Williams v. Snider

56 S.E.2d 63, 190 Va. 226, 1949 Va. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 21, 1949
DocketRecord 3530
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 56 S.E.2d 63 (Williams v. Snider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Snider, 56 S.E.2d 63, 190 Va. 226, 1949 Va. LEXIS 278 (Va. 1949).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error, Lucille B. Snider, hereinafter called plaintiff, instituted this action against the defendant, Ada J. Williams, by notice of motion for judgment, for damages for breach of a contract of sale by the defendant to the plaintiff of certain real estate in the city of Richmond. The case was tried upon a plea of the general issue, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $2,250, the amount sued for.

It is not disputed that the evidence supports a finding by the jury that the defendant, without just cause, wilfully refused to convey the property to the plaintiff who was able and anxious to pay the agreed purchase price and receive a deed to the property. It is not denied that, the defendant was able to convey a good title. The only questions we are called upon to decide relate to the measure of damages.

The jury were instructed that, if their verdict should be in favor of the plaintiff, because of the wilful refusal of *228 the defendant to convey the property to her, “the measure of her damages is the difference, if any, between the contract price and the value of the property at the time when the contract was broken, if you believe it was broken; and in case you award such damages and believe that Mrs. Snider had a valid contract to sell the said property to another person at an increased price, you may consider this in fixing the amount of such award.”

The evidence shows that, before the breach, the plaintiff had resold the property at an increase in price of $2,250, conditioned upon the defendant’s conveyance to her. There was no other evidence of the value of the property at the time of the breach and the jury apparently accepted the resale price as the market value at that time.

The defendant takes the position that in Virginia, in cases where the vendor, though possessed of a marketable title, wilfully refuses to convey the real estate in performance of a contract of sale, the measure of damages is the contract price; and that the vendee may recover only such amount, with interest, as he has paid on account of the purchase money. The case of Stuart v. Tennis, 100 Va. 612, 42 S. E. 667, is relied on in support of this contention.

The general rule in Virginia is that the measure of damages for failure of the vendor to convey as agreed is the purchase price, or any part thereof, paid by the vendee, with interest from date of payment. The rule had its inception in the English case of Flureau v. Thornhill, 2 W. Blackstone’s Reports 1078, decided in April, 1776. The vendee in that case had bought at auction a leasehold house, but the defendant was unable to deliver a good title. The ■vendor offered the vendee his election, either to take the title, with all its faults, or to receive back his deposit on the purchase price, with interest and costs. The vendee contended that he sustained damages due to the loss of his bargain. The court held that, in the absence of any fraud on the part of the vendor, the vendee’s recovery was limited to the amount of his deposit, with interest.

*229 This general rule was predicated upon the good faith of the vendor, who offered to convey such title as he had. It was first applied in Virginia in Stout v. Jackson, 2 Rand. (23 Va.) 132, 152, involving, an executed deed, where it was held that the measure of damages recoverable by a grantee for breach of a covenant of general warranty was the purchase price of the property from which he was evicted, with interest from the date of eviction. It was applied also in a similar case of eviction violating a like covenant of a deed in Threlkeld v. Fitzhugh, 2 Leigh (29 Va.) 451, 458.

The first Virginia case in which the rule in Flureau v. Thornhill, supra, appears to have been applied to an executory contract is Thompson v. Guthrie, 9 Leigh (36 Va.) 101, 107, 33 Am. Dec. 225, in which the vendor, though acting in good faith, was unable to deliver good title. The rule was there held to apply “where there is no fraud on the part of the vendor and he sells believing his title a good one or that it can be made so.”

In Wilson v. Spencer, 11 Leigh (38 Va.) 261, the vendor, after the contract of sale, subjected the land to an encumbrance and then conveyed it to others, thus disabling himself from performing his contract. It was held that the géneral rule was' not applicable but the vendee was entitled to damages based upon the value of the land at the time of the breach of the contract. The bad faith of the vendor was said to make the case an exception to the general rule.

Stuart v. Tennis, supra, relied on by the defendant, was the first case in which this court considered the measure of damages applicable to a wilful refusal, without just cause, of a vendor to convey where the vendor had a good title. It was there held, as contended here by the defendant, Mrs. Snider, that the refusal of the vendor to comply with her •contract of sale of standing timber, although she had good! title thereto, did not “take the case from the control of the general rule that the measure of damages is the contract price, and not the' difference between the contract price *230 and the market value of the property at the time of the breach.”

We áre of opinion, however, that this holding in Stuart v. Pennis was overruled by necessary implication in Davis v. Beury, 134 Va. 322, 114 S. E. 773, 115 S. E. 527, which was a suit in equity to recover and enforce by an attachment damages for breach of a contract to convey certain real estate. There it was held that the test of the vendee’s right to recover compensatory damages was whether the vendor acted in good faith. And the opinion clearly states the rule applicable in this language:

“What is the doctrine in Virginia on the subject of the right of the vendee to recover damages, beyond the return of the purchase money actually paid, with interest, for the breach of such a contract by the vendor?
“The answer is that for a vendee to be entitled, under the doctrine in Virginia on that subject, to recover any damages, beyond the return of the purchase money actually paid, with interest, for the breach of a contract by the vendor to convey the title contracted to be conveyed at the time fixed for the completion of the contract, the vendee must prove that the vendor either acted in bad faith in originally undertaking to convey such title at such time, or that, since the undertaking and on or before the time fixed for the completion of the contract, he has voluntarily disabled himself from making the conveyance, or that he was able at such time to make the conveyance contracted for and wilfully neglected or refused to do so.” (Emphasis supplied). (134 Va. 339).

After the foregoing statement of the Virginia doctrine*, the opinion quotes with approval from Mullen v. Cook, 69 W. Va.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E.2d 63, 190 Va. 226, 1949 Va. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-snider-va-1949.