Tharp v. Massengill

1933 NMSC 105, 28 P.2d 502, 38 N.M. 58
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1933
DocketNo. 3913.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1933 NMSC 105 (Tharp v. Massengill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tharp v. Massengill, 1933 NMSC 105, 28 P.2d 502, 38 N.M. 58 (N.M. 1933).

Opinion

ZINN, Justice.

This is a civil action brought by W. C. Tharp, appellee, plaintiff below, against C. A. Massengill, -the appellant, defendant below. The parties will be referred to herein as they were in the lower court, that is plaintiff and defendant.

The plaintiff alleged in his complaint that on or about the 1st day of January, 1929, he entered into a joint adventure by verbal agreement with defendant to handle personal property and real estate for profit. That the terms and conditions of such adventure were substantially to the effect that plaintiff would find properties for sale, and the defendant wou(d finance them, and that they would áhare the profits and losses equally.

As to the particular agreement upon which this action is brought, the plaintiff, about February 1, Í930, found that the farm and chattels belonging to one Jess Comer were for sale at a certain price, which information he communicated to the defendant. The Comer property consisted of a 320-acre farm and certain live stock, tools, and equipment which could be purchased for the sum of $5,-000 subject to a federal farm loan. It was agreed between plaintiff and defendant that they would buy said property and that the defendant would pay for said property, and plaintiff and defendant would share in the profits of said transaction equally as theretofore agreed upon.

The plaintiff alleged that subsequent to his ascertaining from Comer, Comer’s desire to sell, and imparting such information toi the defendant, that the defendant secretly entered into further negotiations with Comer and purchased said property in defendant’s own name for $5,000, and refused to carry out the agreement of joint adventure, and refused to permit the plaintiff to have his share in said property, which breach of contract by the defendant damaged the plaintiff in a sum equal to one-half of the reasonable value of said premises and property after deducting the purchase price, which total profit on said deal is at least in the sum of $10,000.

Defendant filed his answer, in which he generally denied each allegation of plaintiff’s complaint, but did admit that he purchased from Comer an undivided one-half interest in the estate, some live stock, farm equipment, and feed from the said Comer, all at an agreed price of $5,000, and that, in addition to said purchase price, the defendant was further out the sum of $72 in adjusting insurance and $25 attorneys’ fee in closing the transaction, making a grand total purchase price of $5,197,' and that said property was purchased subject to a mortgage held by the Federal Land Bank.

The case was tried before a jury resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $1,000, followed by judgment of the district court. .

The defendant plants his appeal on six alleged errors of the trial court, and prays for a reversal.

Four of said assigned errors are based on admission or rejection of testimony, one based upon a general assignment that there was no substantial evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury, and that the amount of damages found due from defendant is excessive and beyond that which can be sustained by the evidence, and one alleged error is based on the ruling of the court in finding that Perkins L. Patton, one of the attorneys for the plaintiff and the son of the trial judge, did not have a contingent fee contract v¡here6y his compensation as an attorney for the plaintiff depended upon recovery and collection of the judgment against the defendant, and in the conclusion following to the effect that the trial judge was not thereby disqualified.

As to the alleged error that there was no substantial evidence to support the verdict and judgment for damages, we find from the record that there was substantial evidence offered and received to support the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court, and such verdict and judgment cannot now be disturbed.

Coming to the four errors charged to the trial court because of the admission or rejection of testimony, we find that the defendant objected to permitting witness Comer to testify concerning the amount he was sued for by the defendant as the damages for breach of contract. To understand this objection more clearly, we must narrate at length. It appears that Comer, after agreeing to sell üie land and chattels to the defendant, refused to convey and transfer to the defendant as per agreement, and that the defendant brought an action for damages against Comer, wherein he alleged that the property in question was reasonably worth the sum of $18,500, and because of Comer’s failure to carry out the terms of his agreement, Massengill had been damaged to the extent of the difference between the agreed purchase price and its value as alleged by Massengill, said damages amounting to $10,-000. In this suit between Tharp and Massengill, Tharp placed Comer on the stand, and was asked by counsel for Tharp, what was the amount he had been sued for by Massengill. The objection was made that the evidence was immaterial in that the amount sued for is not proof in the instant case, and does not prove the value of the land. The objection was overruled, and Comer was permitted to testify. Later, the complaint of Massengill against Comer was admitted in evidence without objection.

The property involved in the suit of Massengill against Comer is the same property which is the subject of the transaction causing the immediate suit between plaintiff and defendant herein.

The testimony was competent to show what the defendant thought was the value of the property and how much profit there was in the deal at the time defendant breached the alleged contract with the . plaintiff, though its probative force was slight, if any, being merely the declaration of the defendant’s own appraisal as shown by his sworn complaint, which was admitted without objection.

As to point two, wherein the court struck the answer of defendant which was unresponsive to a question eliciting affirmative knowledge when the responsive answer wás defendant’s belief rather than his knowledge as the question called for, we can see no error therein.

Points three and four relate to rebuttal testimony of the plaintiff through witnesses Comer and Owen, offered and admitted, which testimony was to the effect that just previous to the time negotiations between Massengill and Comer were pending, Comer had been offered $40 per acre for the land; it appears that the defendant introduced testimony showing the value of the land to be much less than the amount claimed by the plaintiff, and plaintiff then offered the testimony of witnesses Comer and Owen in rebuttal to show that Comer had been offered $40 per acre for the land by one Cleve Woods, which offer'was made at about the time of the transactions between Massengill and Comer, over which this suit arose. The objection was made by the defendant that this testimony was inadmissible because an offer to buy is not a true test of the value of land, nor is such offer evidence of the fair market value of the land.

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1933 NMSC 105, 28 P.2d 502, 38 N.M. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tharp-v-massengill-nm-1933.