Showalter v. Hambrick

25 S.E. 102, 2 Va. Dec. 402, 1896 Va. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 16, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 S.E. 102 (Showalter v. Hambrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Showalter v. Hambrick, 25 S.E. 102, 2 Va. Dec. 402, 1896 Va. LEXIS 160 (Va. 1896).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees filed their bill in the circuit court of Floyd county to compel the specific performance of a contract for the sale of a certain tract of land in that county, made in the year 1865 or 1866, whereby H. B. Showalter sold to George Hambrick, one of the appellees, the tract of land in question, at the price of $120, and the latter was put in possession of [403]*403the land at or about the time of the alleged contract, and remained in possession thereof until some time in the year 1891, when he- gave a title bond therefor to his three sons, William J., J. C., and G. E. Hambrick, who are also appellees ; the bond bearing date June 1, 1891, and recorded September 17, 1891. The bill does not appear in the record, but, from the affidavit setting it up as a lost paper, it did not set out clearly the provisions of the contract, but stated that Showalter never delivered to Hambrick any deed, title bond, or other title papers for the land that the latter could place on record, and further set forth that Showalter had on the 7th day of September, 1891, executed to George E. Lester, one of the appellants, a title bond for 25 acres of the land alleged to have been purchased by Hambrick from Showalter in the year 1865 or 1866, and that on the 15th of April, 1892, Showalter executed to one J. S. Lawson a title bond conditioned to convey to Lawson 5-J- acres of land when the purchase price therein named was paid, and that afterwards Lawson sold this parcel of land to Lester, who claims title now to the land embraced in the contract alleged to have been made between Showalter and Hambrick. Upon the hearing of the cause in the court below on the bill and exhibits, the separate demurrer and answer of Showalter and Lester, and the depositions taken for both plaintiffs and defendants, the court overruled the demurrer, and decided that the contract between Showalter and Hambrick, made, as alleged in 1865 or 1866, was a written contract; that George Hambrick had paid Showalter therefor ; that he was entitled to a deed of conveyance, — and directed a commissioner to convey the land in question to J. C., W. J., and G. E. Hambrick, the vendees of George Hambrick, reserving a lien for the unpaid purchase money due to the estate of George Hambrick, who had died after the institution of this suit. From this decree, Showalter and Lester obtained an appeal to this court.

That the court below correctly decided that there was a writ[404]*404ten contract, or title bond, given by Showalter to Hambrick for the land in question, seems to be uncontroverted in the argument, and the decision on this appeal (the demurrer being waived) turns solely upon the question whether or not the court below was in error in holding that the purchase price for the land had been paid by Hambrick to Showalter. The answer of Showalter, read in connection with the answer of Lester, adopted by Showalter as his answer, admits that he sold, or agreed to sell, the land in question to George Hambrick, but insists that he gave to Hambrick a title bond therefor, conditioned to convey the land to him when he paid the purchase price, $120, to H. B. Dowler, to whom Showalter had theretofore given a deed of trust upon his land, which included the land that he (Showalter) had agreed to sell to Hambrick, and denies most emphatically that any part of the purchase money was ever paid by Hambrick. On the contrary, he sets forth that after waiting on Hambrick for many years to pay the purchase money to Dowler, and finding that he was unable to do so, he (Showalter) then paid off his indebtedness to Dowler, and obtained a release deed from him as to all the lands included in the trust deed. Whereupon he notified George Hambrick of this fact, and demanded to know of him what he proposed to do about the land, when Hambrick asked for time to pay the purchase money to him (Showalter), which was given him, and extended until he (Showalter), having become satisfied that he (Hambrick) could or would not pay for the land, sold it to Lester and Lawson.

The principal witnesses relied on by the plaintiffs in the lower court to prove that Hambrick had paid for the land are William J. Hambrick, his son, and one James Kirby, and these witnesses pretend to know what the contract was ; and, according to their testimony, the land was sold by parol agreement in 1865 or 1866 for $40 in cash, and a wagon, which, according to their statement, were paid and delivered, — the money when the trade was made, and the wagon in 1866 or 1867. It is true that one [405]*405other witness (Jacob Sumpter, a son-in-law of George Ham-brick) testified that he heard Showalter promise to make a deed to George Hambrick for land which he (Sumpter) supposes was the land in controversy ; and another witness (Thomas Turpin) testified that H. B. Dowler told him that George Hambrick paid him $40 on the trust-deed debt. But if the statement of Turpin be admitted, though clearly hearsay testimony, it can only serve to prove that the evidence of W. J. Hambrick and James Kirby as to a contract for $40 cash to Showalter, and a wagon, is not true. It is admitted in the record that 10 witnesses testified that they would not believe Jacob Sumpter on oath, while 34 testified that they would; but as this evidence, as we think, is completely overthrown by the testimony on behalf of the defendant Showalter, it is unnecessary to decide whether the testimony of this witness, Sumpter, is worthy of belief or not. The evidence is overwhelming that the statements of Kirby are not to be relied on, and shows that it was impossible for him to have been present at the time and place when and at which he states that he witnessed the contract, and saw the money — the $40 — paid, and knew that the wagon had been delivered. His own evidence and that of J. C. Hambrick, a party interested, who attempts to bolster Kirby up in his statement that he lived with George Hambrick from 1865 or 1866 to 1868, is completely overthrown by four disinterested witnesses who prove that- he was not at Ham brick’s either of those years. Mrs. Miller fixes his whereabouts in 1867 in Montgomery county, a considerable distance from Hambrick’s, and where he had lived since some time in 1864, or the early part of 1865, and by facts which the witness Mrs. Miller most reasonably gave to show the correctness of her statement; and she is borne out by other witnesses, — notably, John T. Shelburn, who moved Kirby, in the fall of 1865, to Bardshaw’s Creek, and testifies that for the first three or four years after the war he was about George Hambrick’s frequently, had hauled up and [406]*406down about Hambrick’s every few days, and that Kirby did not live at or near Hambrick’s Mill (at or near which George Hambrick lived) within three or four years' after the close of the war. It is needless, however, to pursue further a discussion of the testimony of the witnesses relied on to show that Ham-brick had paid Showalter for the land, as the evidence to the contrary is quite conclusive, even if we omit from consideration the evidence of Showalter himself, which is objected to, but which objection, in the view we take of the case, it is unnecessary to pass upon.

F. A. Dowler, a brother of H. B. Dowler, who was examined as a witness for the defendant Showalter, was asked the following question : ‘ ‘Didyou have any transaction with said [George] Hambrick or Showalter for H. B. Dowler? If so, state where and when, and what was it about.” And his answer was : ‘ ‘Yes ; I had a transaction with them both for H. B. Dowler in March, 1882, in Floyd county, Va. H. B.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.E. 102, 2 Va. Dec. 402, 1896 Va. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/showalter-v-hambrick-va-1896.