Taylor v. Ashley

15 Tex. 50
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 15 Tex. 50 (Taylor v. Ashley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Ashley, 15 Tex. 50 (Tex. 1855).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The question to be determined upon this appeal is, whether the verdict and judgment thereon are warranted by the evidence.

The answer admits the making of a parol contract, between the plaintiff and defendant, for the sale of one hundred acres of land, as alleged; but denies that the plaintiff has performed his part of the agreement, and insists that the contract is not binding, because not in writing, as required by the Statute of [52]*52Frauds. The proof, however, is full and satisfactory, not only to the fact of the making of such a contract, but that, in pursuance thereof, the plaintiff went into the possession of the land, erected a dwelling house, and made improvements thereon, with the express consent of the defendant; and that he has fully paid the purchase money. There can be no question that these facts are sufficient to take the case out of the operation of the Statute of Frauds, and to entitle the plaintiff to a specific performance, if the terms of the contract were satisfactorily proved, as to the precise locality and description of the land, and the plaintiff’s case were, in other respects, free from difficulty.

The controversy was as to the terms of the contract, respecting the description of the land, or the form in which .it should be set apart to the plaintiff. There appears to have been a prefectly good understanding between the parties, for a considerable time after the making of the contract, and until the plaintiff proposed to have the land surveyed and set apart to Mm. Both resided and had made improvements upon the tract out of which it was to be taken; and when they met, by appointment, to have the plaintiff’s land set apart to him, he insisted on a different beginning point from that admitted by the defendant; and also upon having the land surveyed in a square form, so as to give a larger front on the river ; and also upon running the lines of the survey in such a manner as to include the defendant’s improvements. To this the defendant objected, and insisted that the point of beginning was to be at a certain spring on the river mentioned by the witnesses, and that the lines were to run so as to include the spring, and at the same time so as to give the plaintiff only the usual front on the river, and not to include the defendant’s improvements. The plaintiff would not consent to this, but declared his determination to run the lines as he pleased ; whereupon the defendant gave him notice, that if he did run the lines as he proposed she would not make him a title to the land. Such was the com - [53]*53mencement of this controversy, and these are the main issues which the parties have presented in their pleadings—the defendant, in her answer, making the same objections to the plaintiff’s pretensions, and insisting on the same construction and terms of the contract, as at the time of its proposed execution. The plaintiff appears to have relied, to make out his case, and the jury to have rested their verdict, as respected the description and locality of the land, on the testimony of witnesses, as to statements made by the defendant in conversation—and these were varient; but had they been consistent, there was, to say the least, a great preponderance of evidence the other way, conducing to show very clearly, if not conclusively, that the understanding of the contract, as contended for by the defendant, as to the locality of the land, was the true one. The only witness who spoke of being present when the contract was made, testified expressly to its terms, as claimed by the defendant ; and the subsequent acts of the parties, and the testimony of the witnesses who detailed what transpired at and after the disagreement as to the manner of running the lines, strongly corroborate that witness’s statement. It will not be disputed that the evidence of what transpired, on the subject, between the parties themselves, is entitled to much more weight than the recollection of witnesses as to what was said by the defendant in general conversations. Moreover, it is not to be credited, that the defendant would have gone on to make improvements upon the land, if she had sold it to the plaintiff; nor would any honest and fair man, under the circumstances, after permitting the defendant to make improvements, in the confidence of enjoying their • benefits, insist on so running out the land purchased, as to include those improvements and take the benefit of the labor bestowed upon them, without compensation. If the contract would have authorized the running of the lines as claimed by the plaintiff, Ms silence, while those improvements were in progress, would preclude him from afterwards claiming the land on which they were made. To [54]*54seek to include them in his survey, under the circumstances, was an act of bad faith on his part, which a Court of equity would not sanction. But we think there is little doubt, that the contract did not authorize the making of the survey as claimed by the plaintiff, and that it was wholly the fault and wrong of the plaintiff, in insisting upon that to which he was not entitled, that the contract was not performed on the part of the defendant. The plaintiff appears to have acted in a harsh, arbitrary and unjust manner ; and this litigation is, doubtless, owing to the temper and disposition he manifested. It is matter of surprise that, under the circumstances of the case, as disclosed in evidence, the jury should have found a verdict in his favor. But as there was some evidence in support of the finding, as respects the locality and description of the land, and there can only be said to be a very strong preponderance of evidence against it, we might hesitate upon this point, to disturb the verdict. But there are other respects in which the verdict is without and against evidence. It expressly finds “ the facts set forth in the petition are true when there is no evidence whatever to support its allegations of fraud; and its averment that the defendant assented and expressly-agreed to the survey as made, is indisputably proved to be untrue. In these respects, at least, the verdict is manifestly unsupported by or palpably against the evidence; and there is a very strong preponderance of evidence against it in other material respects. Its unreserved and unqualified affirmation of the truth of the petition certainly was not warranted by the evidence, and is calculated to induce the apprehension that the jury acted under some undue influence or prejudice. Under the circumstances, the defendant, we think, was well entitled to a new trial, and there was error in refusing it. The judgment will, therefore, be reversed, when the parties may, if they see proper, and it is to be hoped they will, so modify their pretensions as to avoid the necessity of protracting this unprofitable litigation. If the plaintiff will accept a conveyance of the land, [55]*55which the defendant is capable of making, with such locality and description as, in her answer, she admits he was to receive by the terms of the contract, she can have no pretence to contest his right, and by making such conveyance may relieve herself from further liability ; or if, on the other hand, the defendant will execute a conveyance of the land as now claimed by the plaintiff, there will be an end of the controversy. But if the parties will not thus avoid the necessity of further litigation, to entitle the plaintiff to the decree he asks, it will devolve on him, on another trial, to establish the terms of the contract to be clear and definite as to the locality and description of the land, as claimed by him.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Tex. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-ashley-tex-1855.