Williams v. Cotten

684 S.W.2d 837, 14 Ark. App. 80, 1985 Ark. App. LEXIS 1824
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1985
DocketCA 84-216
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 684 S.W.2d 837 (Williams v. Cotten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Cotten, 684 S.W.2d 837, 14 Ark. App. 80, 1985 Ark. App. LEXIS 1824 (Ark. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Tom Glaze, Judge.

This is the second time this case has been appealed to this Court as a result of a contract dated August 14, 1980, for the sale of real estate. Williams v. Cotten, 9 Ark. App. 304, 658 S.W.2d 421 (1983). On the first appeal, we remanded for a determination of whether appellee was entitled to damages as a result of appellants’ breach of contract. The chancellor found that certain damages totalling $12,166.65 resulted from the appellants’ breach. On this appeal and cross appeal, the appellants contend that (1) the trial judge used the wrong measure of damages and (2) appellee should be charged interest on the appellants’ $20,000 that the appellee retained in his possession. On his cross appeal, the appellee/cross appellant contends that the chancellor erred (1) in making no finding with respect to the issue of liquidated damages or, in the alternative, (2) in not awarding appellee/cross appellant each element of damage that he claims to have suffered as a result of the breach.

The measure of damages for a vendee’s breach of an executory contract for the sale of land is the difference between the contract price of the land and its market value at the time of the breach, less the portion of the purchase price already paid. McGregor v. Echols, 153 Ark. 128, 239 S.W. 736 (1922). According to the undisputed facts at bar, the contract price and the market value at the time of the breach were the same — $120,000. Therefore, the appellee’s damages based upon the Arkansas rule were zero.

Appellee has cited no Arkansas authority to support awarding all the damages he maintains he suffered because of the appellant’s breach. In McIlvenny v. Horton, 227 Ark. 826, 302 S.W.2d 70 (1957), a case cited by both parties, the Supreme Court considered whether a provision in a contract for the sale of real estate was or was not a valid liquidated damages clause. The Court found that the provision represented a penalty, not liquidated damages, and denied recovery thereunder. However, the Court found that the appellee vendors had suffered actual damages of $460. The damages were expenditures the vendor had made preparatory to the sale to the breaching vendees and included the cost of an abstract, revenue stamps, a survey, an escrow fee, a real estate agent’s fee, and an attorney’s fee.

We agree with the appellants that the chancellor in the instant case erred in awarding consequential damages that were remote from the breach. In McGregor v. Echols, supra, the court set out the general rules for awarding damages when a vendee breaches (difference between the contract price of the property and its market value at the time of the breach, less the portion of the purchase price already paid), and when a vendor breaches (difference between the contract price of the property and its value when the breach occurred, with interest on the difference). The court said:

“In actions against a vendee on a contract for the purchase of real estate, we had supposed it to be a well settled rule that when a party agreed to purchase real estate at a certain stipulated price, and subsequently refuses to perform his contract, the loss in the bargain constitutes the measure of damages, and that is the difference between the price fixed in the contract and the salable value of the land at the time the contract was to be executed.”

Id. at 132 (quoting Old Colony Railroad Corp. v. Evans, 6 Gray 25, 56 Am. Dec. 394 (Mass. 1856)).

In an earlier case, Kempner v. Cohn, 47 Ark. 519, 1 S.W. 869 (1886), the Supreme Court reversed an award of damages that had been awarded a vendee against a vendor who had breached. Although the situation there was opposite the one in the instant case, the Court’s reasoning is equally applicable here. In Kempner, the trial court had permitted the introduction of evidence showing appellee’s loss of interest on money he had raised by selling interest-bearing securities in order to purchase appellant’s land and evidence of a lease on the subject property that he had negotiated with a third party prior to appellant’s breach. The Supreme Court denied the trial court’s award of that portion of damages representing interest on the vendee’s investment which “lay idle and unproductive for two months,” and damages for loss of profits on the lease. The Court said:

These are not proper elements^ of damages, for two reasons: First. They are too remote, not flowing naturally from the wrong complained of, nor presumably within the contemplation of the parties; and, second: To allow them would be in effect to give double compensation for the same injury. In an action by a purchaser of land for breach of the contract to convey, the measure of damages is the difference between the contract price and the value of the land when the breach occurred, with interest on such difference. To this the cases usually add the expense of investigating the title, when any expense has been incurred. The vendee is entitled to have the thing bargained for, whether it be land or chattels, at the price agreed upon, and to resell it himself at its market price. And when he has received the profit, which it is shown he could have made on a resale, he has been fully indemnified.

Kempner v. Cohn, at 527-28, 1 S.W. at 872.

The rationale underlying the foregoing rule is equally applicable to a vendor when a vendee breaches — the vendor is entitled to the thing he or she bargained for. The appellee in the instant case bargained to sell his house to appellants for $120,000. Because the appellants breached that agreement, the appellee is entitled to the difference between that agreed-upon price and the market value at the time of the breach. There was no difference; therefore, appellee suffered no damage that the law will compensate.

This is not to say a vendor could never suffer damage flowing directly from a breach. For example, expenses for a title opinion or an abstract that appellee incurred in preparation for the sale to the appellants may have been compensable, but not expenses connected with the resale to third parties, as here the Thorntons, the people to whom the appellee subsequently sold the property for the sum of $120,000. See, e.g., McIlvenny v. Horton at 830-31, 302 S.W.2d at 72. Here, the trial judge awarded appellee over $10,000 damages for monthly payments he paid on the subject property from the time of appellants’ breach until he resold the property to the Thorntons. For this same period, appellee also was awarded damages for property association dues and utilities incurred. Obviously, such damages are not directly connected with appellee/appellants’ breached sale and are remote and speculative in that the ultimate or total amount for these items depends solely upon when the appellee consummated a resale.1 Although support exists in a few other jurisdictions for awarding such damages, it is clearly not the law in Arkansas.

Appellants’ second point — that appellee commingled appellants’ $20,000 down payment with his own funds, applied them to his own use and is thus liable for interest on that amount — is without merit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
684 S.W.2d 837, 14 Ark. App. 80, 1985 Ark. App. LEXIS 1824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-cotten-arkctapp-1985.