South Penn Coal Co. v. Male

64 S.E. 925, 65 W. Va. 694, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 105
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 S.E. 925 (South Penn Coal Co. v. Male) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Penn Coal Co. v. Male, 64 S.E. 925, 65 W. Va. 694, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 105 (W. Va. 1909).

Opinion

Mlller, President:

The South. Penn. Coal Company, a co-partnership, by bill filed in December, 1905, seek specific execution of a contract made January 23, 1902, by defendants Reese Male and wife, whereby in consideration of twenty five dollars, paid, they agreed to sell and convey to plaintiffs by deed of general warranty, free from all incumbrances and defects of title a tract of twenty five acres of coal land in Barbour county, at the rate of twenty four dollars per acre, one third cash on delivery of the deed, the balance in two equal annual payments with interest, the plaintiff to have until May 1, 1902, to accept said optibn and if notice of acceptance should not be given the optionors before that date the contract was to become null and void and of no further effect, but should such notice be given the contract was to become absolute and binding between the parties. -Another object of the bill is to cancel and set aside as clouds on plaintiff’s right and title to said land a subsequent contract of sale of said land, made November 9, 1905, and a deed therefor made November 20, 1905, by said Male and wife to defendant William T. George.

On final hearing on bill, answers and depositions, the circuit court by its final decree appealed from- dismissed plaintiff’s bill, thereby denying them the relief prayed for.

A number of questions are raised and argued here but the' one on which all the others depend is whether plaintiffs as charged in their bill and positively denied in the answer of the defendant Male, gave to said Male and wife notice of their acceptance of said contract within the time prescribed thereby. If this question be determined adversely to plaintiffs it will be unnecessary to consider the other questions, for in that event they can not be said to fairly arise on the record.

To establish the fact of such notice before May 1, 1902, plaintiffs rely mainly on the testimony of W. W. Rainey, a member of said firm, who swears that on April 24, 1902, he served notice in writing on Male of the acceptance of said contract, the time, but place and circumstance not given, and he exhibits what he claims is a copy of the notice; the only return of service indorsed thereon, and identified by him as being in his handwriting are the words, “Copy served by W. W. Rainey.” This alleged return-bears no date, was not sworn to at the time, and [696]*696no other witness testifies to the fact of such service. The copy of the notice exhibited is addressed to “Reese and Martha Male/’ but there is no claim that any notice was served on Mrs. Male. J. RT. Wilkinson, another member of the firm, swears that he prepared the notice and that a copy thereof was served by Rainey; but he was not present, and his testimony is entitled to little weight on the fact of service. Plaintiffs also rely to some extent on a copy of a letter exhibited with the bill, alleged to have been written to defendant Male, October 23, 1902, purporting to refer to a former letter, but not by reference to its date, calling Male’s attention to certain specific liens on the land and other defects in his title and requesting him to remove the same. Under each item in this letter is a memorandum showing releases, or defects cured, except a deed of trust to W. B. Kittle of May 22, 1900, not released. The defendant Male in his answer does not deny having received such a letter; he simply says that all the liens and defects referred to had long since been released or corrected except the deed of trust’to Kit-tle, which he says plaintiffs at the time of the contract of January 23, agreed to pay off and discharge for him out of the purchase money. So far as we can find no reference is made to this letter in the testimony of the witnesses. Plaintiffs claim that Male’s procurement of such releases after the date of that letter goes to show that he regarded his contract of January 23, 1902, binding, and supports their claim of notice to him of its acceptance. It is a circumstance we think to be considered in connection with the other' evidence on this important question; but it is by no means conclusive, and we do not think it entitled to very great weight, for admitting the letter to have been received by Male, it was long after plaintiff’s rights would have expired without notice of acceptance given, and neither receipt of the letter, nor procurement by him of releases of liens or other defects in his title, could have in any way operated as a waiver of his rights under the contract, or estop him from denying any rights of plaintiffs not actually acquired by acceptance of the contract according to the provisions thereof. We may even assume that Male concluded, on receipt-of that letter, to act on the suggestion to clear his title of defects, and that if plaintiffs should come forward with their money and notes he would let them have the land upon the terms of the contract, [697]*697but no one would say that in law or equity he would have been bound to do so. More than two years elapsed after the date of this letter before the plaintiffs undertook to have said contract recorded. They first presented it for record October 23, 1905, after the business of buying and selling coal lands had revived, and they had learned that defendant George was buying lands in that vicinity. They did not actually get the contract on record until December 1, 1905, after George had purchased the land at an advanced price and had actually had his contract and ■deed recorded.

Opposed to this testimony of the plaintiffs is the positive evidence of Male that notice of acceptance was never given him. Supporting him is the fact of long delay of plaintiffs in asserting their rights under the contract. Male swears positively that besides want of notice of acceptance no request or demand was .ever made upon him for the abstract of title called for in the contract. Plaintiffs claim that by subsequent agreement with Male they agreed to abstract the title; but when was such an agreement made ? They fail to prove it. And this suggests another very suspicious fact in connection with the alleged notice of acceptance. There is appended to the alleged copy of the notice exhibited with the bill, a form of receipt, as follows: “Received of the South Penn Coal Company the sum of one dollar in addition to the sum of twenty-five dollars heretofore paid, as per receipt, on the purchase price of the said coal described in the above option, and we agree to execute proper deed for the same as soon as said company has the same properly surveyed, abstract of title made and all liens are removed, and deed prepared for proper signature; for which work we agree to allow the sum of - dollars, to be credited on said purchase money. This the 24th day of April, 1902.” But this receipt was never signed by the optionors or either of them. Why not ? True it is dated April 24, 1902, within the time for acceptance; but what the necessity for such receipt? Male was illiterate ; he could neither read nor write. A most significant fact about this form of receipt is its recital of a new consideration of one dollar, and that it contains a new agreement to convey as soon as the plaintiffs should have the land properly surveyed, a deed prepared, abstract of title made and all liens should be removed, “for which work we agree to allow the sum of-[698]*698dollars, to be credited on said purchase money.” “We” meant Male and wife, and.that the receipt was to be signed by both— making a new contract, at a time when the one now sought to be enforced was still operative. Rainey, though admitting that the memorandum of service on the notice is in his handwriting does not distinctly say that that memorandum was made by him at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.E. 925, 65 W. Va. 694, 1909 W. Va. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-penn-coal-co-v-male-wva-1909.