Schultz v. Campbell

413 P.2d 879, 147 Mont. 439, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 402
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1966
Docket10858
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 413 P.2d 879 (Schultz v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schultz v. Campbell, 413 P.2d 879, 147 Mont. 439, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 402 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

HONOBABLB L. C. GULBBANDSON, District Judge,

sitting in place of MB. JUSTICE DOYLE, delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the district court of the eighth judicial district, Cascade County, ordering specific performance of a contract for the sale of land in favor of the plaintiff-purchaser.

Appellant George H. Campbell, for more than fifty years a *441 managing agent of farm lands for eastern principal, acted as agent for the owner, Homer H. Jones, in managing the lands involved in this dispute prior to and during the year 1941. Campbell, as Jones’ agent, negotiated the sale of these lands to respondent, Ralph J. Schultz, and dictated and prepared a contract for deed, dated December 10, 1941, which was executed by Campbell, as Jones’ agent, and by respondent Schultz. The contract was reportedly ratified by Jones and was recognized as binding and valid by all parties. The purchase price was $35,000.00, although later while both the contract and principal agent relationship were in effect, Campbell individually bought the land from his principal Jones for approximately $12,000.00.

The contract for deed recognized that the lands were unbroken sod and required Schultz to break and sow yearly increasing acreage. Payment was to be in crop shares, and the seller’s shares were to be applied first to taxes, then against interest and, finally, against the contract purchase price of $35,000.00. The contract provided that in ten years, by December 1, 1951, Schultz was to have paid in full for the land.

Schultz took possession but was inducted into the Air Force in January, 1942, and his brother, Wilfred, with Campbell’s knowledge and consent, farmed the lands on respondent Schultz’s behalf from April 1942 until September 1945 when Wilfred was accidentally killed. Schultz returned from military service in November, 1945, and resumed farming the land with Campbell’s knowledge and consent. Schultz personally farmed the lands from 1946 through the harvest of 1950, and Campbell inspected the operation occasionally during these years and regularly accepted crops from Schultz in accordance with the contract. During the period of 1941 to 1950, more than 1,800 acres of sod were broken, cultivated and converted to farm land.

Campbell acquired a deed to the land from his principal Jones without notice to Schultz, and later Campbell complained about Schultz’s performance, alleging poor farming practices and lack *442 of farm records, and on July 6, 1950, Campbell wrote Schultz a letter demanding payment in full of the contract balance on or before December 10, 1951. Schultz apparently did not have sufficient cash or credit to pay the contract balance and on January 23, 1951, prior to written notice of default by Campbell, Schultz entered into a contract with respondent Norman E. Wood to sell the land in question for the sum of $50,000.00 cash.

There was no assignment of the Campbell-Schultz contract to Wood, and Campbell and Wood had no contractual relationship.

Wood took possession under the Schultz-Wood contract and has farmed the land and remained in possession since that time. Schultz and Wood contemplated that Schultz would secure a deed from Campbell in accordance with the original contract for deed and would in turn give a deed to Wood.

At this time Schultz believed he owed $27,000.00 on his contract for deed, but Campbell claimed the contract balance was more than $38,000.00, and Schultz accepted Campbell’s figures on the contract balance. Schultz retained attorney O. B. Kotz to secure an appropriate deed from Campbell, and Mr. Kotz advised Campbell that funds were available to complete the contract. Campbell, after receiving notice that Schultz desired to complete the transaction, prepared and executed a quitclaim deed, which deed did not comply with the contract, and later it was declared to be unacceptable by attorney Kotz. Campbell also demanded execution of releases to Homer H. Jones, and to the Estate of Ebenezer B. Rany, which demands were not in accordance with the contract between Jones and Schultz.

Campbell took the position that he was not obliged to deliver a deed under the contract inasmuch as he felt that Schultz had forfeited his rights by failure to keep adequate crop records, and by engaging in what Campbell felt were poor farming practices. Campbell therefore claimed he had no obligation to perform under the contract and that he was only willing to *443 compromise the matter with Schultz by delivering a deed which reserved various rights of way to Campbell. Attorney Kotz repeatedly urged Campbell to forward a “conforming deed” and sent him such a deed form, but Campbell refused.

On June 1, 1951, Campbell retained counsel and served Schultz with a written notice of default.

On the Schultz-Wood contract, Wood had paid $4,000.00 down to a real estate agent, and was to pay the balance of $46,000.00 by March 15, 1951. Wood at that time arranged with his father to deposit two checks totaling $46,000.00 and a tender of the two checks was made to the bank designated by Campbell. The checks were never deposited for collection by the bank because Schultz refused to accept the deed submitted by Campbell. The two checks were subsequently withdrawn about June 1, 1951, and Wood then delivered his own personal check to the bank under a credit arrangement with the Montana Bank of Great Falls to cover such check if it was accepted by Campbell’s agent. Later the note which Wood signed to permit such potential advance of credit was destroyed pending litigation and about 1953, the check itself was withdrawn. Schultz in the meantime had delivered possession to Wood in March 1951, and on June 26, 1951, Schultz commenced this action for specific performance. On November 7, 1953, the court ordered Wood joined as a party plaintiff, and in April 1964 the case came on for trial.

Campbell during trial admitted his desire to retain the land and admitted he had contacted Schultz and Wood separately in an effort to induce them to abandon the contract between themselves.

Upon the conclusion of the trial, Judge R. J. Nelson, made findings of fact and conclusions of law and ordered a decree be entered thereon wherein George C. Campbell, et ux, was ordered to convey said lands to Schultz. Schultz was ordered to pay Campbell $38,064.94 and Wood was ordered to pay $3,-615.68 to Campbell as reimbursement for taxes voluntarily paid. *444 Respondent Wood was decreed all of the crops and Campbell was decreed not to be entitled to any interest upon the contract price after the tender of the checks March 20, 1951, by Wood to the Great Falls First National Bank because of such tender and because the court found the defendants willfully delayed the litigation and were unwilling to do equity, and lacked clean hands. The appellant set forth the following specifications of error:

1. That the court erred in granting the remedy of specific performance under the facts of this case where no mutuality of remedy existed between Campbell as seller and Schultz and/or Wood as purchasers.
2.

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Bluebook (online)
413 P.2d 879, 147 Mont. 439, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultz-v-campbell-mont-1966.