Tinnon v. Tanksley

408 S.W.2d 98, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 14, 1966
Docket51553
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 408 S.W.2d 98 (Tinnon v. Tanksley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tinnon v. Tanksley, 408 S.W.2d 98, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 628 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

The named purchaser in a written contract for the sale of 80 acres of land, Woodrow Tinnon, filed a suit in two counts against the sellers named in the contract, Sam Tanksley, and Dale and Delmar Al-corn, d/b/a Alcorn Bros. Rea! Estate. Count I sought specific performance of the contract. Count II sought to recover down payments of $4,000 and damages for breach of contract in the sum of $2,0C0. Defendants filed a general denial and a counterclaim for recovery of possession of the land, for $5,000 for unlawfully withholding possession of the land (Tinnon was a tenant on the land at the time he signed the contract to buy it) and for $2,400 for rents and profits. The court found that the contract was rescinded and denied specific performance; that plaintiff was entitled to the return of his $4,000 and that defendants were entitled to rents and profits in the sum of $1,600, and rendered judgment accordingly. Plaintiff Woodrow Tinnon and defendant Sam Tanksley both appealed.

Title to real estate is involved within the meaning of Art. V, § 3, Constitution of Missouri, V.A.M.S.; Price v. Ridler, Mo.Sup., 373 S.W.2d 59[1],

We review the entire record and reach our own conclusions as to the facts, determining the weight and value to be *101 given the evidence, deferring to the findings of the trial court, however, when proper. Anderson v. Abernathy, Mo.Sup., 339 S.W.2d 817 [1],

Leland O’Reilly owned a 200-acre farm in Mississippi County. The farm was rented to Woodrow Tinnon. On August 19, 1963 O’Reilly and Sam Tanksley entered into a real estate contract for the sale of the 2C0 acres. January 10, 1964 was fixed as the closing date. On September 16,1963 Tanks-ley made a written contract with Woodrow Tinnon for the sale of 80 acres out of the 200-acre tract for $34,000, $2,000 down and $2,000 upon the purchaser receiving a commitment to make a loan, “the balance in cash upon the closing of this transaction, which shall be on or before January 10, 1964.” The contract was to be considered null and void and the money deposited returned to the buyer in the event the buyer should be unable to obtain the loan within 60 days after the date of the contract. Time was agreed to be of the essence. If seller kept his part of the bargain by furnishing good and sufficient title and the buyer failed to comply with the terms of the agreement within 10 days thereafter the money deposited was to be forfeited as liquidated damages, and the contract was to be thereafter inoperative, at the option of seller. (Although the real estate agents Alcorn who negotiated the deal were designated in the contract as cosellers with Tanksley, their only interest was in the commission.)

Tinnon paid $2,000 when the contract was executed. He received a loan commitment from an insurance company on November 7, 1963. On November 12, 1963 Tinnon made a second $2,000 payment. O’Reilly gave Tinnon written notice to vacate the 80 acres, effective December 31, 1963, but Tinnon did not vacate and was still in possession at time of trial in December, 1964. Tinnon did not on or before January 10, 1964 offer to pay the balance of the purchase price. He was unable to close the deal on time because he could not obtain the signature of his wife on the loan papers. She had filed suit for divorce on February 23, 1963 and was unwilling to sign the papers. Tanksley did not at any time declare the contract void and the $4,000 forfeited when on January 10, 1964 Tinnon failed to pay the balance due on the contract. There was no communication between the parties themselves. On January 20, 1964 the attorneys employed by the insurance company to examine the title wrote to Tinnon, informing him that they had received a check from the insurance company and that “this can be closed at your convenience”; that they were authorized to hold the check “only for a time specified.” Tinnon did not answer the letter or communicate with the attorneys or the sellers. Tinnon did not at any time communicate to the sellers that he was ready to close; did not tender the money and demand a deed, and did not instruct his attorney to close the deal at any time for the reason that his attorney assured him that he had talked to Tanksley and Alcorn and he thought “everything was okay,” i. e., that the sellers would not do anything “to hurt Woodrow” and would “hold the 80 until Woodrow got his divorce over with.” From November, 1963 until March 21, 1964 the attorneys for Tinnon and his wife were negotiating with respect to a settlement of the property rights of the parties. The sellers did not insist upon a specific date beyond which they would no longer wait. Instead, by acts and conduct, they countenanced the delay for a period of several weeks after January 10, 1964.

On January 1, 1964 a principal and interest payment became due by O’Reilly to an insurance company. O’Reilly intended to pay this debt out of the proceeds of the sale of the 200 acres to Tanksley. He made several inquiries of the Alcorns, asking when the deal between O’Reilly and Tanks-ley was to be closed, stating that he needed his money. Dale Alcorn and Tanksley were “fussing,” “wanting Woodrow to hurry up and get this divorce over with so they could close the deal” between Tanksley and Tin- *102 non. They said that O’Reilly was pushing them and that they “needed to get the thing out of the way.” Tinnon’s attorney could not give them a definite date on which Tinnon would close the contract. It depended upon the granting of the divorce, which was indefinite as to time because the parties were still negotiating with respect to the property. Tinnon’s attorney did not request of the sellers that they give a commitment postponing the closing to a specific date and no such commitment was ever made. “Off and on” during January, February and March, 1964 Tinnon’s attorney would talk to Tanksley about the status of the divorce suit. Tanksley would ask “when are you going to get that divorce? We need to get this thing over with,” and Tinnon’s attorney would reply that they were trying to get a property settlement worked out “so that Woodrow could .go ahead.”

The time came when the checks sent by the insurance company for the Tinnon loan had to be returned to the company. Tanks-ley had paid down $5,000 earnest money on his contract with O’Reilly. Finally, under obligation to fulfill that contract and to protect his earnest money from forfeit, Tanksley on March 5, 1964 consummated his contract with O’Reilly, took a deed to the property, and on the same day made a •deed of trust to Prudential Insurance Company covering the 80 acres and other lands as security for a loan the proceeds of which he applied on his debt to O’Reilly. Tanks-ley’s attorney had previously told Tinnon’s attorney that Tanksley was going to close the purchase of the 200 acres in his name and close the loan. “The general idea” was for Tanksley to close that deal in his name, “and the 80 would be held for Woodrow” until Woodrow “got his divorce over with.” On March 12, 1964 Tanksley entered into a contract for the sale of the 80-acre tract to Dearmont Oliver and wife, without notice to Tinnon or his attorney and without giving Tinnon any opportunity to pay the balance due under his contract with Tanksley. The Tinnons settled their controversy over property rights on March 21, 1964 and were divorced on March 25, 1964.

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Bluebook (online)
408 S.W.2d 98, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinnon-v-tanksley-mo-1966.