he was present at the time Rule took possession, offered no objection whatever thereto and says that he supposed that, as Rule was going to buy the land, he had the right to take possession. Link pointed out to Rule some of the section lines or corners and after Rule went into possession performed various acts of work on the land for Rule. Link was representing himself in this transaction as well as his co-plaintiff, Mrs. Kerr, his aged mother-in-law. After Rule went into possession he at once began to plow the lands and practically plowed the entire section and planted and cultivated a corn crop, which proved to be of the value of about $4,000. In March, 1925, after defendant’s entry upon the land, the plaintiffs delivered to the defendant the abstract of title to the land. There is a conflict in the evidence as to the time this instrument was . delivered, but the variance is not of material importance. After the abstract of title was delivered to the defendant he sent the same to his counsel in another state for examination and report upon the same. About March 30, the defendant returned the abstract to the First National Bank of Eads, which institution was holding the documents, with the opinion of defendant’s counsel which was that the title was not a merchantable title in that the Union Pacific Land Company, through which the plaintiffs deraigned their title, had made a reservation of oil and gas rights.

There is no question but that such reservation constitutes a lien or incumbrance and that the title was not merchantable and the trial court so instructed the jury and no objection thereto was made by the plaintiffs. The testimony is not in entire harmony in all particulars, but it sufficiently appears without any question that the defendant’s objection to the title was well taken and that he was not obliged to take the title to the land and comply with the conditions of the contract on his part to *87 be performed. Having taken possession of the land, however, and having expended considerable sums of money in plowing and cultivating his crops, he was confronted with an embarrassing situation. After having received a letter from the Eads bank, which was acting for the plaintiffs, in which it was stated that a quitclaim deed of the mineral rights could not be furnished and that it was plaintiffs’ understanding that the defendant was purchasing the land subject thereto, the defendant replied to this letter on April 5,1925, wherein, among other things, he stated that the written contract of purchase called for a clear title to the land free and clear of all liens and incumbrances and he demanded that such a title be delivered to him before making final settlement. Defendant further said in his letter that he was ready at any time to pay the balance then due on the contract, and execute notes for the deferred payments, if the requirement as to removing liens and incumbrances could be met, but if it could not be met he was not then prepared to say what procedure he would follow. Thereafter the defendant offered to submit the matter in dispute to arbitration: one arbitrator to be selected by himself, one by the plaintiffs and a third by these two arbitrators, but the plaintiffs rejected this proposition. Thereafter on May 18, the defendant proposed by lptter that he would take the land at a reduction of $5.00 per acre on the purchase price and comply with all other provisions of the contract as to payment and would give the plaintiffs two years time in which to secure a release of the reservations and clear the title, in which event he would pay the plaintiffs an additional $5.00 per acre, which would give them the full contract price. Plaintiffs did not accept this proposition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 P. 1005, 84 Colo. 82, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rule-v-link-colo-1928.