Sutton v. Myrick

39 Ark. 424
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 39 Ark. 424 (Sutton v. Myrick) 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
Sutton v. Myrick, 39 Ark. 424 (Ark. 1882).

Opinion

Williams, Sp. J.

Josephine Myrick filed her complaint in this cause in the Phillips Circuit Court in Chancery, in which she claimed that in the fall of 1877, through her husband as her agent, she had made a contract with Mrs. Jane A. Sutton for the purchase, by parol, from her, of a certain tract of land in Phillips County, described in the complaint, in consideration that she would pay three notes of Mrs. Sutton to Alcus, Scherk & Auty, for nine hundred and fifty-nine and four one-hundredth dollars each, all drawing six per cent, interest from January 7, 1875, to secure which they held a deed of trust on the land, and to pay a judgment in favor of same parties against her, rendered February 24, 1877, upon which a payment had been made by Mrs. Sutton of about $111. Neither the rate of interest of this judgment nor the time of this payment is given ; but, as the testimony shows, it was paid by Myrick out of the proceeds of the sales of Mrs. Sutton’s crop for 1876, and the Master, in his account, put it at a balance of $425.98, and the interest up to the time of making his report, about four years’ interest only, at $92, we infer that the payment was about coeval with the judgment and that the rate of interest was six per cent.

The complaint states the further consideration of the payment by Myrick of a debt of S. J. Sutton, the deceased husband of defendant, Jane A., to C. S. and W. E. Moore, for $641.05, which she wanted paid to prevent an administration on her husband’s estate.

That under this.contract Myrick had taken possession of the land on the first day of January, 1878, and had demanded a,deed of Mrs. Sutton, setting out in detail the manner and occasions of making such demand ; also states that the debts had been paid and assigned to plaintiff, and exhibited the claims, all, except the judgment.

The complaint also states that Mrs. Sutton, refusing to make a deed, had rented the place to Hudson, one of the appellants, for 1880 and 1881, who was threatening to take possession, and was disturbing plaintiff’s tenants and laborers on the land. Prayer for specific performance and temporary injunction.

The injunction was granted on the seventeenth day of January, 1880.

The defendant’s answer, denying the contract of sale as stated in the complaint. Mrs. Sutton states that she employed Russell Myrick to pay the Alcus, Scherk & Auty debts, and agreed to let him have the land until the rent reimbursed him. She admits the renting to Hudson.

Voluminous depositions were taken in reference to the matter, very much of them irrelevant, as to loose declarations of parties. Before the hearing Russell Myrick was made a party plaintiff.

At the final hearing the court below rendered a decree dismissing so much of the complaint as prayed for a specific performance of a contract of sale, directing an account to be taken between plaintiff, and Mrs. Sutton, in which she should be charged with the indebtedness above stated, and lawful interest thereon, and credited with the rents received by plaintiffs, or such as they should reasonably have received, less all sums paid for such repairs as were necessary to keep the premises in tenantable condition, and all taxes paid upon the property By plaintiff. No direction was given ihe Master to calculate interest on the rents from the end of each year, or to credit them on the debt, and stop interest thereon, and the error was manifested in the Master’s report, to which there were exceptions filed by the defendant, Jane A. Sutton. The court overruled the exceptions, but ordered the report to be remodeled so as to charge Mrs. Sutton with the sum actually paid by Myrick for the Moore debt, which Mrs. Sutton admitted in her deposition that she directed Myrick to pay after she made the contract for the other debts. This debt of Moore the Master had allowed in full.

The court also referred it tó the Master to determine and report upon the pleadings and evidence as to whether there had been any waste for which Myrick was responsible. The Master reported, making this correction in his first report. He also reported that there was no waste or disposition of timber for which Myrick was responsible. In this he is sustained by the testimony. The court decreed that plaintiffs, Josephine and Russell Myrick; recover from defendant Jane A. Sutton the sum of three thousand six hundred and fifty-eight dollars and seventy-four cents, the amount found due in the amended report, and declared that sum to be a lien on the land, and that the land should be sold. The injunction was made final against defendants, enjoining them from disturbing Myrick’s possession. All the costs, except a portion adjudged against Hudson, were decreed against Mrs. Sutton.

In view of the fact that Myrick had made an unsuccessful effort at proving a contract of sale as to which his complaint had been dismissed, it would seem an abuse of that discretion which allows great latitude to a Chancellor in matters of costs, to tax the defendant with all this cost appertaining to the effort to prove a parol contract of sale.

2. Specific Performance: Of parol contract. Evidence.

It is now a well established rule that, when parties so far disregard the statute of frauds as to enter into parol contracts in violation of its letter, trusting to equity to protect and enforce their contracts, in order to prevent fraud, where they are partially performed, they must see to it that their contracts are clearly and conclusively proven; that they have been partially performed, and that the acts claimed to be in part performance are referable to the contract alone and were done under and in consequence of it. Otherwise, equity must deny relief.

In this case the preponderance of proof shows that there was no sale intended. Myrick’s own deposition and letters show this. The only real doubt which arises from the evidence is as to this, whether Myrick was to have a mortgage or a mere rent charge upon the land.

He says in his deposition that he took possession in January, 1878; that in January or February of that year, perhaps later, he asked Mrs. Sutton for a deed, which she refused to give. At that time it is doubtful from the testimony whether Myrick, who acted in this matter, he says, as agent for his wife from beginning to end, had paid all the said debts of Mrs. Sutton. The Moore debt, he says, was not paid until January or February.

In September, 1878, he wrote a note to Mrs. Sutton, asking for a deed for the land, expressing in it a fear that by the death of either of them the matter would be insecure and unsettled. In the note he proposes to allow her or her children to redeem at any time, and stated that he did not want the land. Here he asks for a mortgage (for a deed with right of redemption is nothing more), with indefinite right of redemption. Now it is evident that the real difference between these parties is this: One wanted a mortgage; the other intended and proposed rents, as security, and the possession was taken not in part performance of any definite contract, to which the two' minds had given assent, and to which the possession is referable, or of which it was a part performance, even if there could be a parol contract for a mortgage partly performed so as to take it out of the operation of the statute of frauds, which we doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Ark. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutton-v-myrick-ark-1882.