Teagarden v. Calkins
This text of 173 P. 549 (Teagarden v. Calkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon appropriate pleadings and after trial upon the evidence the lower court found in substance these facts: That on or about May 10, 1908, George W. Moore granted an option to purchase certain real estate owned by him amounting to 8,820 acres, situate in Meagher and Sweetgrass counties in this state. By its terms the option expired July 1, 1908, and it ran to A. C. Graves, but Graves and the plaintiff Teagarden were joint and equal owners of it. Later, and within ten days of its expiration Graves, without consulting* Teagarden, sold the option to R. M. Calkins, Jr. The price paid was $50, but Calkins agreed that if he should make anything out of the deal he would “remember” Graves. The value of the option was “problematical,” and Calkins procured another and more liberal one from Moore under which he sold the property at a substantial profit long after the expiration of the Graves-Tea-garden option; but Calkids “remembered” Graves to the extent of $500. Before this action was brought, Graves died and the defendant Marrs was duly appointed administrator of his estate.
As conclusions of law it was declared that “in the absence of actual proof of fraud, Graves will be deemed to have done the [37]*37best he could with an option about to expire,” and that “the plaintiff Teagarden is entitled to a judgment against the estate of A. C. Graves, for one-half the sum of $550, with interest from June 10, 1908,” and costs. Judgment was entered accordingly, and from it, as well as from an order denying him a new trial, Teagarden appeals.
In his brief, the appellant makes four contentions, but upon the argument all of these save the last were waived. The contention relied on as ground for reversal is “that the value of the option was not problematical, but, on the contrary, was shown by the evidence to be at least $8,820.” In other words,
Counsel argues that loss of profits may be recovered in a suit by the option grantee against the option grantor for refusal to convey according to the terms of the option. Grant this to be true, it has no relevancy here, because it depends upon conditions not pertinent to nor present in this case. Here either owner could sell, and each was at the mercy of the other’s honest judgment and discretion. Hence, in the absence of fraud, the
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
173 P. 549, 55 Mont. 35, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teagarden-v-calkins-mont-1918.