Whittenburg v. Groves

208 S.W. 901, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 170
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1919
DocketNo. 41-2696
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 901 (Whittenburg v. Groves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whittenburg v. Groves, 208 S.W. 901, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 170 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

MONTGOMERY, P. J.

This suit was instituted by plaintiff in error, J. A. Whitten-burg, to compel the specific performance of the defendant in error, R. F. Groves, of a contract for the sale of two sections of land situated in Hutchinson county, Tex. The contract sought to he enforced was in writing and is here copied:

“The State of Texas, County of Hutchinson:
“Received of J. A. Whittenburg the sum of $210.00 as part payment on the following described land, situated in Hutchinson county, Texas, and known as follows, to wit:
“Section No. 30, block M. 23, T. C. Ry. Co., containing 640 acres; also all of section No. 6, in block R. 2, D. & T. Ry. Co., containing 640 acres, and I hereby agree to make the said Whittenburg a good and perfect conveyance conveying to him the absolute title to the same, save and except the claims of the state for purchase money, reserving a vendor’s lien for the balance of the purchase price, to wit, four notes of $500.00 each, to become due' and payable in one, two, three and four years, respectively after date, the balance of the cash payment to be paid when deed is delivered, in the sum of $790.00.
“The condition of the above obligation is dependent upon my being able to perfect the title held by me under deed from W. B. Ware as administrator, and the compliance on the part of the said Whittenburg in the execution and delivery of the notes hereinbefore referred to, which are to bear 8 per cent, interest per an-num, and payable at Shamrock, Texas.
“Witness my hand this the 10th day of February, 1906. • J. A. Whittenburg.
“R. F. Groves.
“Witness: Ben H. Kelly.”

[902]*902The plaintiff in error, Whittenburg, in addition to setting out the contract, alleged that when the contract was made Groves was claiming the land referred to therein under a deed from one W. B. Wfere purporting to act as the administrator and the executor of the estate of O. B. Johnson, deceased, and that by the contract Groves bound himself to convey said land to Whittenburg, and further, bound himself that if the title was imperfect he would perfect the same and then convey the land; that in fact Groves’ title was good, and if it was not in fact good then it has since been perfected. Plaintiff prayed for a specific performance of said contract.

Groves in his answer, among other things, alleged that after the execution of the contract, and in the early part of the year 1911, Whittenburg, the plaintiff in the court below, secured from the heirs of C. B. Johnson and Vienna Johnson, his wife, both deceased, quitclaim deeds conveying all the right, title, and interest of said heirs in the land in controversy to said Whittenburg, and that said Whittenburg, relying on the title so acquired, brought an action of trespass to try title against the defendant Groves seeking to recover the identical land described in the contract above, and prosecuted said suit of trespass to try title to final judgment, and that the judgment in said suit was in favor of the defendant Groves, and that plaintiff take nothing.

The facts alleged were relied upon by Groves both as res adjudieata and as constituting a repudiation and abandonment of the contract of sale on the part of Whittenburg.

The evidence showed the execution of the contract of sale as alleged. It also appears that about February, 1909, Groves, in a conversation with Whittenburg, refused to perform the contract, although at that time Whittenburg was ready, able, and willing to perform it and then offered to do so; that Groves then claimed that the contract was conditioned upon his being able to perfect the title to the land, and he then claimed that he had lost one-eighteenth of it in a suit brought by one of the Johnson heirs; and that he had been advised by his lawyers that he was not bound by the contract and he at that time positively refused to carry it out. The plaintiff Whittenburg, testified on the trial of this case that he at all times had been ready, able, and willing to perform the contract.

It was also shown that, after the execution of the contract between Whittenburg and Groves, one of the heirs of G. B. Johnson, deceased, filed suit against Groves and recovered an undivided one-eighteenth interest in the land.

The plaintiff, Whittenburg, in the years 1910-11, secured deeds from various heirs of C. B. Johnson and Vienna Johnson conveying to him the land in controversy. ,

On March 30, 1911, Whittenburg filed,an action of trespass to try title against Groves and others to recover the land described in the contract. The case was tried and judgment rendered in favor of the defendants, Groves and others; the judgment being dated March 4, 1913. The original petition in this suit for specific performance was filed March 3,1913, being one day before the date of the judgment in the trespass to try title case.

In the case of trespass to try title, plaintiff, Whittenburg, asserted title only under the deeds from the Johnson heirs, and the contract of sale was not in any manner involved in the issues made by the pleading or the evidence.

On the trial of the specific performance ease from the judgment in which this appeal is prosecuted, the court gave the jury a peremptory charge to find for the plaintiff, and on the verdict rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Whittenburg, specifically enforcing the contract. This judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals (165 S. W. 889), said court holding in effect that the giving of such peremptory charge was improper and that the evidence required the submission of the issue of abandonment of the contract on the part of Whit-tenburg to the jury. Writ of error in this case was applied for by J. A. Whittenburg.

Opinion.

For the purposes of this opinion we may concede that Whittenburg was entitled to a specific performance of the contract of sale, unless the evidence shows that he had himself repudiated the contract of sale and thereby placed himself in such a position with reference to the contract as required a court of equity to refuse to enforce it at his instance.

[1] Groves in the year 1909 had positively refused to perform the contract and repudiated the obligation imposed on him by its terms.

Whittenburg then had the right to have enforced the contract by suit provided he was willing to take such title as Groves could convey. 1-Ie also had the right to accept Groves’ repudiation of the contract and thereafter treat the contz-act as abandoned and canceled.

[2] He was within his rights when he purchased and had conveyed to him the apparent outstanding title in the heirs of Johnson, because this purchase was not inconsistent with his right to have Groves perform his contract by conveying such title as he had.

[3] We think, however, that when he asserted the title obtained from the heirs of Johnson against Groves by bringing the suit to recover the land, relying upon that title, his act amounted to an abandonment and repudiation of the contract of purchase from Groves, and that the contract thereafter [903]*903should be treated as abandoned by both parties and no longer enforceable at the suit of either.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 901, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittenburg-v-groves-texcommnapp-1919.