Welch v. W. W. Dillon & Co.

7 Tenn. App. 430, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 430 (Welch v. W. W. Dillon & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welch v. W. W. Dillon & Co., 7 Tenn. App. 430, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

In this case, the Chancellor held on final hearing that the allegations of complainant’s bill are fully met and denied by the answer and are not sustained by the proof, and he dismissed complainant’s bill and taxed the cost to complainant and the surety on his prosecution bond. Complainant has appealed and assigned errors upon the opinion and decree of the Chancellor.

*431 The material facts of the case will appear from the written “Findings and Opinion” of the Chancellor, which is in these words:

“This is a suit for money had and received and grows out of the following state of facts:
“J. H. Smith OM'ned real estate at Monterey, Tennessee, and being in straitened financial circumstances and desirous of disposing of his land, employed W. W. Dillon & Co., a firm of real estate brokers at Nashville, to conduct and hold an auction sale on the premises. After making advertisement of the proposed sale the brokers, on November 28, 1923, on the premises, offered the property, consisting of ten acres, to the highest bidder, upon terms of one-fourth cash, remainder in three equal installments maturing in six, twelve and eighteen months, when and where the complainant J. W. "Welch bid off the property at the price of $2325. All parties preceding the sale had information that there were incumbrances on the land which w7ould have to be released before the deed was passed and cash and notes delivered.
“While J. W. Welch bid off the property in his own name and alone signed the memorandum, his undisputed testimony is that he bid for himself and a Mr. Pugh, the latter holding the only encumbrance on six of the ten acres. Welch testifies that he and Pugh were interested in the bid on a ‘fifty-fifty basis. ’
“At the conclusion of the auction, Welch, the accepted bidder, and Smith, the owner entered into a written memorandum in terms following:
“ ‘For and in consideration of the sum of $2325 to be paid as follows, one-fourth cash, balance to be paid in three equal installments at six, twelve, eighteen months from the date of sale, with six per cent interest, payable semi-annually, vendor’s lien retained, the undersigned owner or owners, J. H. Smith have sold through W. W. Dillon & Co., Real Estate Brokers, and agree to convey by a sufficient warranty deed (here follows a description of the property).
“ ‘And the undersigned purchaser . . . agree to make said cash payment and to execute notes for said deferred payment, as soon as abstract of title can be examined, if the title is found to be good and the said vendors agree to make and deliver said deed simultaneously with the payment of said cash payment and the execution and delivery of said notes.’
“This memorandum was made upon the regular form used by Dillon & Co. in sales of this character. Either just, before or just after the memorandum was signed, I think before, Mr. Welch paid, by check, to the real estate brokers $232.50, being *432 ten per cent of libs bid, as a deposit to guarantee his good faith and willingness to comply and to be applied as a credit upon his cash payment at time of compliance. The check was that day cashed by Dillon and it is the sum which 'Welch sues to recover.
“Mr. Welch testifies he understood Dillon’s representative was to come to his office the same afternoon and compliance with the executory agreement there made by both parties, that is, deed delivered to him and remainder of cash and notes delivered to Smith or his brokers. Dillon’s representative says his understanding was the deal was to be closed at a later date and that a bank in Monterey was to prepare the deed after the existing liens had been released. The memorandum of the executory contract bears out the idea that delivery of the deed and compliance on purchaser’s part was to be made on a later day and after the purchaser had examined the title and found it to be good. This must have been so, for all parties understood there were liens to be released and they all knew that Cookeville, the county seat, was some eighteen miles away.
“As stated, Dillon cashed the check, retained broker’s commission and expense of sale and paid the remainder to Smith and left for Nashville and heard nothing more of the matter until about February 7, 1924.
“The existing incumbrances were a $600-vendor’s lien note held by Pugh, Welch’s partner in the deal, and a $1000 note on four acres, payable to Welch’s son, but held and owned at the time by a Sparta bank, the note being secured by a mortgage or deed of trust.
“It seems there should have been no trouble in securing a release of the lien of the $600 note held by Pugh, who Welch says was his partner in the sale, but as Smith was in a practical state of insolvency he was having trouble in getting the other note released, unless he could handle the proceeds of the sale to secure the release, and this the purchasers knew. On the other hand Welch was unwilling to make further payments until the incumbrances were released.
“Mr. Smith was continuing his efforts to raise money to.pay off the liens and discussed the matter from time to time with Welch, and continued negotiations as appears from a- letter of Smith’s until about February 7, 1924.
“On December 18, 1923, and again on January 8, 1924, Mr. Welch wrote Smith suggesting methods, differing from their contract, by which the matter might be closed. In the last letter lie proffers to help Smith in securing a release of the *433 bank's debt if Smith would pay certain accounts claimed by Welch and his son.
“At no time did Welch make demand for compliance on or by any certain date and thus matters continued until about February 7, 1924, when Welch called Dillon & Co. over the phone and gave information that the trade had not been closed or liens released, and because thereof, demanded the return of the $232.50 deposit or guaranty fund.
“So far as-this record shows this is the first time Welch declared his desire to terminate negotiations or refuse Smith further time, and it certainly is the first notice to the brokers that the entire matter had not been concluded.
“On February 7, 1924, Dillon wrote Welch a rather lengthy letter in which, for themselves and their client they made the following offer:
“ ‘We propose, if necessary, to clear this property at our own expense and present you with a deed to same upon the price and terms as agreed upon on the day of sale. I ask you what fairer proposition could we possibly make you . . . Please answer this letter by return mail or phone me and I will make arrangements to meet you at Cookeville and have release made and deliver deed to you.’
“This offer Mr. Welch declined and stated he would not accept the property even though the title was cleared.
“About the last of January or first of February, 1924, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Tenn. App. 430, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-w-w-dillon-co-tennctapp-1928.