Stamper v. Combs

176 S.W. 178, 164 Ky. 733, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 438
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 19, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 S.W. 178 (Stamper v. Combs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stamper v. Combs, 176 S.W. 178, 164 Ky. 733, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 438 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hurt

Affirming.

[734]*734The appellant, William Combs, owned a tract of land in Letcher County, consisting of about 300 acres. He claims that on the 4th day of May, 1910, on account of his ignorance and want of business knowledge and capacity, and.the value of his lands, that he was induced by an agent of the North Pork Coal and Timber Company, for the nominal consideration of $1.00, to execute a paper, by which he agreed that if the North Pork Coal & Timber Company, within six months after the date of the writing, should elect to buy his lands, at the sum of $5.00 per acre, and pay to him the said sum therefor, he would convey the lands to it by deed with clause of general warranty. The acreage was to be determined by a survey made at the expense of the . coal and timber company. He claims that his lands at that time were of the value of at least $15.00 per acre, and in a very short time thereafter, learning of his mistake, he became very much dissatisfied with the option he had given upon the lands, and posted up some notices in writing at places upon the land, forbidding it to be surveyed, and that thereafter, from three to four weeks before the option expired, some surveyors, representing the coal and timber company, came to his place to survey the lands, and that he told them that he did not want it done, and that the surveyors left, saying to him that he would not be further interfered with, and thereafter, about the first of November, the appellant, Stamper, came to his place and notified him that he had purchased the option from the North Pork Coal & Timber Company, and that he was going to proceed to survey the lands, and take it at the price of $5.00 per acre, unless he would agree to sell him the timber on the land; that he declined to do so, when Stamper came with surveyors on the 3rd day of November, about noon, and on the 3rd and 4th days of November did some surveying, and on the 4th day of November, believing that the option contract was still in force, and Stamper so representing to him that it was, in order to prevent the lands from being taken from him at $5.00 per acre, he and his wife, Mahala Combs, were induced to execute a deed to Stamper, by which they sold to him all the oak, hickory, and black pine trees upon the lands, which were five feet and above in circumference, and all the walnut trees which were four feet and above in circumference, except a small lot of timber trees in a designated place upon the premises, [735]*735in consideration of Stamper paying to Mm $150.00, and delivering Mm the option released, which he had executed to the North Fork Coal & Timber Company. The deed provides that if the option is not delivered to him, the deed was to be void. He claims that- having waited about a month for Stamper to deliver him the option contract, and he having failed to do so, he and his wife, Mahala Combs, instituted this suit for the cancellation of the deed to Stamper, alleging that it was procured by the fraud of Stamper, in representing that he had purchased the contract from the coal and timber company, when he had not done so, and that it was in full force and effect at the time of the making of the deed, when it, in fact, was not enforcible, and that he was going to take appellees’ lands, under the option, and that the price, which he received for the timber was grossly inadequate, and that the means used by Stamper to procure the deed were oppressive and fraudulent, and done with the purpose to impose upon his ignorance and want of business capacity, and that the advantage taken of him in procuring the deed was unconscionable and inequitable. He furthermore claims that the timber embraced in the sale to Stamper was of the value of about $2,000.00 at the time.

The appellant, Stamper, claims that $5.00 an acre was the fair value of the land at the time the contract was made with the North Fork Coal & Timber Company by appellees, and that the coal and timber company would have elected to exercise the option within the life of it, by surveying the land and paying the price agreed upon, but for the fact that the appellees forcibly prevented its surveyors from surveying the lands by putting them in fear of bodily harm, and that he purchased the contract from the coal and timber company on the first day of November and that it was assigned to him on that day, he paying to the coal and timber company $50.00 for it; that he did not have the contract at the time he undertook to survey the lands, because it had been sent to him by mail, and addressed to a postoffice other than the one at which he received his mail; that' it was in full force on the áth day of November, and that he could have surveyed the lands and paid the price according to the contract on that day, but that appellees proposed to him to sell him the timber, and at their request, he stopped the survey and accepted the deed, and [736]*736paid to appellees $5.00 in money and gave him a check for $145.00 on the 4th day of November, and the appellees executed and delivered the deed, and that he had since that time, but not before the bringing of the suit, offered to deliver the option contract to appellees, but that they refused to accept same, and denied his guilt of any fraud or oppression upon his part in securing the deed. It, also, appears from the evidence that before the suit was brought, and after the appellees had offered to return the check and money paid him by appellant and requested a return to him of the deed, and that appellant had refused to accede to these requests of the appellees.

The court below adjudged that the deed be cancelled, and that appellees pay to appellant the sums which he paid out in the transaction, with interest, and adjudged that this sum be a lien upon the timber in controversy.

The writing executed by the appellees to the North Fork Coal & Timber Company was a mere offer upon .the part of the appellees to sell their lands at $5.00 per acre, and to convey them to the coal and timber company, within six months from the date thereof. There was nothing in the writing which bound the North Fork Coal & Timber Company to accept the offer or to complete the transaction to purchase and pay for the land. The writing contains two elements, an offer to sell, which does not become a contract without an acceptance, and the other to leave the offer open for six months, which was a complete contract. This complete contract, by the terms of which the North Fork Coal & Timber Company was to have six months from its date in which to make an election to accept the offer to sell the land, in order to be binding upon appellant, must have necessarily have been supported by a valuable consideration. The consideration supporting the contract was one dollar, in hand paid. This is no substantial consideration to support a contract giving one six months’ time in which to determine whether he will accept an offer to purchase 300 acres of land, in a community where values are rising rapidly. It is merely nominal. To make the offer to sell the lands a contract binding upon appellees, it was necessary for the holder of the writing to have given them notice of an acceptance of the offer, and to have ascertained the price by a survey of the lands, and a tender of the price of it, within the time specified in [737]*737the writing. Thompson v. Reid, 101 S. W., 964; Kernan v. Carter, 104 S. W., 308; Boucher v. Van Buskirk, 2 A. K. M., 345; Litz, etc., v. Gooling, etc., 93 Ky., 185; Noble v. Mann, 105 S. W., 152; Berry v. Frisbie, 86 S. W., 558.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 S.W. 178, 164 Ky. 733, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamper-v-combs-kyctapp-1915.