Van Horn Construct'n Corp. v. Joy Et Ux.

207 P.2d 157, 186 Or. 473, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 166
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 207 P.2d 157 (Van Horn Construct'n Corp. v. Joy Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Horn Construct'n Corp. v. Joy Et Ux., 207 P.2d 157, 186 Or. 473, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 166 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This is a suit for specific performance in which plaintiff, Van Horn Construction Corporation, seeks to require defendants, Brady S. Joy and Dorothy M. Joy, his wife, to convey to it a tract of land 168 by 170 feet upon the payment of the agreed purchase price, or, in the alternative, a parcel of land 134 by 160 feet (being Lots 23 and 24, Portview Tracts) for the price of $1,689.08, which is 75.07% of the agreed price of the larger tract of land.

The complaint is in the usual form of a suit of this kind. Attached to and made a part of it, as an exhibit, is a copy of the earnest money receipt. It is therein recited that the plaintiff agrees to purchase from the defendants, and the defendants agree to sell to the plaintiff, for the sum of $2,250, the following described real property, to wit:

“Lots 168' x 170' "West of restaurant and on the No. side of Killingsworth St. Portland on bet. 75th Ave. & 74th Ave.
*476 “Lot 24 Portview Tracts, Multnomah Co., Oregon.
“Lot 23 Portview Tracts, Multnomah Co., Oregon.”

Plaintiff alleges that it has fully complied with its part of the contract, and that the defendants refuse to perform their part of the agreement. These allegations are denied by defendants.

In their first affirmative answer, defendants admit the execution of the contract hereinbefore described, and allege that Lots 23 and 24, Portview Tracts, constitute a single rectangular area measuring approximately 134 by 160 feet; that “the true measurements and area of said tract of land were unknown either to plaintiff or to defendants, that they believed said tract to be of the size expressed in said contract, and that they were mutually mistaken as to the area and measurements thereof”; and that it was the intention of the parties to the contract that Lots 23 and 24 be sold by defendants to plaintiff “according to their true and correct measurements and area”. Defendants conclude this defense by asking that the contract be reformed so as to set forth the the correct intention of the parties thereto.

Por a second affirmative defense they allege that at the time of the execution of the agreement here involved, Lots 23 and 24, Portview Tracts, were and now are unimproved and of the reasonable value of $2,250; that “the difference between the area of said property as erroneously described in said contract and the true area thereof does not represent a proportionate or any difference between the value of the property as attempted to be described in said contract and the actual value thereof at said time, and that plaintiff then and *477 there well recognized and understood said fact and the value of said property and the basis for said value as aforesaid and intended to use a portion of said property only as a site for a building and at no time intended to use more than three quarters of the actual area thereof and that the remaining area thereof was intended by him to be wholly surplus and unused area”, and that if the purchase price is reduced plaintiff would be unjustly enriched and there would be placed on defendants a serious hardship. The new matter alleged in the affirmative defense was put in issue by the reply.

The decree ordered the defendants to convey to the plaintiff title to Lots 23 and 24, Portview Tracts, and that plaintiff, concurrently therewith, pay to defendants, as the full purchase price for such property, the sum of $2,119.50, said amount being $130.50 less than the contract price for the large tract of land. From this decree plaintiff has appealed and assigns as error the failure of the court to grant to it an abatement in the price of $560.92 instead of the amount allowed.

Milton E. Van Horn, secretary of the plaintiff corporation, was looking for property to purchase in the neighborhood of the tract of land here involved. He called upon Fred L. Cofer, a real estate broker, who had his office in the vicinity of this tract of land. Cofer had no listing of this property for sale but he had heard of it from another broker. He described it to Van Horn as being a tract of land west of a restaurant on the north side of N. E. Killingsworth Street and between N. E. 74th and N. E. 75th Avenues, and as being 168 by 170 feet in size. He also informed Van Horn that the owner was asking $2,500 for the tract. *478 Van Horn drove from Cofer’s office direct to the property, which he easily located, and inspected it for five or ten minutes from his automobile. The property suited him and he returned to Cofer’s office, and made him a counter-offer of $2,000. Plaintiff and defendants finally compromised on a price of $2,250. At the time the contract was signed by Mr. Joy and Mr. Van Horn, on behalf of the corporation bearing his name, it did not contain the description of the lots in Portview Tracts. That was inserted later at the time Mrs. Joy signed, but with the knowledge and consent of Mr. Van Horn and Mr. Joy. The earnest money receipt stipulated that the Joys were to pay Cofer a commission of $112.50 for his services, which the evidence shows has been paid.

After the suit was started plaintiff and defendants entered into a stipulation whereby it was agreed that plaintiff was to pay at once to the defendants the sum of $1,689.08, and was to deposit in trust with plaintiff’s attorney the sum of $560.92, said amount being the difference between $1,689.08 and the contract price of $2,250. Defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiff a warranty deed for Lots 28 and 24, Portview Tracts, and a policy of title insurance. It was further agreed that plaintiff should have immediate possession of the property; that the suit should be prosecuted without delay and that the issues “will be restricted to those of specific performance presented to the court by the pleadings herein, said issue being only as to the duty of plaintiff to pay and the right of defendants to receive the difference between the sums of $1689.08 and $2250.00, just as if this stipulation had not been made.”

At the time the contract was executed N. E. 74th Avenue did not extend north of Killingsworth Street; *479 N. E. 75th Avenue was not graded and there was no curbing or other designation to indicate the location of that avenue. The surface of the tract of land lying north of Ballingsworth Street, and extending west from 75th Avenue for a distance of about 200 feet, was of the same general character; was approximately three feet below the level of Ballingsworth Street, and was covered with grass and weeds. There were no objects visible which would indicate the boundary lines of Lots 23 and 24, or of the larger described tract. Lot 22, Portview Tracts, lies to the west of Lot 23 and located thereon is a small house with a graveled road connecting it with Ballingsworth Street. Between the restaurant to the east of Lot 24 and the house on Lot 22, there is a distance in excess of 168 feet. Van Horn testified that during the negotiations with Mr. Joy he was informed by him that the property in question had a frontage of 168 feet on Killingsworth Street and a depth of 170 feet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 P.2d 157, 186 Or. 473, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-horn-constructn-corp-v-joy-et-ux-or-1949.