Yawkey v. Lowndes

148 S.E. 554, 150 S.C. 493, 1929 S.C. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 7, 1929
Docket12672
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 S.E. 554 (Yawkey v. Lowndes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yawkey v. Lowndes, 148 S.E. 554, 150 S.C. 493, 1929 S.C. LEXIS 166 (S.C. 1929).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Blease.

This is an action for the specific performance of an alleged contract involving certain land of the defendant, William Lowndes, on South Island, in-. Georgetown County, of this State. The action was commenced on the 10th day of December, 1926. The case was referred to Walter Hazard, Esq., as referee, to take the testimony and report the same back to the Court. The cause came on for hearing before Hon. William PI. Grimball, Circuit Judge, at the regular November, 1927, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Georgetown County, upon the pleadings and testimony reported by the referee. On the 7th day of December, 1927, Judge Grimball filed his decree in favor of the plaintiff. From this decree, *511 the defendant appeals to this Court upon the exceptions set out in the record, and which will be reported.

For an understanding of the issues presented, it is necessary to make a brief statement of the allegations contained in the pleadings, and of the testimony offered in support thereof.

The plaintiff, Thomas A. Yawkey, alleges in his complaint : That in May, 1926, the defendant, William Lowndes, employed H. L. Oliver, a real estate agent of Georgetown County, to sell fo.r him certain real estate on South Island known as the Lowndes property; that on or about the 12th day of May, 1926, said defendant, through said agent, approached plaintiff, in writing, and offered to sell him said property at and for the price of $5,500; that as a result of said negotiations, the plaintiff agreed, in writing, to purchase from the defendant, and the defendant agreed, in writing, to sell to the plaintiff, all remaining Lowndes property on South Island at and for the price of $5,500; that on or about October 11, 1926, the defendant delivered to the plaintiff a deed' in fee simple executed by Eliza B. Lowndes, wife of defendant, for the following described tract of land:

“All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land situate lying and being on South Island, in the County of Georgetown, State of South Carolina, and being on South Island, and measuring and containing in front, on Winyah Bay, two hundred and twenty-five (225) feet, more or less, and running back from Winyah Bay to Mosquito Creek, a distance of thirteen hundred (1300) feet; the said parcel or lot of land containing six and one-quarter (6%) acres, more or less, and butting and bounding as follows, to wit: North by lands of the Church of Messiaji; South by lands now or lately of George W. Hazzard; East by Winyah Bay; and West by Mosquito Creek. Being the same premises which were conveyed to me, the said Eliza B. Lowndes, by William Lowndes, by his deed bearing date August 26, 1916, and re *512 corded in the office of the Clerk of Court of Georgetown County in Deed Book J., page 251.”

That after entering into the said agreement and at the time of the closing of said transaction, the defendant falsely and fraudulently represented to the plaintiff that his wife, Eliza B. Lowndes, was “the owner of all remaining Lowndes property on South Island”; that the plaintiff accepted said deed, when delivered to him, in good faith, as being a compliance on defendant’s part with his contract, and paid to him and his wife the full purchase price of $5,500; that thereafter plaintiff was informed that at the time of the closing of said transaction, and long prior thereto, “the title to all Lowndes property on South Island was not in Eliza B. Lowndes but, on the contrary, a portion of the property which defendant 'had contracted and agreed to sell to plaintiff and which plaintiff had contracted -and agreed to purchase from the defendant was in the defendant”; that the defendant is claiming a portion of the Lowndes property on South Island against plaintiff in violation of said agreement, though he is estopped by his fraudulent conduct from so doing to plaintiff’s great hurt and damage, and prays that it be adjudged by the Court that any and all property claimed by the defendant abutting on, adjacent to, or included in the property conveyed to the plaintiff by Eliza B. Lowndes is property of plaintiff; that the defendant be ordered and required to convey to plaintiff all property claimed by him abutting on, adjacent to, or included in the property conveyed to the plaintiff by Eliza B. Lowndes.

The answer of .defendant denies the main allegations of the complaint; alleges that in 1926 his wife, Mrs. Lowndes, listed with Oliver her lot with residence on South Island; that he never listed his lot for sale or employed any one to sell same, nor did he ever sell same or agree so to do; sets up an agreement, dated May 29, 1926, of Mrs. Lowndes with H. L- Oliver, as agent, to purchase her property; that in said agreement the words “and other realty” were inserted by *513 Oliver and stricken out by her before execution; that said contract was carried out and confirmed by plaintiff, and a deed from Mrs. Lowndes, dated October 11, 1926, was delivered to plaintiff and accepted, the money paid, and a lease was executed on the same day as deed by Yawkey to Mrs. Lowndes in pursuance of said contract. Defendant also pleads statute of frauds.

In support of the allegations of the complaint, plaintiff introduced a letter bearing date May 12, 1926, addressed to plaintiff by H. L. Oliver, set out in the record as Exhibit A; a telegram from plaintiff to said Oliver bearing date May 20, 1926, set out in the record as Exhibit B; telegram from said Oliver to plaintiff bearing date May 20, 1926, set out. in the record as Exhibit C; a telegram of May 21, 1926, from plaintiff to said Oliver, set out in the record as Exhibit D; telegram bearing date May 21, 1926, from Oliver to plaintiff, set out in the record as Exhibit E, and the deed from Eliza B. Lowndes to plaintiff bearing date October 11, 1926, conveying the lands as described in the complaint; also abstract prepared by James A. Wingate, an attorney, dated October 5, 1926. Let the exhibits from A to E, inclusive, be reported.

“Before specific performance can be decreed, it is first necessary to determine whether there is a contract between the parties or not. If there is no contract, then there is nothing to enforce. It would be speculative for a.Court to say what would have been the rights of the parties if they had made a contract. The declaration of opinion would be simply the individual opinions of the members of the Court.” Adams v. Power Co., 101 S. C., 170, 85 S. E., 312.

“The Courts have no power to malee contracts for people and then require them to perform them. They can only require parties to contracts to specifically perform the contracts they themselves make. This is fundamental law, and no au *514 thority is needed for it.” Fairey v. Strange, 112 S. C., 155, 98 S. E., 135.

“It is a well-settled principle of equity that the Courts will not decree specific performance if the contract fails to express the true agreement of the parties by .reason of fraud, accident, or mistake. Anthony v. Eve, 109 S. C., 255, 95 S. E., 513; Marthinson v. McCutchen, 84 S. C., 265, 66 S. E., 120.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.E. 554, 150 S.C. 493, 1929 S.C. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yawkey-v-lowndes-sc-1929.