Strahan v. Haynes

262 P. 995, 33 Ariz. 128
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1928
DocketCivil No. 2666.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 262 P. 995 (Strahan v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strahan v. Haynes, 262 P. 995, 33 Ariz. 128 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

— C. Haynes, hereinafter called plaintiff, brought suit against Margaret Hilton Strahan, hereinafter called defendant, for specific performance of an alleged contract for the purchase and sale of real estate. There were several other parties named as defendants in the complaint, but, since they defaulted, and have taken no appeal from the judgment rendered herein, it is not necessary that we consider them for the purposes of this opinion.

*132 The complaint sets up, in substance, as follows: On and prior to the nineteenth day of June, 1923, defendant was the owner and in possession of certain real estate situated in Phoenix, Arizona, and on said date entered into an agreement with William O. Fields for the purchase and sale of said real estate for the price of $8,500, payable $500 in cash at the execution of the agreement, $3,500 upon the delivery of a warranty deed to the property, and $4,500 by the assumption of a first mortgage then existing on the premises. The $500 was paid at the execution of the agreement,’ and on the twentieth day of June a tender was made of the $3,500, and an offer to assume and pay the mortgage, but defendant refused to accept the money or to convey the property to Fields or to anyone for him, or to give him possession. About the twenty-fifth day of July plaintiff herein purchased from Fields the latter’s rights in the agreement of purchase of the said property, paying thereon the sum of $500, and tendering to defendant- the $3,500, and offering to assume the mortgage, but defendant still refused to convey or surrender possession. It was further set up that the premises were rented for $150 per month, and that defendant had collected the rent thereon continuously since the date of the agreement of sale, without accounting to plaintiff therefor. An allegation was also made of a continuous tender, and there was a prayer for specific performance and an accounting by defendant for the rents which it was alleged she had received.

Defendant answered by various admissions and denials, and also through a cross-complaint. The effect of her pleadings was to raise four issues: First, a denial of the execution of the agreement of purchase and sale; second, that, if she had executed it, she was at the time incompetent and mentally irresponsible; third, that there had been no payment or *133 tender under the agreement; and, fourth, that the property in question was her homestead, and as such a contract for specific performance of a sale thereof could not be enforced. The case was heard before a jury, and two interrogatories were submitted, one on the question of whether defendant had executed the agreement, and the other on whether she was mentally competent at the time it was alleged she executed it. Both of these questions were answered in the affirmative by the jury. It had been stipulated during the trial that the' matter of an accounting for the rents should be determined by the court without the aid of the jury in case that issue became material, and evidence was presented to the court upon that point. After various motions were made and passed on, the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and thereupon rendered a decree vesting the title to the property in plaintiff, subject to a first mortgage in the sum of $4,500, which he was to assume, crediting on the cash payments of $4,000 set up in the agreement of sale the $500 initial payment and the further sum of $2,300.97, which the court found, after due hearing, was the net amount plaintiff had been damaged by the withholding of possession of the premises, and finding there was still due on the purchase price $1,199.03. After various supplementary motions and the usual motion for new trial by defendant had been made and overruled, an appeal was taken to this court.

There are some twenty assignments of error which we will consider in their order so far as we think necessary for the determination of this case. The first is that defendant’s general demurrer should have been sustained. The only question raised under this assignment is that the complaint sets out a clear case of champerty and maintenance. This doctrine has been practically discarded both in England, the country of its origin, and in the United States. *134 There may be a very few states in which it is still in force, bnt we think Arizona is- not one of them. The subject is thoroughly discussed in the case of Gurule v. Duran, 20 N. M. 348, L. R. A. 1915F 648, 149 Pac. 302. We heartily agree with the principles laid down therein, and do not hesitate to hold that the complaint in this case is not subject to demurrer on the ground that it sets up a case of champerty and maintenance.

The second assignment is that the court should not have allowed the introduction of Plaintiff’s Exhibit “C,” it being an alleged listing of the property for sale with the real estate firm of Murphy & Fields, and signed by the defendant under the name of Mrs. E. B. Hilton. The only objection made to the admission of this document was that it was not properly “identified.” The reporter’s transcript shows that a proper identification was made, and we think the court did not err in overruling an objection made on this ground. It is a well-established rule of evidence that, when objection is made to the introduction of a document on a specific ground which is not well taken, it is not error for the court to admit the document, even though there are other grounds which would have' caused it to be excluded, had they been urged. 26 E. C. L. 1048. Waiving this point, however, we are satisfied that the document was admissible, first, as showing the authority of Murphy and Fields as the agents of defendant to receive the initial payment on a sale, and, second, as bearing on the issue as to whether or not she had. actually executed the subsequent agreement of sale.

The third assignment is that the court should have granted defendant’s motion for judgment on the ground of variance between the proof and the complaint. This is based apparently upon the claim that there is no evidence the initial payment of $500 *135 was ever made to defendant, and that there was never a legal tender of the balance of the purchase price. The agreement of sale on this point reads as follows:

“The snm of five hundred ($500.00) dollars upon the signing of this agreement (said sum now in the hands of my agent, J. T. Murphy), the sum of three thousand five hundred ($3,500.00) dollars upon delivery of warranty deed to said property.”

This agreement was signed by defendant and Fields, and taken in connection with the listing of the property and the oral testimony, we think was sufficient to support the finding made by the court that Murphy was the agent of defendant for the purpose of receiving the initial payment, and that he did receive it. There is also sufficient evidence of a legal tender of the balance of the $3,500. If such was the case, the denial of the motion for judgment in favor of defendant on the ground of variance was proper.

The fourth assignment of error raises the most serious question in the case. Defendant set up in her answer that the property in question was her homestead, claimed by her as such under chapter 1, title 20, Revised Statutes of Arizona 1913, Civil Code.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 995, 33 Ariz. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strahan-v-haynes-ariz-1928.