Thurmon v. Skipton

403 P.2d 211, 157 Colo. 423, 1965 Colo. LEXIS 703
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 21, 1965
Docket21036
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 403 P.2d 211 (Thurmon v. Skipton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thurmon v. Skipton, 403 P.2d 211, 157 Colo. 423, 1965 Colo. LEXIS 703 (Colo. 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Schauer

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*425 The parties appear here in the same order as they appeared in the trial court and, for convenience, will be referred to as they there appeared, or by name, or as seller or purchaser. When we refer to “Skipton,” the reference is to Francis Skipton, the husband.

This is an action for specific performance and damages for breach of a real estate purchase contract. Trial was had to the court and judgment was rendered adverse to the plaintiff, who prosecutes this writ of error.

In summary, the facts are as follows:

On April 5, 1961, the parties entered into a written contract by the terms of which the Skiptons agreed to sell and Thurmon agreed to buy certain lands, improvements and personal property in Elbert County, Colorado. The lands were described partly by legal descriptions and partly by metes and bounds, “containing approximately 1311 acres.” The property was further described as “being known as the Francis Skipton property.” Certain mineral rights were reserved. The agreed purchase price was “to be determined at $60.00 per acre, to be adjusted above or below the above-mentioned 1311 acres.” The parties agreed at the trial that the property to be conveyed constituted all of the property owned by the Skiptons in Elbert County.

Under the terms of the contract, abstracts of title were to be furnished to the purchaser on or before April 5, 1961, showing merchantable title in the sellers. Upon notice of defects in the title, the sellers were granted 120 days in which to render the title merchantable. The abstracts were furnished within the time specified, and a written opinion showing alleged defects in the title was served upon the Skiptons, but they took no action toward remedying the alleged defects.

The purchase price was fixed at $78,660.00, being $60.00 per acre for the 1311 acres, subject to adjustment. The down payment, in the amount of $2500.00, was fixed, paid and receipted for at the time the contract was executed. An additional payment of $5,000.00 be *426 came “* * * payable by cashier’s or certified check on or before delivery of deed * * The balance of $71,160.00, subject to adjustment, was to be represented by the promissory note of the plaintiff secured by a first deed of trust on the property conveyed. Plaintiff made the down payment and offered to make the additional $5,000.00 payment within the prescribed time limit, but the offer was refused by the defendants.

Thurmon visited and viewed the premises in the presence of Skipton, who then and there pointed out the boundaries, but no mention was made of exceptions within the boundaries. Later, a dispute arose over the question whether a strip of land approximately 132 feet wide and 3200 feet long, containing approximately 8.36 acres, should be included in the property to be conveyed. The undisputed evidence of a competent engineer and surveyor was to the effect that the strip was not included in the land description in the contract, but was included in the 1311 acres to be conveyed.

It became necessary to determine the exact acreage of the lands to be conveyed because plaintiff was paying $60.00 per acre for the land to be actually conveyed. No survey was expressly provided for in the contract. Defendants were to convey a merchantable title and, by inference, the determination of this acreage was essential.

The parties could not agree as to who should pay the cost of the survey. Plaintiff thereupon advised defendants’ attorney that he, the plaintiff, would make the additional $5,000.00 payment, accept defendants’ warranty deed, execute the promissory note and deed of trust provided for in the contract and pay all the expense of the necessary proceedings to remove the title defects complained of; furthermore, if the Skiptons would not repay this expense, he, Thurmon, would then bring an independent action against the defendants for this expense, including the expense of the necessary *427 survey to establish the actual acreage for which he was to pay. Skiptons’ attorney replied:

“There is no use of us discussing it any further. My client isn’t going ahead with the deal, and they are not going to close it for any amount. What would you take to settle it?”

The instant action was then instituted.

The plaintiff was required to elect as between his action for specific performance and his action for damages, which had been commingled in one count of plaintiff’s complaint. Plaintiff elected to proceed on his complaint for specific performance only, and the court so directed.

At the outset of the trial, counsel for Thurmon moved to amend his complaint to include within the land description the strip of land concerning which a controversy had arisen, as was pointed out above. The court denied the motion. We are of the opinion that the court erred in so ruling. The law of this state permits liberality in dealing with requests to amend pleadings in the furtherance of justice. The defendants herein would not have been prejudiced by an amendment “* * * to include such property as the defendants may own * *” when the contract used the phrase “* * * known as the Francis Skipton property” as a part of the description of the property to be conveyed. The error, however, was harmless under our view of the case.

The evidence is clear that Thurmon met all the obligations imposed upon him by the contract, except when prevented from doing so by the Skiptons. He was ready, willing and able to perform his part of the contract on April 15, 1961, as the contract provided, and is still ready, willing and able to do so. The Skiptons were not willing to perform their obligations at that time, or when the action was brought, or at the time of trial. They were given ample time after their default within which to perform, and there is nothing in the record that would justify their failure to do so.

*428 The trial court permitted the plaintiff to recover his down payment on a finding of misunderstanding. No explanation was given as to what was mutually misunderstood. Therefore, it is impossible to determine whether there is or is not support in the record for the finding of mutual misunderstanding.

The finding of the trial court giving rise to a ruling in favor of the defendants and denying specific performance, as prayed for by the plaintiff, may be summarized to the effect that there was no agreement between the parties as to who would pay the cost of a survey, and that since this was a requirement made by the plaintiff, the defendants were justified in refusing to perform the contract. This finding is not supported in the record.

The requirements were that seller was to furnish abstracts, purchaser was to examine and advise as to objections in the title and then the seller had a given time in which to make corrections — in this case, 120 days. This procedure was followed up to the time the seller refused to make the corrections of the title to meet the objections to the title made by the purchaser. The validity of the objections made was testified to by two qualified lawyers without objection and without one word of contradiction.

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Bluebook (online)
403 P.2d 211, 157 Colo. 423, 1965 Colo. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurmon-v-skipton-colo-1965.