Turner v. McCormick

67 L.R.A. 853, 49 S.E. 28, 56 W. Va. 161, 1904 W. Va. LEXIS 106
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 67 L.R.A. 853 (Turner v. McCormick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. McCormick, 67 L.R.A. 853, 49 S.E. 28, 56 W. Va. 161, 1904 W. Va. LEXIS 106 (W. Va. 1904).

Opinion

3?OEEENBAEGER, PRESIDENT :

' Tn this case, the circuit court sustained a demurrer to a bill, jpraying the specific joerformance oí two alleged contracts for the sale of the Pittsburg vein of coal underlying two separate tracts of land in Monongalia county. The owner of the land executed two options of sale to the plaintiff, each of which provided that it should be accepted within a certain time, and, if not so accepted, it should be void. The demurrer was sustained upon the theory that what is relied upon in the bill as constituting acceptance is insufficient, because it sought to introduce a new element into the proposed contract, and make not the contract originally proposed, but a new and different contract.

The first optical bears date December 31, 1901, was executed hy William McCormick, as party of the first part, and E. D. Turner, .as party of the second part, covers the coal in a tract of about 150 acres at the price of fifty dollars per acre, one-third to ,be paid in cash on delivery of deed and the balance in two equal annual payments, and provides, as to acceptance, that, “The party of the first part agrees that the party of the second part shall have until the first day of March, 1902, to accept the coal herein described as the same may be determined by the county surveyor. * * * And if the party of the second part does not give notice of such acceptance by said date, this contract shall be void, and of no further effect.”

The other option, executed by the same parties, is dated February 8, 1902, covers the Pittsburg vein of coal in and underlying'a tract containing about one hundred and four acres, at the price of $41.00 per acre, one-third to be paid in cash on delivery •of deed and the balance in two equal annual payments, and provides as td 'acceptance, that, “If the sec<®Rl party, heirs or 'assigns, fails to notify said first party in writing, on or before the first day of March, 1902, that he or they elect to purchase said coal, then this agreement is to be considered as rescinded, nuí? and void and neither party to be bound thereby or liable in any way.” As to performance and the coaisumriiation of the proposed sale, the written option provided as follows: “The first party shall and will, within ninety days, after the notice in writing that the said second party, his heirs or assigns, elect to purchase said coal at his own proper cost and charge, make, execute and deliver to the said second party, his heirs co? assigns a good and [163]*163sufficient deed, or deeds for said coal and mining rights, in fee ■simple, clear of all incumbrances, with clause of general warranty,” etc.

The first option does not require acceptance in writing nor performance within ni^ty days after notice of acceptance. The •second does impose these conditions. Besides alleging a verbal acceptance of both of these options on the 21st day of February, 1902, the bill avers an acceptance and notice thereof in writing, ;and sets out a copy of the notice of acceptance which reads as lollcws:

g “Morgantown, W. Va., Feb. 21, 1902. Mr. William McCormick : I hereby notify you that your coal will be accepted ac-■-eording to terms of the option given to me on same'and respectfully request you to make delivery of deed, with abstract of title, to me, in Morgantown, W. Va., on Saturdai', June 28th, 1902, ‘hour and place to be decided later. Yours truly, E. D. Turner.”

Two objections to the written acceptance are urged. One of Íthese relates to the -first clause, and is that its language relates to the future and imports a promise to accent and not to notice of a completad acceptance. The other, objection is that the request that the deed be made on June 28, 1902, in Morgantown at •an hour and place thereafter to be decided, superadded to the alleged notice of acceptance, made it conditional and not absolute, 'by attempting to introduce new terms into the proposed contract. Acceptance of the first option gave the right to have immediate performance and allowed no time to the vendor in which to perform thereafter. Absolute acceptance of the second option would have included as one of the terms thereof an agreement that the ■vendor should have ninety days within which to tender the deed. .As it required acce^ance on off before the first day of March, 1902, and performance within ninety days thereafter, the re■quest or condition in the notice that the deed be delivered on the •28th rlajj^-of June, 1902, named ajtatejaore-íha-a-:nin,efcy-days ■after the first day of March, the limit for acceptance, and one ■more than ninety days after the notice of acceptance.

The first objection overlooks the substantial and legal meaning of the terms, and amounts to a mere criticism of the phraseology. By turning this- weapon upon the appellees themselves ■their contention is completely overthrown. The language is not that the opticki will be accepted, but that the coal will be accepted [164]*164in the future and the contract itself contemplates performance in future and after acceptance of the option. It is in the very nature of a contract that it shall be first made and then performed. Moreover,' the language of the acceptance, in strictness, more-nearly conforms to the language ctf the contract than that which it is said should have been used. The provision of the option as-to notice of acceptance uses this language: “That he or they elect to purchase said coal.” It requires notice of intention and election to- do a thing in the future. Hence, it may be said, without doing any violence to the language of the option, that notice of an ejeeiio-n-Jx) purchase according to the terms of the option should be understood and deemed to carry with it by nec-l essary implication prior or contemporaneous acceptance of the-[terms of the option. Acceptance of the coal according to the-terms of the option could not take place without a full accession to all the terms of the option. To this it may be added that it is not usual to refer to the instrument by its date or otherwise and merely say it is accepted or its terms agreed to. Thus, in Watson v. Coast, 35 W. Va. 463, the vendee had telegraphed as follows: “Will take the property. Meet me at Toronto, first-train. Answer.” Another telegram responding to another proposal was, “Will accept your proposal.” Ho substantial distinction between these forms of acceptance was discovered. In both instances, the future tense was used. In Barrett v. McCallister, 33 W. Va. 738, there was a verbal notice in which the plaintiff told the defendant, after looking over the land, he was satisfied with it and was ready to pay the money when the deed should be made. Then a day or two afterwards, he wrote a letter in which he said, “I am here -at your place of business ready to take the-land and pay the money whenever the deed is made.” In these instances, the language, with one -exception, related to performance and it never occurred to anybody to question its sufficiency on that ground. In the same case, at page 745, Judge Brannon took this view. He said: “Why talk about the execution of a deed if the land was not satisfactory? Why talk about a. deed, if' Barrett had not accepted the option ? The fact that they so talked about a deed proves that Barrett had accepted the option and informed McCallister of it; indeed, this conversation about a deed is of itself acceptance.”

But it is further urged that the reference to the future in the-[165]

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Bluebook (online)
67 L.R.A. 853, 49 S.E. 28, 56 W. Va. 161, 1904 W. Va. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-mccormick-wva-1904.