Thackeray v. Knight

192 P. 263, 57 Utah 21, 1920 Utah LEXIS 74
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1920
DocketNo. 3477
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 192 P. 263 (Thackeray v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thackeray v. Knight, 192 P. 263, 57 Utah 21, 1920 Utah LEXIS 74 (Utah 1920).

Opinion

CORFMAN, C. J.

Plaintiff brought suit against the defendants in the district court of Morgan county, Utah, for the specific performance of a written agreement entered into by defendants Elizabeth Ann Knight, Mary Jane Wickle, and Agnes Irene Adkins with the plaintiff for the conveyance of real estate and water stock which the said defendants had subsequently thereto contracted to convey to the defendant Gibson A. Condie.

Briefly stated, it was alleged -by the complaint that on February-28, 1918, the said defendants Knight, Wickle, and Adkins by said contract agreed to sell and the plaintiff agreed to purchase certain real property specifically described, with certain shares of water stock, situated in Morgan county, Utah, for a consideration of $1,500, payable in installments, to wit, $1,000 cash on the execution of the agreement and the remaining sum $500, on or before April 1, 1918; that upon full payment of the purchase price the said defendants agreed to execute and deliver to the plaintiff or his assigns a warranty deed (for the real property and an order for the transfer of the water stock; that pursuant to said agreement the plaintiff paid the said $1,000 installment of said purchase price, entered into possession of, and -has ever since retained possession of, said property, and has at all times been ready and willing to pay, and now comes into court and tenders payment of the balance of said purchase price; that without the knowledge, consent, or acquiescence of the plaintiff said defendants, on or about May 13, 1918, made a deed of conveyance for said property to the defendant Gibson A. Condie; that notwithstanding said conveyance the said defendants Knight, Wickle, and Adkins were at all times since, and now are, able to transfer to the plaintiff a good and sufficient title to said property. Prayer was that it be [23]*23decreed that said property be deeded to and quieted in the plaintiff and for general equitable relief.

The said defendants Knight, Wickle, and Adkins answered the complaint, and, among other things, not material here, admitted the execution of the agreement sued upon, and affirmatively alleged that said written contract did not contain all the terms and conditions agreed upon between the said defendants and the plaintiff; that as a condition precedent to said sale of the property plaintiff demahded the removal of a certain incumbrance or easement in the way of a water pipe line over the real estate, which easement was claimed by one John E. Condie, and that upon the failure of such removal and a discharge of said incumbrance it was orally agreed between the parties that the transaction was to be terminated and the $1,000 of the purchase price paid in pursuance of the contract was to be returned to the plaintiff.

As a further defense said defendants alleged that shortly after the payment of the $1,000 installment referred to in the complaint, plaintiff rescinded said contract, for the reason that defendants were unable to remove and discharge the said easement claimed by the said John E. Condie, and that they, the said defendants, acquiesced in such rescission, and offered to return to plaintiff the $1,000 which had theretofore been paid by him on the purchase price of said premises, and that they thereafter, acting in pursuance of such rescission, conveyed the premises to the defendant Gibson A. Condie.

The answer of the defendant Condie was practically to the same effect as the other defendants’ answer, with the additional allegation that he purchased the property not knowing of any claims of plaintiff in the same; that he made said purchase at a time when the plaintiff was not in possession of the property, and that he had paid to the defendants Knight, "Wickle, and Adkins the full purchase price therefor.

Plaintiff demurred to the answers of the defendants, and also moved to strike the allegations therein contained with respect to said written contract not containing the entire [24]*24agreement between tbe parties and the rescission thereof.

Upon said demurrers being’ overruled and the motion to strike being denied by the court, the plaintiff filed his replies to the answers, denying that he rescinded the contract, and also affirmatively alleging that the "alleged agreement of rescission, not being in writing, ivas void under the provisions of section 4874, Comp. Laws Utah 1917.”

After a trial to the court the issues yvere found in defendants’ favor. Plaintiff appeals.

Some twenty-eight errors are assigned as grounds for reversal of the judgment and decree of the district court. All of the errors assigned, however, go to the rulings of the trial court as to the sufficiency of the defendants’ answers and the court’s findings bearing on the question as to whether or not, as a matter of law, the alleged conduct of the plaintiff after the contract had been entered into was such as to legally constitute a rescission. For convenience we will hereafter treat the answers of the defendants as one, and without discrimination. The errors assigned and complained of by plaintiff will be discussed and passed upon without special reference to the effect they may have upon the respective interests of the defendants as pleaded or as shown under the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence.

The plaintiff contends that the contract sued upon was complete in itself; that the court committed error in not sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer and motion to strike, directed against the defendants’ answers, and in the admission of evidence, over objection, tending to prove an oral rescission of the contract by the plaintiff, in view of the provisions of section 4874, Comp. Laws Utah, 1917, which reads:

“No estate or interest in real property, other than for leases for a term of not exceeding one year, nor any trust or power oyer or concerning it, or in any manner relating thereto, can he created, granted, assigned, surrendered, or declared, otherwise, than by act or operation of law, or by a conveyance or other instrument in writing, subscribed by the party creating, granting, assigning, surrendering, or declaring the same or by his lawful agent thereunto authorized by writing.”

The facts were pleaded in the answers, and the trial court [25]*25found from the evidence received upon the hearing of the case as follows:

“(2) At the time of the execution of said contract, and for some time prior thereto, there existed upon said premises a certain pipe line, running across one of said parcels of land from a certain spring thereon to the home of one John E. Coridie, through which the water of said spring was conducted to and for the use of said John E. Condie; and at the time of the execution of said contract, the plaintiff demanded of the defendants that they should cause said pipe line to be removed from said premises, and the said defendants thereupon undertook to cause said pipe line to he removed, and thereuupon notified the said John E. Condie to remove the same, hut the said John E. Condie failed and refused to remove said pipe line, or to discontinue the use of the water of said spring, and on the 20th day of March, 1918, the plaintiff demanded of said defendants the immediate removal of the said pipe line or the return to him of the money paid hy him to the said defendants on said contract of purchase, and the defendants again failed to procure the said John E.

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192 P. 263, 57 Utah 21, 1920 Utah LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thackeray-v-knight-utah-1920.