Stanford v. Sager

217 S.W. 458, 141 Ark. 458, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 458 (Stanford v. Sager) 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
Stanford v. Sager, 217 S.W. 458, 141 Ark. 458, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 100 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

Wood, J.

George Sager, who resided in Illinois, owned a tract of land in Drew County, Arkansas, consisting of 164% acres. Sager by letters duly authorized W. C. Eoss, a real estate dealer, to sell this land at the net price of $40 per acre.

In one of the letters, of date February 10, 1918, to Eoss he said in part: “I will make terms one-half cash, the balance one and two years and would make it three before missing a sale with 8 per cent, interest. I have a man on the place and I have promised him the place for this year not signed up yet. * * * For description and number of section, see E. G. Hammock, attorney. He has all my papers. I have 164% acres in the place.”

In another letter of February 19, 1918, he writes Eoss as follows: “In reply to yours of the 15th, I want the renter protected, but if you should make a sale, the tools and one horse on the place are mine. I would not want to leave them to make this year’s crop. W. E. Lephiew and I have been trying to trade for some time. I had priced the place to him some time ago for cash $6,000. He made me an offer of $30 an acre. I told him we could not trade and now lie has wrote me again if I will make the price some less we can trade. I will not make it less. When I sent him that price I had an eighty-acre farm contracted for here for that amount of money. It was sold last week. Also received a letter from J. B. Coleman, the man that bought the Wells place, wanting price and terms on my place. I will refer him to you. Do the best you can for me. I will be down in about two weeks.”

After receiving the above letter Ross entered upon negotiations with Dr. J. M. Stanford of Hector, Arkansas, for the sale of the place. Stanford made an offer, the terms of which Ross immediately wired to Sager as follows: ‘ ‘ This offer of terms $2,500 cash, balance to be arranged one, two and three years. If you can accept these terms the place is sold.”

Sager wired in reply: “Will be in Dermott tomorrow.” On the arrival of Sager he and Ross agreed orally upon the amount of cash that Sager was to receive for the place and the terms upon which the deferred payments .should be made.

It was agreed between Ross and Sager that when the notes for the purchase money were due they were to be taken up at the bank without discount to Sager. After these terms had been arranged which were satisfactory to Sager, Ross informed him that his place was sold. Ross and Sager then went to Judge Hammock, Sager’s attorney, whom Sager directed to bring down the abstract to date preparatory to closing the deal. Sager also instructed him to make the deed when the abstract was completed. Sager informed Ross that Judge Hammock handled the whole thing for him.

The terms of the sale agreed upon between Doctor Stanford and Ross were as set forth in the telegram above except that the notes were to draw 8 per cent, interest to be paid annually, and were to reserve a lien on the land. After Sager and Ross had agreed upon the terms for the payments Ross wired Judge Bullock, Stanford’s agent, that the deal had been accepted by Mr. Sager and to forward the money at once. In answer Ross received the following check;

“Russellville, Ark., March 16, 1918.
“Pay to the order of J. T. Bullock five hundred dollars ($500.00).
“ J. T. Stanford, M. D.
“To People’s Exchange Bank, Russellville, Arkan-' sas.
“One-fifth of first payment, endorsed by J. T. Bullock and W. C. Ross. ’ ’

Ross then notified Sager and Judge Hammock, his attorney, that he had received the check. Hammock and Crenshaw, attorneys and agents of Sager, informed Ross that the deed had been prepared and would be forwarded to Stanford. Ross wrote to Stanford that the deed had been prepared and forwarded. In the meantime Ross had sent the abstract of title to Doctor Stanford at Russellville to be approved by his attorney. On April 10, 1918, Ross received a letter from Sager in which he states that more than three weeks had elapsed since he was down there, and that he had not heard from any one. Ross replied April 12, explaining that the delay had been occasioned by the failure of the abstracter to complete the abstract, but that it had been completed and forwarded to the attorney of the purchasing party at Russellville, and further stating “if he handles the matter with any dispatch whatever I shall be able to report a close on this transaction within the next week or ten days. ”

Then follows some correspondence between Ross and Stanford showing that they considered the deal about ready to close, but that the papers had not as late as April 20, 1918, been passed upon by the attorney for Stanford. On that date Ross writes Sager saying; “I think from the appearance of matters in the premises now that I will be ready to close the deal between you and Doctor Stanford'within the next few days. I have not heard from him since sending a correction on the title which was asked for by the attorney, but I expect to receive the papers within the next few days, at which time the matter should be closed. I will notify you just as soon as I have everything in hand to close the deal.”

On May 7, 1918, Ross learned that Sager had sold the land to W. E. Lephiew. On that day Ross wired Sager in part as follows: ‘ ‘ My client put up $500 when I sold him your property as per your order. Money for balance has been ready pending abstract and deed. ’ ’

Sager on the 7th of May, 1918, sold the tract of land of 164 acres to W. E. Lephiew.

Stanford and Ross instituted this action in the Drew Chancery Court against Sager and Lephiew for specific performance of an alleged contract between Sager and Stanford for the sale of 164 acres of land which are specifically described in the complaint and for cancellation of the deed from Sager to Lephiew of these lands, and for damages for breach of contract. Demurrers were filed and overruled.

Sager and Lephiew denied specifically all the allegations of the complaint and Lephiew adopted his answer and set up that he was an innocent purchaser for value.

The chancery court found that the contract which plaintiff sought to have specifically performed rested entirely in parol, and that there was no part performance thereof to take it out of the statute of frauds, and entered a decree dismissing the complaint in this respect for want of equity. Prom which is this appeal.

The facts as above set forth were developed by the testimony of Ross, and they are undisputed.

The chancellor found that Ross was duly authorized by Sager to make the sale of the‘lands in controversy, and that Ross entered into an oral contract with Stanford for a purchase of the lands. These findings are correct, but they are not sufficient to warrant a decree for a specific performance.

In the negotiations between Ross, as the agent of Sager, and Stanford, the proposed purchaser, it nowhere appears that there was any memorandum containing a description of the lands to warrant specific performance.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 458, 141 Ark. 458, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanford-v-sager-ark-1920.