Solmson v. Deese

218 S.W. 657, 142 Ark. 189, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 28
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 657 (Solmson v. Deese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Solmson v. Deese, 218 S.W. 657, 142 Ark. 189, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 28 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

Smith, J.

J. B. Deese brought this suit, and for his cause of action alleged that he had employed H. B. Solmson as his agent to sell, his farm, and that the contract of agency authorized a sale for $50,000, with a commission of a thousand dollars, if a sale was made at that price, together with any excess over $49,000 net to Deese, but that his said agent had made a sale at $62,500 and had only accounted to him for $45,000, and judgment was prayed for $16,500.

Solmson filed an answer denying the allegations of the complaint, and alleged the facts to be that, acting solely for himself, he took a contract from Deese for a period of thirty days for the sale of the farm together with certain personal property for the net sum of $49,000, Solmson to receive all in excess of that sum as compensation. That, while said contract was in the form of an agency contract, Solmson in fact intended to obtain an option for the purchase of said property, and in pursuance of this purpose he, in a few days after obtaining said contract, entered into negotiations with Deese to purchase said property for himself, and on March 29, 1919, Deese and his wife conveyed said property to him for the consideration of $46,950.

It very clearly appears that Solmson is a man of much more experience in the transaction of important business than is Deese; in fact, Solmson is a man of largé and successful experience, yet the original contract entered into between the parties is very clearly an agency contract, a form being used in its preparation which was in common use by real estate agents in Little Rock in taking contracts to sell land. Solmson admits that he knows, and knew, the difference between an agency contract and a contract with an option to buy, and that he knew the contract he had taken was an agency, and not an option, contract; but he says it was his purpose to taire an option contract, and that this purpose was effectuated by the second contract, which he made with Deese. The first contract was executed March 19, 1919, and the second one on March 24, 1919.

This second contract is in form a contract of sale and recites a consideration of $49,000, of which sum $5,000 is cash in hand paid, and Solmson says this second contract expresses the agreement he had with Deese. This is denied by Deese. In fact, according to Deese’s testimony, and that of his son, who was present when the contract was signed by Deese and wife, the contract which they did sign was written on a single page, while the writing produced appears on three different pages, the insistence being that the writing is now a contract of sale when it was'not so at the time of its execution. We do not review the testimony on this disputed point and decide that dispute, as we find it unnecessary to do so. On March 29 Deese and his wife executed and delivered to Solmson a deed to the land, and a separate bill of sale for the personal property, for the consideration recited in the contract of sale. Deese testified that when the deed and bill of sale had been delivered Solmson confided to him that he had “unloaded” this property on the State Board of Control, but did not tell him the terms of the sale, and he was not advised as to its terms until a few days before the institution of this suit, and that as soon as he was advised he immediately consulted his attorney and brought this suit, it being filed April 25, 1919.

The General Assembly, at its 1919 session, passed an act, which was approved February 13, 1919, directing the Board of Control of the State Charitable Institutions to purchase and operate a farm within fifteen miles of the city of Little Rock, and pursuant thereto the members of the board undertook to locate a farm containing something like 500 acres, and that fact appears to have been generally known to the real estate men of the city, although, the testimony does not show when Deese was first advised of the board’s purpose. The board was unable to find a place of that size and decided to buy a smaller place, and, being advised that Solmson had lately become the owner of the land in controversy, they sent for him and opened the negotiations which terminated in its purchase. The board members testified that they dealt with Solmson as the owner, and knew no other party in the transaction, and that on April 2 he executed a deed to them for the land, which, after describing the lands, contained the further statement, “all of the foregoing lands being in township 1 north, range 11 west, and containing three hundred four and twenty-six hundredths (304.26) acres, more or less, also all accretions thereto, whatever they may be or become.” '

In addition to this recital, the board members testified that Solmson represented to them that the place contained 304.26 acres of tillable land and a sandbar of fifteen to twenty acres, and this Solmson admits doing. After obtaining the deed the board caused a survey of the land to be made, which disclosed the fact to be that there were only 254.12 acres of tillable land and fourteen acres in the sandbar, which is practically valueless. The correctness of this survey is not disputed. Thereupon the Board of Control intervened in this litigation and asked a proportionate abatement of the purchase money.

It is insisted on behalf of Solmson that, even though his original contract with Deese created an agency, his second contract changed the relationship to that of vendor and vendee, and the correctness of this contention presents the real question in the case. Upon this issue we summarize our understanding of the facts as follows: Solmson had an agency contract, which gave him as his commission the excess over $49,000, but at the time of making the second contract he represented to Deese that his “party” would only pay $45,000, yet the cash payment recited, together with the deferred payments, aggregated $49,000. A cash payment of $5,000 was recited, of which only a thousand dollars was in fact paid. The $4,000 additional cash consideration was paid by Solmson delivering to Deese his check on the American National Bank for $4,000, payable to Deese, which Deese endorsed and returned to Solmson, who later passed the check through the bank, having the same marked paid by it. Solmson did not tell Deese he expected to sell the property to the State. Upon the contrary, he asserts the fact to be that he did not open negotiations with the board until after he had completed his purchase. A witness named Thomason gave testimony, however, to the effect that he had a conversation with Spencer, the partner of Solmson, in which Spencer stated that Solmson had a purchaser for a farm such as the Board of Control desired to buy, the substance of that testimony being that Solmson had the customer if he could get the farm. This conversation is said to have occurred at a time when, if the facts there stated were true, there was a gross breach of good faith to Deese on Solmson’s part. Spencer denied having this conversation, and the chancellor made no finding of fact on that issue, stating in the opinion, which he delivered in deciding the case, that he considered it unnecessary to do so,

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 657, 142 Ark. 189, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solmson-v-deese-ark-1920.